There’s something I can’t shake today. And honestly… it makes me sick. I just read about a correctional officer at the same prison my husband is sitting in right now —Lewis Prison Complex—who was caught smuggling heroin, fentanyl, and cell phones into the facility. Not using. Not struggling. Not trying to survive addiction. Smuggling. Trafficking. Profiting. Investigators didn’t just catch him once either. This wasn’t some “bad decision” moment. This was a full investigation—months long—with surveillance, evidence, and tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of drugs tied to it. Let me say that again… A man with a badge, authority, and access was bringing poison into a prison —into a place already filled with men fighting addiction, trauma, and survival every single day. Now here’s the part that I cannot wrap my head around… My husband is serving seven years for doing drugs. Seven years. For addiction. For a battle that started when he was a child—before he even had ...
Expectations are powerful, but by themselves they don’t change systems. People can expect better outcomes. They can talk about reform, stability, rehabilitation, and long-term success. Public conversations can shift dramatically over time. But until expectations are tied to accountability, institutions rarely feel the pressure to adjust their structure. Arizona Department of Corrections operates within a framework where success has historically been measured through control: facility stability, rule enforcement, and population management. As long as those elements remain intact, the system can present itself as functioning properly. But expectations reshape that framework when they begin asking different questions. Instead of asking whether prisons maintain order, people start asking whether incarceration actually reduces long-term harm. Instead of focusing on disciplinary metrics, they start examining reintegration outcomes. Instead of assuming the system works because it exists,...