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Dec. 19, 2025 - Hodgetwins
12:01
Parole Board STUNNED After Parolee Explodes at Hearing!

Hodgetwins react to a parole revocation hearing for Mr. Jones at Terrabone Correctional Center, where the inmate claims exoneration and coercion while violating drug conditions. Commentators express outrage over his release, labeling him an "imbecile," yet debate the fairness of California's "Three Strikes" law, arguing it disproportionately targets Black people. The chaotic exchange highlights systemic confusion as the board votes to continue the hearing, sparking broader questions about judicial integrity and racial bias in sentencing. [Automatically generated summary]

Transcriber: nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v2, sat-12l-sm, and large-v3-turbo
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Violating Parole and Moot Hearings 00:09:59
So, this idiot right here violated his parole.
Wow.
He's out on parole for playing with kids.
So, they let this imbecile out.
He violates his parole.
And now he's at a revolution hearing.
And this guy's intellect is disturbing.
They should never have let this dude out.
I don't even parole.
Right.
I don't even know why they're providing him with the hearing.
I mean, he's already a sick, demented piece of crap.
Why you?
I would just make him switch about the rest of his sentence.
Yeah.
Watch this.
Good morning.
Good morning.
It's the committee on parole, and we're going to be sitting here and we're going to be interviewing you and talking to you a little bit about the revocation hearing that you got right now.
I love this dude's accent.
Mr. Jones, you're at Terrabone Correctional Center.
Is there anybody in the room with you?
No, sir.
Okay, no staff in there.
Okay.
So we'll just talk to you.
Then what's your DLC number, Mr. Jones?
Is it 00376190?
Is that correct?
No, 376190.
Wait, sorry.
All right.
Mr. Terrier, did I get exonerated?
Did you get what?
Exonerated.
The black guy understood him.
White guys, like, I don't talk Negro.
No, sir.
I don't think you did.
No, sir.
I don't think you did.
Wait a minute.
You had a rope.
You violated your parole.
They're giving you a hearing.
Why are you saying you got exonerated for what?
This is weird.
Well, my wow.
I got exonerated, I think, like four, five years back.
And now y'all said I'm not exonerated anymore.
How can that be?
Do you have a form in front of you?
Yes, sir.
Hey, did you sign that form?
For the provocation hearing?
Yes, sir.
For this hearing.
No, I was forced to come.
The parole officer said that I had to come.
He said I had to come and I deferred it.
He said I have to come to.
I don't know why.
Okay.
Were you on parole?
I was on parole for drugs, yes, sir.
Okay.
And that's why we're here to talk about the fact that you violated your parole.
I violated my parole.
I think that's how he violated it.
I think he was out on parole for playing with kids.
I may be wrong.
Maybe the information I got was wrong.
But he's saying he, I think he got paroled.
He lost.
He got his parole got revoked because they caught him off drugs because he's not complying with his conditions of his parole.
Why is he playing stupid?
I don't think this is an act.
I'm pretty sure that you don't think I don't think this is an act.
If this is an act, he deserves what is that, an Emmy?
Yeah.
What's that when you get for acting?
Is it an Emmy?
I think it's an Emmy.
Golden Globe.
I don't think it's an Oscar.
More than less.
That's an Oscar.
It's an Oscar?
Oscar.
I think the Emmy's for music, right?
I don't know what it is.
Who cares?
I don't watch those awards, sir.
Yeah.
Okay, sir.
I'm trying to find out if I deferred this hearing.
Why I did that?
Why am I here?
He refused to sign the preliminary hearing.
I deferred it.
I deferred it.
So I know I got to go to court for the charge That I should have that that when were you arrested?
I was arrested on the seventh, about two months back.
Okay.
Been in jail for two months.
And you, but you refused to sign your paperwork.
Hold on.
What paperwork?
Okay, you signed the paperwork right there for the hearing for today.
No, I didn't, sir.
No, I got, and listen, he told me, the pro-offs told me that he making me come to this hearing.
He said, yeah, he said I have to come to this hearing.
Okay, well, you're here now, so we might as well have the hearing then.
Hold up, please, sir.
But hold up, but sir, I would like to defer the hearing.
I don't want the hearing.
Why do I have to have a hearing?
Well, you got some place to be.
What you doing?
You're just sitting in your sale.
You act like you got somewhere to be.
I'm saying I deferred already.
I don't want it.
I don't think it's a good thing.
The lawyer already told me that the charge has been dismissed on me.
She said that the registration stuff that I have been going through, she said that she don't even see why I'm even in jail.
Okay.
I'm not going to execute session.
Yes.
Y'all not asking my questions.
Just stand by for just a minute.
We're going to go in executive session and look at your paperwork.
