On May 6th, Michael Santos led a live webinar to walk people through exactly how to use the free materials at PrisonProfessors.org. The webinar covered what you can start doing right nowâwhether youâve just been charged, already sentenced, or sitting in prison wondering what happens next (our transcripts are often sent to people in prison).
This blog gives you the full picture: what we taught, what questions were asked, and why some people end up with better outcomes than others.
Donât Wait for Someone to Tell You to Start
People stall out in this system for all kinds of reasons. They trust their lawyer will âhandle everything.â Theyâre overwhelmed. They assume theyâll get to it when the timing is better.
Then the PSR interview shows up, or sentencing is four weeks away, and they havenât written anything, havenât documented anything, and have nothing to show the judge beyond a couple of letters and whatever their lawyer says in court.
Thatâs what this webinar was aboutâgetting ahead of that.
Michael Santos said it best:
âNo one should work harder than you for your liberty. And no one can do the work but you.â
What Happens When Your Lawyer Doesnât Want the Narrative
Scotty joined the webinar and asked a question weâve heard hundreds of times:
âMy lawyer told me not to bother with a personal narrative. Thatâs not how they do things.â
Michaelâs response wasnât combative. It was direct:
âYou donât have to argue. You just say, âI respect your view, but I want the judge to hear directly from me.â Then you follow through. You write it. You own it. And you hand it to the probation officer at the PSR interview.â
Scottyâs situation isnât rare. Some lawyers donât use personal narratives. That doesnât mean you canât. A well-prepared narrative helps the judge understand you as more than a case file. If you donât write it, no one else will.
Preparing for the PSR: You Only Get One Shot
Scotty also had his PSR interview coming upâmoved back due to a medical issue. That gave him extra time. The question was how to use it.
Michael gave this advice:
âWalk into that interview with a printed copy of your story. Tell the officer, âI know I might forget some things in the moment. I wrote this to help you understand what Iâve been doing, what Iâve learned, and who I am.ââ
If youâre polite, clear, and professional, the officer may include it in your PSR. Thatâs the document the judge reads before sentencing. Itâs what the Bureau of Prisons reads when youâre in custody. Itâs what your case is built on.
You either help influence that document or you let others do it for you.
After Sentencing: How Shamirâs Judge Said One ThingâBut the Outcome Was Different
Shamir was sentenced to six months. During the hearing, the judge said:
âI donât care if he serves this from home.â
But the judgment didnât include that condition. So now the BOP is in control.
Shamir reached out right after sentencing. He asked if there was anything he could still do.
Yes. There is.
Michael explained:
âIf the BOP is going to look at your case and consider early release, theyâre going to look at what youâve done since sentencing. That includes a release plan. It includes a documented record of what youâre building.â
Shamir is now building that record through our nonprofit platformâpublishing a Talent Profile and preparing for home confinement review. That work wonât guarantee anything. But doing nothing guarantees nothing changes.
Early in the Process: Paulâs Call with His Public Defender
Paul had just received his target letter. He asked a good question:
âWould it help to watch my judge in court before my own hearing?â
Michael told him thatâs fine, but itâs not where the leverage is. Judges donât need you to watch them. They need something to read.
âIâve spoken to more than 20 federal judges. Most of them said the same thing: âI already know what the lawyer will say. I want to hear from the person facing sentencing. I want to know what theyâve done since getting charged.ââ
Thatâs your lane. Not court watching. Not speculation. Work.
Paul now knows he can use this time to write his narrative, start a service project, and track what heâs doing weeklyâbefore anyone else decides it for him.
Family Members Want to Help. Hereâs How.
Joanâs son was under investigation but hadnât been charged. She wanted to know how she could help.
Michael gave her a simple answer:
âYou donât need to understand every part of the law. You just need to learn enough to guide him. You became a nurse by studying. Same approach applies here. Read the blog. Learn the stages. Help him ask better questions.â
Ritaâs son had already been inside two years. She asked if there was still a way to connect, to get his progress seen.
âYes,â Michael said. âHe can write. He can create a profile. You can help get it published. Even after sentencing, even in custody, thereâs always a next step. Thatâs what this platform is for.â
Whatâs Actually on PrisonProfessors.org?
Daily Blog
Every day thereâs a new postâcase examples, mistakes to avoid, whatâs working in the system, and how people in our community are moving forward.
Talent Profile Platform
This is where you can build a documented record of what youâre doing. You can track your work. Others can read it. And itâs built to be shared with:
- Judges
- Probation officers
- BOP staff
- Reentry partners
- Future employers
Itâs freeâbut only useful if you actually use it.
What To Do If You Donât Know Where to Start
Start here:
- Download the PSR prep materials.
- Write your story. Edit it. Refine it.
- Join the next live webinar.
- Begin a service project you can track.
- Build your release plan in writing.
- Create a Talent Profile if you want your work seen.
You donât need to figure it all out today. But you do need to stop waiting.
Closing Words from Michael Santos
âPeople who wait lose time. People who workânot perfectly, not all at once, but every dayâthey get better outcomes. Not always shorter sentences. But better ones. Better PSRs. Better reviews. Better reentry. It starts now.â
If youâre wondering whether itâs too early or too late, the answer is the same:
No. Itâs not.
Justin Paperny