INCARCERATED MOTHERS -
THOMPSON & ROTHMAN - MAY 12
MEGAN THOMPSON: Brenda
Singer is serving two years at the Indiana Women’s Prison in Indianapolis for
opioid possession and failing to show up at a work release program. When she
arrived here in January, she was almost 9 months pregnant. It meant she’d give
birth behind bars and possibly be separated from her baby just hours later.
BRENDA SINGER: I was
scared. I was really worried, I mean, I would have had a-- little under 24
hours with her. But that's-- that would have been just, like, havin' her and pushin' her away.
MEGAN THOMPSON: But
that’s not what happened. Two weeks after getting here, Singer gave birth to
her daughter Doris. Little Doris now lives here, in the prison, with her mother
in a special unit called the “Wee Ones Nursery.”
BRENDA SINGER: She's
amazing. She's startin' to smile and coo back at me.
First smile breaks your heart. Just melt, you know?
MEGAN THOMPSON: And you
got to see it.
BRENDA SINGER: Yeah.
Yeah. Thanks to Wee Ones.
Leah Hession
is the nursery’s director.
LEAH HESSION: Wee Ones
was started in April of 2008 as a way for pregnant low level offenders, to be
able to keep their children after delivery, while the mother is still
incarcerated.
MEGAN THOMPSON: The United
States puts more females in prison than any other country in the world. And the
majority of incarcerated women are mothers. But prison nurseries are
rare. There are only eight in the country.
For some people watching
this, it might be a little bit surprising to see babies in a prison. Is it good
for a baby to be living in a prison?
LEAH HESSION: I
think so. These are infants. These are babies who are months old, who just wanna be held, and nursed, and loved by their mothers. And
that's what we're able to provide in a safe environment.
MEGAN THOMPSON: The
nursery is housed in its own dormitory, where mothers live separated from the
nearly 600 other prisoners.
LEAH HESSION: So this is
one of our mother's rooms. You'll notice it only has one bed. A typical
offender room is going to have a bunk bed so it'll be two offenders to a room.
With our mother's room, we only have one bed and room for the crib. So it gives
the mother and child time to bond.
MEGAN THOMPSON: When we
visited, there were four babies in the nursery. There is room for up to 10.
Pregnant prisoners can live here too.
LEAH HESSION: Over here,
this is also a nursery. This nursery does have a television in it. It's got two
of the electric swings so it's a little more - little more popular.
LEAH HESSION: This here
is our supply closet. So once a week, the mothers will bring - they have like a
reusable bag.
MEGAN THOMPSON:
Officials say the Wee Ones program is funded entirely by private donations and
grants including all the diapers and wipes.
LEAH HESSION: We have
two closets, we have a boys’ closet and a girls’ closet.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Same
goes for the baby clothes. Most of them are donated, and then re-used.
LEAH HESSION: The
mothers are able to come and exchange clothes every other week just as their
child grows so much in the first year.
GUARD: Lunch!
MEGAN THOMPSON: To live
here, women must be low-level offenders with zero history of violence. And
their sentences must be relatively short, so they’ll be released by the time
their child turns two. The stakes are high. If they break the rules, they could
get kicked out.
LEAH HESSION: We have
expectations from room inspections to classes and things like that that she
must complete. She's going to have a positive attitude and a willingness to
change her life.
JAMIE BEAM: I hate bein' on drugs. I hate that life. But I
can’t let it hold on to me cause I'm ready to move forward. I'm ready to be a
better person. I'm ready to be a better mom- more than anything.
MEGAN THOMPSON: 28-year
old Jamie Beam has battled addiction since she was 14 years old. She says
her drug of choice is methamphetamine.
She was convicted last year of burglary and of illegal possession of a
firearm. When she was locked up last summer she was about five months
pregnant.
JAMIE BEAM: I didn't
know where we would be. I didn't know what would happen, who-- who she'd be with. I didn't have any answers, and I was
very scared.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Khloe
was born in December.
JAMIE BEAM:
She is such a happy baby. She's full of smiles. Just very happy.
And I'm so glad that I didn't have to miss out on that.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Beam has
raised two other young daughters who are now living with their dad in Michigan.
In here, sober, Beam feels she’s able to focus more on Khloe than she was with
her other children.
JAMIE BEAM: I notice a
lot more parenting, you know, things than I did with my other girls just
because being on the outside there's distractions. There's comin'
and goin', you know, versus me and Khloe where it's
just, like, one on one, all the time, every day.
JAMIE BEAM : You know,
to be able to show her she's got a mom who loves her and is gonna
take care of her and be there for her. I don't know if later in the future if,
you know, if we didn't have this bond where our relationship would be. Because
I feel like that bond is gonna be how her whole life
might turn out. Sounds crazy, but yeah.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Angela
Tomlin says that’s not crazy at all. She’s a psychologist and expert in early
childhood development at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
ANGELA TOMLIN: It's
really important for kids to have that early attachment to their parents.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Tomlin
notes that the brains of infants are still developing. And babies need certain
social experiences to help their brains form.
ANGELA TOMLIN: And that
social experience that is most important is that relationship with the parent.
