Thursday, December 12, 2019

Corn-Fed

Corn-Fed, also know as Paul Schneider is a member of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang. The Aryan Brotherhood was created around 1964 and is considered a neo-Nazi group with about 15,000 to 20,000 associates who are around the world as prisoners and as people living in the free world. The US had segregation amongst society as well the jail system, so once prison began to desegregate, a large number of prisoners still had fixed mindsets. This lead to their first objective which was to try to protect themselves from Black majority gangs and make a profit from Latino inmates. Eventually, the goals for the group were to benefit themselves economically, create alliances, and be willing to kill other Black or Hispanic captives. Ways they publicized their beliefs and being were through their participation in drug trafficking and spreading their claimed swastikas and shamrock symbols.
Aryan Brotherhood hate symbol.svg
The group of individuals considered Charles Manson as an idol due to his careful planning for the murder of actress, Shannon Tate. The main restriction that members have is their communication or cooperation with the police which is looked down upon or can be seen as a threat to the group. This is exactly what Schneider did after his caught involvement in the SF dog mauling. When his character was looked into, he had given up information on how he was involved, what they did, and how he contributed to the brotherhood. After his forbidden talking, Schneider had to be moved to a different location in the system to avoid the potential actions taken against him by the group of radical men for his exposure to the police.
Image result for Corn fed prisoner
When Schneider had a confirmed association with the murder of Diane Whipple, the victim in the dog attack, he was given a third life sentence. This had been added to the time he already needed to serve from his attempted murder and aggravated assault, instances being an aggressive stabbing and an armed car robbery. Schneider's connection to the mauling was not only, his original ownership of the dogs, but was also his relationship to his defense lawyers which were also the secondary owners of both canines, Robert Noel and Marjorie Knoller. He became their adoptive son, at 38, violating the ethical boundaries of lawyers and suspected to have a financial motive. After the death of Whipple, it was discovered that the dogs were supposedly trained to protect Aryan Brotherhood projects outside of prison that they could benefit from.

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