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Federal government ending use of private prisons

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NEW YORK TIMES

Guards escort a prisoner inside the privately run Saguaro Correctional Center in Eloy, Ariz. on Oct. 16, 2009.

WASHINGTON >> The Obama administration announced today it will phase out its use of some private prisons, affecting thousands of federal inmates and immediately sending shares of the two publicly traded prison operators plunging.

In a memo to the Bureau of Prisons, Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates told it to start reducing “and ultimately ending” the Justice Department’s use of private prisons. The announcement follows a recent Justice Department audit that found that the private facilities have more safety and security problems than government-run ones.

The Obama administration says the declining federal prison population justifies the decision to eventually close privately run prisons. The federal prison population — now at about 193,000 — has been dropping due to changes in federal sentencing policies over the past three years.

The policy change does not cover private prisons used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which hold up to 34,000 immigrants awaiting deportation.

“Private prisons served an important role during a difficult period, but time has shown that they compare poorly to our own Bureau facilities,” Yates wrote in a memo to the acting director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons. As private prison contracts come to an end, the bureau is not to renew the contract or it should at least “substantially” reduce its scope, Yates wrote. She did not specify a timeline for when all federal inmates would be in government-owned facilities.

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton says the country should move away from using private facilities to house inmates. The Clinton campaign has said it no longer accepts contributions from private prison interests, and if it receives such a contribution, it will donate that money to charity. The private prison industry is a major contributor to Republican political campaigns, particularly in recent years. GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump has said he supports the use of private prisons.

The private prisons on the chopping block are operated by three private companies — Corrections Corporation of America, GEO Group Inc., and Management and Training Corporation. After the announcement Thursday, Corrections Corp. stock dropped $13.22, or 48.6 percent, to $14 and Geo Group tumbled $13.80, or 42.7 percent, to $18.49. Both companies get about half their revenue from the federal government.

The Management and Training Corporation and Corrections Corporation of American issued statements saying they were disappointed with the decision. They also said they disagreed with the conclusions of an inspector general’s audit that preceded the Justice Department’s decision.

The federal government started to rely on private prisons in the late 1990s due to overcrowding. As of December 2015, private prisons held about 12 percent of the total federal prison population, or 22,500 inmates, according to the inspector general report released earlier this month. Many of the inmates are foreign nationals who are being held on immigration offenses, the audit said.

Immigration and human rights advocates have long-complained about the conditions in privately-run prisons. Amnesty International urged states to follow suit. Some states, such as Kentucky, already have.

Before Thursday, the Bureau of Prisons had been working toward the goal of phasing out private prison contracts when, three weeks ago, it did not renew a contract for 1,200 beds, Yates said. Thursday’s policy change also included direction to change a current solicitation for a private prison contract, cutting the maximum number of beds required by 66 percent.

The state Department of Public Safety contracts with Corrections Corp. to house inmates from Hawaii on the mainland.

10 responses to “Federal government ending use of private prisons”

  1. BigIsandLava says:

    Looks like da braddahs coming home

  2. nodaddynotthebelt says:

    So where are they going to house these inmates? And then the other hand will fine the other for over crowding. And the tax payers will be the losers as they not only have to pay more to house these inmates due to union labor but now they have to pay these stiff penalties for the over crowding. And so the vicious cycle continues on the tax payers. And guess what? The very criminals we house more often than not probably did not PAY into the system.

  3. etalavera says:

    First thing that came to mind was “I guess execs from Corrections Corp. of America (CCA) forgot their annual campaign contributions to the Dems.”

  4. residenttaxpayer says:

    Easy for the federal government to do as they have the money and resources to expand or build new facilities…on the other hand state corrections departments are often overcrowded and facilities are antiquated and the states are unwilling or can’t afford to build new facilities or update existing ones so they depend upon private prisons to help house the burgeoning inmate population ……..

    • klastri says:

      You haven’t been following the news. The federal prison population has been dropping for years, as the crime rate fell and as drug use sentences changed. States like Hawai’i use the disgraceful prisons owned by CCA – where inmates are killed and left to die from illness at unacceptable rates. Privatizing prisons has been a hot mess.

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