Across America, county jails have quietly become the largest mental health institutions in our communities. Every person arrested for a state offense will likely pass through the county jail. Some will go on to prison. Others will be released back into our neighborhoods. What happens inside those walls—what treatment, education, or neglect they receive—can determine whether they return home ready to rebuild their lives, or return to the streets broken, untreated, and dangerous to themselves and others. This book dares to ask: What if jails could be more than warehouses of punishment? What if they could also be centers of healing? Author Craigen Armstrong introduces a groundbreaking model born inside Los Angeles County’s Twin Towers Jail—the largest jail system in the nation, and by default, its largest mental health facility. Here, incarcerated residents were trained as Mental Health Assistants (MHAs), transforming despair into dignity and chaos into care. With structure, training, and compassion, they became caregivers, advocates, and leaders—proving that even behind bars, transformation is possible. Inside This Book: Architecture of Healing – How structure, environment, and culture can turn a jail pod into a therapeutic community. - The Power Ten Principles – The guiding code that transforms policies into lived values, and inmates into leaders. - Stories of Transformation – Real accounts of MHAs who turned violence into trust, neglect into care, and hopelessness into redemption. - Field-Use Tools & Training Modules – Practical, step-by-step guides for training incarcerated residents to identify, support, and care for those living with severe mental illness. Why This Matters The county jail is the most critical building in any community. It is the crossroads where punishment and treatment collide. If we ignore mental illness inside, we guarantee its consequences outside. But if we train incarcerated residents to recognize, understand, and respond to mental illness, we create a ripple effect of safety, dignity, and healing that extends far beyond the walls. This is not theory—it is lived proof. When incarcerated people are trusted with responsibility, they rise. When structure is paired with compassion, healing takes root. And when dignity drives policy, incidents drop, compliance rises, and lives change. A Call to Action This book is a blueprint for correctional officers, mental health professionals, policymakers, and everyday citizens who believe that justice must include humanity. It is urgent, it is necessary, and it is possible—but only if we act now. Dignity by Design is not just a manual. It is a movement. A movement to restore dignity behind the walls, to protect our communities, and to prove that even in the hardest places, transformation is possible. Craigen Armstrong is living proof that redemption is possible, even in the darkest places. Once facing death row, Armstrong’s life could have ended as another statistic of America’s broken justice system. Instead, he chose transformation. Through resilience and an unshakable commitment to service, he became one of the first incarcerated Mental Health Assistants (MHAs) inside Los Angeles County’s Twin Towers Jail—the largest jail system in the nation, and by default, its largest mental health facility. In that role, Armstrong helped pioneer a model where incarcerated residents are trained to provide peer-led mental health support to society’s most vulnerable: men and women living with severe mental illness behind bars. His work proved that jails—too often warehouses of despair—can also become places of healing, dignity, and leadership. From death row to dignity, his story is more than personal—it’s a blueprint for systemic change. His life’s work challenges correctional leaders, policymakers, and communities to believe that no one is beyond redemption