With
Sessions' Sentencing Change, It's Time To End Secrecy Around Private Prisons
By Lisa
Rosenberg
Scandal-ridden Wyatt private prison in Central Falls |
Those prisoners will
have to be incarcerated somewhere, which is perhaps the reason for the Attorney
General's February memo reversing an Obama-era directive to phase out the
Justice Department's use of private prisons.
While the private prison
population will likely increase, taxpayers can expect little in terms of
accountability in return for footing the bill for government contracts with
private prison companies.
Even though for-profit
prisons are fulfilling a government role by housing federal prisoners, the
industry remains shrouded in secrecy and shielded from meaningful public
oversight.
By asserting their
status as private entities, private prison companies exempt themselves from the
public's chief tool for transparency and accountability, the Freedom Of
Information Act (FOIA), making it harder to assess whether private prisons are
comparable to their federally-run counterparts.
A damning 2016 report by the Justice Department found that private prisons were less safe and secure [oig.justice.gov] than government-operated facilities, and that Bureau of Prisons (BOP) oversight of private prisons was often lacking.
Private prisons under
federal contract can shield from public scrutiny factors that are necessary to
determine whether private prisons are adequately performing their contractual
duties, including:
- the number of deaths and sexual assaults that occur while in custody;
- the number and types of security breaches that occur;
- guard-to-prisoner ratios and data on overcrowding;
- information on prisoners' access to medical care;
- and whether the private prisons are in compliance with their contractual obligations.
In 2015, the Bureau of
Justice Statistics reported that about 18 percent [bjs.gov] (34,900) of federal
prisoners were held in private prison facilities.
The statistics for
immigrant detention facilities are much larger -- a 2016 DHS advisory committee
report noted that 65 percent [dhs.gov] of Immigrations and Custom Enforcement
(ICE) detainees are held in for-profit detention centers.
By implementing policies
expected to further increase both the prison population and the number of
undocumented immigrants in detention, the Trump administration has given
private prison companies a significant boost.
The two largest
companies, CoreCivic (formerly Corrections Corporation of America) and Geo
Group, saw a dramatic increase in stock prices [money.cnn.com] this year.
Moreover, a month before
the 2016 election, Geo Group hired two former Sessions aides [politico.com] to
lobby for federal government contracts with private prisons.
Sessions also supported
private prisons [motherjones.com] in his home state of Alabama, as attorney
general and later as Senator.
By housing tens of
thousands of federal prisoners, the private prison industry is a proxy for the
federal government.
As a condition of this
role, private prisons should be accountable to the taxpayers from which they
profit.
Congress and the public
should demand that private prisons are subject to the same public access and
information laws with which federal prisons must comply, to ensure that they
are living up to their contractual obligations, that they are not wasting
taxpayer dollars, and that they are as safe and secure as their federal
counterparts.
Rosenberg is executive
director of OpenTheGovernment.org.