In a corner office peppered with awards, three jailhouse journalists designed the next edition of their newspaper as Nat King Cole serenaded them on the radio.
Deadline was approaching at the Prison Mirror.
The monthly publication run by and for inmates at the Stillwater correctional facility aims to shed "a ray of light" upon those behind bars, said senior editor Lennell Martin. "I think we have influence and a responsibility to make the world a better place."
Since 1887, the paper has acted as a vehicle for criminal justice reform, an outlet for prisoners to air grievances and rally against injustices — both real and perceived. Over the last 132 years, contributors have covered labor strikes, deadly prison riots and technological advancement.
Now, the longest continuously running prison newspaper in the United States is thriving among a dying breed of penal periodicals.
That may have something to do with its fabled beginnings.
Founding members included an infamous array of outlaws, including the Younger brothers of the Jesse James Gang, captured after a failed bank robbery attempt in Northfield. The three gangsters helped bankroll the Mirror, whose original motto was "God Helps Those Who Help Themselves." Editors later changed the catch phrase to its current form: "It's Never Too Late To Mend."
Peer institutions, also eager to illuminate readers about prison life, started their own inmate-run newsletters. But the prison press nose-dived after peaking in the mid-1970s, dwindling from several hundred publications to just a few dozen today.