Alfred is as confused as ever. Gee thanks, Gary. Although he knows that he could go to the store and buy a whole new strand, Alfred stubbornly wants to fix it himself. Her tension relieved, Enid schedules a ten-day drug holiday for Alfred to determine whether he will be eligible for Correcktall. Gary goes to the medical supply store to pick up the shower bar. She. He can hear her talking in her bedroom and she quickly pops out when he knocks. The probation officer is responsible for writing the pre-sentence investigation report. Denise laughs and says that it's just "Mexican A" (6.285). Gary arrives a few minutes later with a bag of "railroad memorabilia" (6.676) he just bought. Society cannot afford to imprison everyone who violates the law. Chapter 9. And he has one question that he wants to ask Chip, "his intellectual son" (6.36). To her disappointment, it's only a bottle of wine—no Aslan. Community corrections are a way to punish offenders without incarcerating them. Chapter 12. Franzen, you sly dog! Probation is a widely used sentencing alternative in which offenders are not incarcerated if they promise good behavior and agree to restrictions and/or requirements set by a judge. The decision to grant parole is based on three principles: retribution, rehabilitation, and prison space. She finds two voicemails on her phone when she returns from Philly: one from Emile telling her that he took her job at the Generator, and one from Robin wanting to talk. Movies. He fumbles with the lights and they come back on, only to flicker back. Denise runs outside. He says that Alfred, Enid finally breaks down and asks her friend Bea Meisner—who's about to visit her daughter in Austria—to bring her back a six-month supply of Aslan. We're shown one of Alfred's hallucinations: He's in a "prison yard" (6.1188) being intimidated by wardens and fellow patients alike; he hopes that Chip will rescue him. Alfred is having a psychotic episode and Gary feels himself going a bit mad while standing in the bathroom with him. The family sits down to eat. Parole grew from the philosophy that the penal system should help the offender return to society. Learn corrections chapter 4 with free interactive flashcards. Denise finds the workshop door locked and freaks out—she immediately thinks that Alfred is going to kill himself. Her mood is lifted the next morning, however, when Chip calls and tells her that he'll be home for Christmas. He continues mumbling about Little Rock and the bottom of his bench. Chapter 3. Gary stops by the airport and picks up Denise. Somehow, just. Awakening in a Chicago motel room on Thanksgiving morning with the realization that the life he has worked so hard to create is about to take a dark turn, Chip is forced to acknowledge what he has been avoiding for quite some time. The mother and daughter have a heart-to-heart. He creeps into the hallway and realizes that it was just Denise. She's also getting into the Christmas spirit because Gary and Jonah. After things at the university begin to go wrong, however, he succumbs to his own weaknesses and the manipulations of Melissa Paquette, a young, entitled and supercilious undergrad. Gary finally reaches a breaking point, shouting at everyone and storming out. CHAPTER TWO COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS . Their session ends after Alfred pees his pants while mumbling something about the "bottom of the bench" (6.761) and a man with "blue cheeks" (6.765). Offenders returning to society face three primary obstacles: prisonization, weakened social ties, and stigmatization. Their escape is cut short when their car flips off the road. | 2. Shock probation is a program in which the offender receives a false sentence in jail or prison, but is released on probation after 30 to 90 days of incarceration. Chapter 11. Her big brother has to stay that extra week. They go to Christmasland, St. Jude's annual Christmas light show, later that night; both Enid and Gary are moved by the spectacle. And what does she want for return? But he's scared. He hates the medical supply store because it's filled with his least favorite things: "large quantities of human bodies" and "poor people" (6.217).