AmericaRevealed.org
The latest report by the
American Civil Liberties Union(ACLU) is not likely to inspire politicians to
shut down our private prisons when prison operators are pouring millions of
dollars into their campaign coffers.
Jobbing out the
incarceration business, said lawyer David Shapiro of the ACLU Prison Project
“has been a bonanza for the private prison industry, which rakes in billions of
dollars a year and dishes out multi-million dollar compensation packages to its
top executives.”
And those top executives, in
turn, between 1998 and 2000, for example, wrote over $1.2-million in checks to
political candidates and political parties. And why not, when their firms have
received such huge public subsidies as $68 billion in tax-free bonds to help
them build?
Since the 1980s Reagan era
shift to privatization, more than 150 private facilities---detention centers,
jails, and prisons----with a capacity of about 120,000 have been opened, and 7%
of all U.S. adults inmateshave been dumped in them.
“One study found 49% more
prisoner-on-staff and 65% higher prisoner-on-prisoner assaults in private
medium and minimum security prisons than in public ones,” Rosenthal writes.
Example: at the Northeast Ohio Correction
Center in Youngstown , operated by industry leader
Corrections Corporation of America(CCA), in a period of just 14 months there
were 13 stabbings, two murders and six escapes that ended in violence.
Rosenthal said other sociologists have documented “many other examples of
brutality and incompetence perpetrated in CCA-run facilities.”
Since private prisons
prosper in proportion to the number of prisoners they house, “the suspicion
remains that they may hold on to prisoners, particularly ones who are not
troublesome as a means to earn extra money,” Rosenthal writes. Even when
operators do not directly control discharge decisions, she notes, “by
controlling record-keeping about prisoners’ behavior they can have a
determining role in establishing when a prisoner is to be released or paroled.”
The ACLU report, titled, “Banking
on Bondage: Private Prisons and Mass Incarcerations,” was released
Nov. 2 and traces the rise of the for-profit prison companies that have
“capitalized on the nation’s addiction to incarceration (2.4-million behind
bars) to achieve gigantic profits.”
“Spurred by criminal laws
that impose needlessly steep sentences---especially for low-level, non-violent
offenders---and curtail rehabilitation opportunities, the United States today
imprisons more people than any other nation in the world,” an ACLU news release
states.
“The crippling cost of
incarcerating increasing numbers of Americans has saddled government budgets
with rising debt and exacerbated the current fiscal crisis confronting states
across the nation. Yet the two largest private prison companies alone obtained
nearly $3 billion in revenue in 2010,” the ACLU statement said.
It noted that Arizona is seeking to
add 5,000 more private beds despite its own Auditor General’s finding that
for-profit imprisonment may cost more than jailing them in public facilities.
The ACLU report asserts that
mass incarceration “wreaks havoc on communities by depriving individuals of
their liberty, draining government resources and bringing little or no benefit
to public safety.” The biggest losers in the privatization fiasco, apart from
the taxpayers, are members of the Afro-American and Hispanic communities whose
harsh sentences for minor crimes are filling many prison beds. Many marijuana
prisoners are doing harder time than white collar criminals.
“It is imperative that we
halt the expansion of for-profit incarceration,” Shapiro said, as “The private
prison industry helped create, and continues to feed off, the social ill of
mass incarceration.” He concludes, “Private prisons cannot be part of the
solution---economic or ethical---to our nation’s addiction to incarceration.”
To “halt the expansion” of
private prisons is an urgent first step---as long as it is quickly followed up
by closing every one of them now in operation. This would be a fine project for
church groups and civic associations. And one way to find beds for private
inmates would be to set free the hundreds of thousands of prisoners doing time
for victimless crimes such as marijuana possession and to transfer others who
rightfully belong in mental institutions, not behind bars. #
(Sherwood Ross is a
Miami-based public relations consultant who writes on political and military
topics. He formerly reported for the Chicago
Daily News and contributed regular news columns to wire services. Reach
him at sherwoodross10@gmail.com)
Please also read: Private Prisons and the American Police State
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