Trapped: Mental Illness in America’s Prisons
Here is my latest project - Trapped: Mental Illness in America’s Prisons.
What started out as an assignment for school has produced a piece that has changed my life and hopefully will do the same for the people that view it. That was my hope when producing it at least. Ten weeks ago, we (my grad class at OU) were given the assignment to create a magazine including the brand, the mission statement and of course the content.
For this project, I decided to focus on the mental health crisis, specifically in prisons. This brought me to the CPTU inside the Kentucky State Reformatory.
My intention was to make a multimedia piece that made the viewer feel what I felt when I was there. There were days that I was extremely scared and others that I left thinking how much someone on the outside missed them. Some days, I had to remind myself that many of these men had done heinous things.
I saw them cry. I saw them hit themselves so hard in the head that they bled. I saw them throw things at the officers.
I left the prison feeling the same way the warden and the doctors do - wanting to help these men that have nowhere else to go but feeling helpless. All I could do was make a piece that brings others in and hopefully makes them feel for these men, the doctors, the warden and the issue at large. There needs to be a shift in the way our society sees mental illness. We don’t need to just house these people and maybe prison isn’t the place for them.
I hope you all feel something from this piece. Please let me know what you think. Visit my project at www.indepth.jennackerman.com


June 18, 2008 at 11:05 pm
Excellent work. I was really impressed with all of it – the story, the photos and especially the multimedia.
Steve Remich sent me a link to your Web site after he read a story I wrote for the Jackson Hole paper about a mentally retarded man who couldn’t get help for his urges because he is a sex offender and there are no treatment centers in Wyoming. Eventually, he made enough noise that the police conducted a sting operation and arrested hem. He got 35- 50 years, at least twice as long as any sentence I’ve seen from this court in a year and a half. Even the judge said the system failed this guy.
Your story really put mine in perspective for me. I don’t think much abut the prison system. And I’m a cops and courts reporter. Most people probably don’t think about it at all. Your project is really mazing and I’m glad I got to see it.
-Amanda Miller
Link to my story
http://www.jhnewsandguide.com/article.php?art_id=3205