Hard Time is the story of Shaun Attwood. Attwood grew up in England and moved to Arizona after university. His life seemed to be going wonderfully, if illegally—he was a successful stockbroker with a huge mansion and a sports car, and he also threw raves and dealt drugs like Ecstasy. However, after several years, the partying began to weary him and he settled down with his girlfriend, Claudia, and was living a more sedate, lawful life.
However, the law caught up with him. In 2000, he was arrested on suspected drug dealing charges and thrown into one of Sherriff Joe Arpaio’s jails. For those of you who don’t know him, Arpaio is a disgusting human being. Amnesty International has complained about him, and he has more lawsuits than you can shake a stick at. This is a man who feeds his inmates green bologna and violates human rights. Many of the people, like Attwood, were unsentenced, meaning that many of them could be and were innocent. Others were definitely guilty, but still did not merit being treated like dogs.
Choice quotes by Arpaio:
"It costs more to feed our police dogs than our inmates. The dogs never committed a crime, and they're working for a living."
"It's 120 degrees in Iraq and the soldiers are living in tents and they didn't commit any crimes, so shut your mouths."
— Arpaio to inmates living in tents that reached 138 degrees during a heat wave.
Nice guy, right? Attwood was thrown into the jail and his bail was set at $750,000, even though they only had circumstantial evidence. In the end, Attwood spent 8 years of his life in first the jail and then the Madison prison, befriending cockroaches and suffering from terrible health problems and having his life threatened. But he fought back.
While in jail, Attwood started a blog and smuggled the entries to his aunt Anne, who typed them and sent them to Attwood’s parents. Attwood’s parents then put them on a blog under a pseudonym: Jon’s Jail Journal
Before long, the blog began attracting visitors and press. Last year I spent hours reading the blog, fascinated by the horror Attwood lived through and amazed at the different people he interacted with and befriended. Attwood used his time wisely, reading widely, working on his writing skills, and practicing yoga for hours every day.
After Attwood was finally released, he began speaking at schools and published his book, and has been quite the thorn in Arpaio’s side. Hard Time is an honest look into what his life was like in the jail and the difficulties he faced, and chronicles his attempt to have justice and a clear sentence. It’s definitely worth the read.