And then we'll get right back with it.
But I can ask y'all questions.
Y'all not asking my questions, but y'all want to ask y'all.
Yes, sir.
Sometimes it's not fair.
Okay.
We're going to do it.
Hold on, sir.
Sir, sir.
You can't.
He said, sometimes things are not fair.
Yeah.
I think I understand what happened.
They violated his parole when he got arrested.
I think those charges, if I heard him correctly, got dismissed.
You got to take whatever he says with a grain of salt.
I know, I know, I know, I know.
But it sounds like those charges got dismissed.
I don't know.
But he's still in jail.
Yeah.
So what if he's saying is moot because it does he's not making any sense.
Yeah.
It's not fair.
No, you can't do that.
No.
No.
This dude thinks he's running things.
Disrespectful.
He just told me it's not fair.
No, sir.
That's not this.
Why am I here this?
Mr. Jones, we've discussed this thing and we've run up down the street with it.
You got two choices.
You can either ask for a continuance.
Okay.
We can continue it.
Or you can revoke yourself.
I'm mute yourself.
Tell him to ask him to un you're muted.
I can't hear you.
Get somebody in there to unmute you.
Who the hell muted him?
Yeah, he might.
He probably did something.
Okay.
Our judicial systems sucks.
Well, I don't think it sucks.
I gotta go in there.
Okay.
See, are you going in there?
We need you unmuted.
Tell her we need we need him unmuted.
Why would a woman want to work in a male prison?
Okay, now we can hear you.
I think go ahead and say what you she thick too, got a nice body in front of a bunch of these people.
How dangerous.
I don't even see a gun on her.
Yeah, that's a brave white girl.
You have two choices.
Oh, listen.
In parole, on parole, what I'm not here for the, I'm not here.
Listen, the charge of the, listen, what, what is my, what am I here for?
Okay, revoke yourself.
I have to do this wrong.
When I talk, do you listen?
When you talk, I'll listen.
Okay, are you going to revoke me?
You can, I can listen.
I don't get revoked in parole.
The judge, whatever.
If I go to court and I lose it and they're the charge, understand me, they're revoked me.
Understand my parole.
Not just revoke myself.
Why would I do that?
You want to continue it, correct?
I continuous for what?
I don't come back to you.
I don't listen.
I want to defer it.
I don't want to deal with y'all.
Can I defer it?
Like I'm supposed to.
I'm deferring the parole like I did before.
I defer it on the paper.
That's the same.
I want a continuance.
You want to defer it.
I want to defer it.
Deferred.
Like when the pro-loft came to me, he came to me and I can defer it.
I said, I'd like to defer it, sir.
I don't want to defer it.
And why am I here if I defer it already?
Okay.
That'll conclude this here.
We're doing.
We're voting.
I vote to continue this hearing until they're going to be able to do that.
I'm deferred.
I'm deferring it.
That's what it means.
Yeah.
He's using the word defer.
They're using the word continue.
But he hasn't picked up that those two words mean the same thing in the context of this hero.
Three Felonies Mean Life 00:02:01
Right.
Yeah.
I don't want no hearing from y'all.
I'm deferring it.
I'm deferring.
Big quiet.
Big quiet for just a second, please, sir.
To say that you're getting what you want.
See, this black guy knows better.
I don't got to say nothing.
Period this morning.
That's the end of the hearing.
That's the end of the hearing.
And they put this guy out on parole.
They released him out on parole.
Yeah.
Why?
Let him serve out his sentence and then let him out.
Yeah, because it doesn't look like he's a good match for society.
Don't look like he's compatible at all.
Look at how difficult he made this damn parole here.
Look how his face.
It's nuts.
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
I don't think our judicial system is strict enough.
You see all these people getting unalive and they got like multiple arrests, like over 20 arrests.
Right.
Like, I remember back in the day, man, we used to live in California.
They had this law.
Three strikes and you're out.
Three felonies and you get life in prison.
Yeah.
I think that's a fair way to handle these people.
Yes, I think that's fair.
You commit three violent felonies, you get life in prison.
Yeah.
I think it was just three felonies.
Yeah.
You're done.
Yeah, I know, because a felony is a major crime.
And you commit three major crimes on three separate occasions.
And we're giving you parole hearings and we letting you out on good behavior.
Yeah, but it was on three separate occasions.
Like you commit like five felonies.
Well, you pretty much should get life, but usually it's three separate cases.
Yeah, it's three separate cases.
But I would love for them to bring that back.
They said it was, they said it's racist, though.
Yeah.
That's racist.
It's racist.
Because it affects blacks more than any other race.
Yeah, that's why it's racist.
They don't know how to police themselves.
Crazy.
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