So we need, over and over again, day to day, moment-by-moment experiences of
having the parent see the baby, understand the baby's need, and fulfill it over
time. And what we understand that happens through that process is that the
child comes to know in, like, a real way that they are psychologically and
physically safe. And that sense of safety, or trust, is what we think of when we
think of as a secure attachment. That secure attachment has so many benefits
down the road. Doing well in school, getting along with other people. And
really growing up to be a sensitive parent themselves.
MEGAN THOMPSON:
Researchers at Columbia University compared babies who lived in prison
nurseries to those raised by mothers outside with similar risk factors, like
drug addiction. They found that a larger number of the prison-nursery babies
developed secure attachments.
Another Columbia study
found these children were less anxious and less depressed once they got to
preschool, compared to babies who’d been separated from their incarcerated
moms.
And, most children of
prisoners are separated. All the moms in the Wee Ones Nursery and of most
the other inmates have older kids they had to leave behind.
ANGELA TOMLIN: Any
time a child is separated from their parent that has the potential to be
experienced as a trauma.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Tomlin
says it can be especially traumatic for children when a mother goes to prison,
because she’s usually the primary caregiver.
ANGELA TOMLIN: So if Dad
goes to prison, Mom often is still there for the child. When Mom goes to
prison, a lot of times it's not the dad who's available to take care of the
child. It may be another family member. The child may be in a foster care
situation.
MEGAN THOMPSON: While
kids can develop secure attachments to other caregivers, like grandparents, and
regular visits to their mothers in prison can help, too.
JESSICA INHOLT: Every
time he comes down here that’s what he wants, dinosaurs.
The Indiana Women’s
Prison “Family Preservation Program” has a huge play area where visiting kids
can run free.
JESSICA INHOLT: I
personally pretty much just pretend like it's home.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Jessica Inholt didn’t qualify for the Wee Ones Nursery because her
sentence for dealing heroin was too long. But her mom faithfully brings her
two-year-old son, Tripp, to visit every weekend.
JESSICA INHOLT: You
know, I set snacks out for him. And make sure he's not gonna
hurt himself playing around. Being a first-time mom, and being in prison- I
just try and do the best that I can to learn how to be a mom while I'm here.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Play
rooms like this one go a long way towards helping moms develop and maintain
relationships with their children, says Angela Tomlin. Especially compared to
typical prison visiting rooms where prisoners often can’t hold their children,
or even might be sitting behind glass.
ANGELA TOMLIN: The child
needs to see the parent as a caregiver. So we need an environment where the
child can behave in a typical way, and the parent can have opportunity to
respond to the child in a typical way.
BRENDA SINGER: Hi baby!
MEGAN THOMPSON: Back in
the Wee Ones Nursery Brenda Singer stays in touch with her five other children
with phone calls. Most of them live in Ohio, too far away for regular visits.
BRENDA SINGER: Aw, you
got a belly ache?
MEGAN THOMPSON: Singer,
who’s been incarcerated at least 4 times before, tries to call every day.
BRENDA SINGER: I hope
you feel better. I love you.
BRENDA SINGER: I do
worry about them having trust with me. My oldest daughters I had-- quite a bit
of confrontation with them because they just felt like, you know, "We're
tired, Mom. So either get it right this time, or, you know, like, you know, I--
you're not gonna be my mom," pretty much is how
I got it. So it hurts them. You know, not only do we do the time, but they
do. So we let them down. I let them down, I should say.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Doing
time in the nursery is supposed to give moms the chance to turn things around.
And proponents of the nursery say this program can help make that happen. A
2013 study by the University of Indianapolis followed women who spent time in
the Wee Ones Nursery. Compared to women separated from their babies, they were
about half as likely to return to prison within their first year of release.
To make sure the new
moms can go to therapy and classes, there’s childcare provided by other,
low-level offenders who live on the unit, too.
While her baby’s looked
after, Jamie Beam attends a cocaine anonymous group, a 12-step program and
culinary arts classes. The prison also offers prenatal, postnatal and parenting
classes.
JAMIE BEAM: I feel
like if I weren't to be with her, I'd probably not be able to work on myself as
quick as I have been- just 'cause I feel like that-- I would be missing a
very important time of Khloe's life.
MEGAN THOMPSON: Brenda
Singer is going through a rehabilitation program here, too.
MEGAN THOMPSON: You've
been incarcerated before. Is there something about this time, this place, this
stay that means you're gonna turn it around?
BRENDA SINGER: Oh yeah.
I missed a lot. I'm gonna miss my grandson's birth.
And that tears me up. But I made those choices. So if this wasn't a smack in
the face, I don't know what would be.
MEGAN THOMPSON: When
Doris is older, when she's grown up, what are you gonna
tell her about this chapter of her life?
BRENDA SINGER: That
Mom- Mom learned a lot just by having her with me. She's my coach. As I call
her, she's my boss right now. And it's great. Because I need that. I need that
mentally, to be fixated on what's important. And it's not about the drugs. It's
not about pills or, you know, rollin' the next blunt
or drinkin' my next drink. It's about Doris, at the
end of the day. And all day, it's about her. So I think that's mentally making
me fit, you know, for the outside.
###
|
TIMECODE |
LOWER
THIRD |
1 |
1:37 |
LEAH HESSION INDIANA WOMEN’S PRISON |
2 |
6:39 |
ANGELA TOMLIN INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE |