Shocking: Nation's First Private Prison Is A Hellhole

The Real

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Over 18 Months, Nation's First Privately Owned State Prison Has Declined Rapidly | ThinkProgress

In an unprecedented experiment fueled by budget concerns, Ohio sold a state prison to Corrections Corporation of America, one of the largest private prison corporations in the country, in 2011. Within a year, a state audit of Lake Erie Correctional Institute, the nation’s first privately owned state prison, found rampant abuse and abysmal conditions well below state standards. The CCA prison was given another chance to pass, but flunked another inspection four months later. Independent reports continue to illuminate filthy, broken facilities, as well as much higher rates of crime and violence in and around the prison. On Tuesday, the ACLU of Ohio sent Ohio lawmakers a comprehensive timeline of the prison’s decline since CCA took over.

The Lake Erie prison is now reportedly overcrowded at 130 percent capacity, with single-person cells holding 3 inmates each, according to internal documents obtained by the ACLU. Assaults on guards and other inmates have skyrocketed by 40 percent.

In fact, on the same day the ACLU released their timeline, the Lake Erie prison had to tamp down a series of inmate fights that lead to the confinement of 500 inmates.

Private prison companies have been repeatedly caught cutting corners on space, sanitation, and staff in order to maximize their profits. As a result, deadly riots frequently break out at these facilities, sparked by poor food quality, lack of health care access, and unsanitary conditions.

Despite Lake Erie’s multiple violations of state standards, Ohio has stubbornly maintained its infatuation with private prisons. The state plans to outsource prison food to Aramark, a private vendor already under investigation in Kentucky for multiple contract violations, including serving old food that had not been stored properly and overbilling the state.

Republican-dominated state legislatures are all too eager to ignore the private prison industry’s dismal record. CCA and other companies like GEO are paying well to maintain their massively profitable government contracts; the industry spent $45 million on lobbying in the past decade. CCA has done especially well for itself, rebounding from near bankruptcy in 2000 to rake in a net income of $162 million in 2011.

@KingpinOG, I hope your state doesn't decide to create more of these.
 
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Sensitive Blake Griffin

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the mechanic

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Theyre only privatizing the profits from the look of it..the costs are still socialised...

If this happened in the third world the Media would call this corruption..since its ohio its "privatization"
 

88m3

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this needs to be banned, what are they going to do next privatize the judicial process?

@BarNone
 
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Orbital-Fetus

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States sign contracts with the owners of these private prisons and are obligated to keep them at 90% capacity (% may vary from state to state).

this means that people are being arrested and sentenced in order to fulfill a contract...that's fukked up.
 

Bud Bundy

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the mechanic

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wait wait...but shouldn't the free private market fix all of our problems?? :sadcam:

:mjpls: What does a freemarket have to do with any of this..

this is corporatocracy..the only reason these corporations want to put people in cages is because theyre given money taken from taxpayers to do so

In a free world would you willingly pay for someone to be locked up ???
 

Gallo

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Outside of the assault on guards I really don't have a problem with anything in that article. If it were up to me they would be living in even worst conditions and doing slave labor.
 

714562

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When the goal is to make a profit, and your sole activity is to keep a bunch of cons separated from society, what else do you do?

Cut costs. Simple as that.

The government has entirely different motives when running prisons.

I'll bet they accepted a nice lowball contract too, thinking they would entice the government away from other companies. Now they're stuck with a nickel-and-dime deal and no way to turn a buck besides make the prison shytty or lease the cons out as labor.

If we're going to do this, why not just sell convicts wholesale to manufacturers or labor-service companies and be done with it?
 
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