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Walls of Secrecy : Stories of Prison Life 1971-1981 by Kelley D. Messinger (2019, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherWaters, Emily
ISBN-100578552914
ISBN-139780578552910
eBay Product ID (ePID)22038689584

Product Key Features

Book TitleWalls of Secrecy : Stories of Prison Life 1971-1981
Number of Pages202 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicGeneral
Publication Year2019
GenreBiography & Autobiography
AuthorKelley D. Messinger
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.5 in
Item Weight10.8 Oz
Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
SynopsisHow Politicians Turned a Correctional Institution Into the Top Drug-Trafficking, Gang-Controlled, Murder Capitol of Washington State. ### Pressure Punks. Bikers. Kids. Lifers. Dings. Girls. Dealers. Everyone fit into one prison group or another, sometimes more than one group. In 1971 I had to figure out where I was going to fit, and becoming a Biker had a huge impact on my survival. My name is Kelley D. Messinger and I lived a decade in maximum security at Washington State Penitentiary. This is my story. ### Twenty-three-year old Kelley D. Messinger was convicted in Washington in the early 1970s of killing his teen-aged wife. This book is his memoir of his decade in prison and the maximum-security unit at Washington State Penitentiary. Chronicling a ludicrous prison governance system, this book captures the life of prisoners including social hierarchy, survival rules, violence, rape, murder, and defense tactics. The book's characters, his fellow prisoners as well as prison administration and staff, are in many cases, stranger than could be invented by a fiction writer. However, Mr. Messinger's undefeated will to survive in this environment colors the tone of the book with his humorous, witty and grounding perspective. Ultimately Mr. Messinger's case was brought to the attention of Washington Governor Dixy Lee Ray, who happened to be touring a Washington State Trooper's Academy. Her interest in Mr. Messinger's conviction was piqued when she heard the investigation used to convict him was used as a case study for how NOT to investigate crimes. When she inquired as to the outcome of the criminal trial, she learned Mr. Messinger was then serving a life sentence in maximum security. Before Governor Ray left office, she exonerated Mr. Messinger.