At thirteen, William Thiel's already chaotic childhood collapsed. One mistake, born from trauma, neglect, and institutional failure, became the mark that followed him into adulthood. The state declared him a threat before he even knew himself. It handed him a life sentence without walls and turned his name into a warning signal for people he would never meet.Labeled: A Memoir does not look away. It drags you into the mind of a boy condemned and forced to live under a punishment so heavy it crushed any chance at innocence. This book tears down the curtain hiding what happens when the system brands a child, shames him publicly, and gives him no path back.It is a story made of stigma, silence, and survival. A story about living as the outlaw no one is permitted to defend and fighting to hold on to a sliver of humanity while a single label tries to devour everything it touches.This is not a redemption arc. It is not an apology.This is a dangerous book because it speaks a truth most people would rather ignore.When a child becomes the cautionary tale, the world stops seeing a child at all.And once you step into that world, you will not forget it.