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Is this a Prison or A College Dorm?

By Pat Trevino, Cuero Online

I grew up believing that in the United States, the punishment should fit the crime. That justice meant accountability. That if you hurt a child, you paid dearly for it — sometimes even prisoners themselves would deliver their own justice. Because apparently, even criminals in prison draw a line in the sand.

But today, I look at our Justice system — and I see something grotesque.

Ghislaine Maxwell, convicted of sex trafficking minors, is serving a 20-year sentence in a minimum-security federal prison in Bryan, Texas. She has access to yoga classes, gardening, and structured recreation. The facility has no perimeter fencing. That’s right — she’s not even locked up in the traditional sense.

She’s been interviewed by federal officials, offered the chance to testify before Congress, and allegedly may even receive a presidential pardon.

Prison where Maxwell was moved.

Let’s be clear: this woman groomed and recruited children — some as young as 14 — into a network of sexual abuse that spanned a decade, from 1994 to 2004. The full scope of Maxwell’s involvement likely extends far beyond the courtroom record.

Now I want you to do something for me. I want you to look at our eighth-grade girls.  I’m talking about Jr. High girls — that’s the age group we’re talking about — and tell me that what Maxwell did isn’t just vile. It’s straight up EVIL.

She lured these children with promises of modeling careers, education, and safety. Then she turned around and handed them over to Jeffrey Epstein and others, knowing full well what would happen. They were young girls, they were children, manipulated, their bodies used by filthy sick pedophiles.

And yet, Maxwell sleeps in a dormitory. She has legal counsel. She has rights. She has yoga. And the prison doesn’t even have a fence.

Now look at “Alligator Alcatraz.”

Deep in the Everglades, surrounded by swamp and silence, over 700 migrants are being held — many with no criminal record. Some are green card holders, others have pending asylum claims, and many were detained during routine ICE check-ins. Over 250 detainees have no charges or convictions in the U.S.

They are locked in wire-fenced cages, under fluorescent lights that never turn off. They sleep on metal bunks, swatting away mosquitoes, enduring fungal infections, and waiting — often without legal counsel, without family contact, and without daylight.

They’re allowed to shower every 3–4 days. Their outdoor time is infrequent and highly restricted. Some report not seeing daylight for days. Bond hearings are routinely canceled, and many are coerced into signing deportation orders without legal representation.

This is not justice. This is cruelty.

We are allowing children to be raped — and then giving their abuser a yoga mat. But locking up families who fled violence, who sought safety, who followed the rules — and treating them like animals.

So I ask: What is it going to take?

Will it take another child being trafficked while we debate immunity for the trafficker?
Will it take another detainee dying in a cage while we argue over jurisdiction?

Or will it take us — all of us — saying enough?

Because if we don’t, we’re telling every child in this country that being violated isn’t the crime — speaking up is. And that in America, justice wears a price tag!

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