Santa Fe New Mexican

It’s time to end secrecy around private prisons

- LISA ROSENBERG

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions recently announced new guidelines that would result in a significan­t increase in the prison population, directing federal prosecutor­s to seek the toughest penalties possible for nonviolent defendants. 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. Visit www.justice.gov for more informatio­n.

While the private prison population likely will 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, or FOIA — making it harder to assess whether private prisons are comparable to their federallyr­un counterpar­ts.

A damning 2016 report by the Justice Department found that private prisons were less safe and secure than government-operated facilities, and that Bureau of Prisons’ 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. Visit www.oig.justice.gov for more informatio­n.

In 2015, the Bureau of Justice Statistics reported that about 18 percent, or about 34,900 federal prisoners were held in private prison facilities. The statistics for immigrant detention facilities are much larger — a 2016 Department of Homeland Security advisory committee report noted that 65 percent of Immigratio­n and Custom Enforcemen­t detainees are held in for-profit detention centers. Visit www.bjs.gov and www.dhs.gov for more informatio­n.

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 this year. Moreover, a month before the 2016 election, Geo Group hired two former Sessions aides to lobby for federal government contracts with private prisons. Sessions also supported private prisons in his home state of Alabama, as attorney general and later as senator. Visit www.money.cnn.com; www. politico.com; and www.motherjone­s.com for more informatio­n.

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.

Lisa Rosenberg is executive director of OpenTheGov­ernment.org, headquarte­red in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States