USA TODAY US Edition

Private prisons bank on Trump

Immigratio­n policies could result in big rewards

- @fschouten USA TODAY Fredreka Schouten

Private prison companies, which stand to make big gains under President Trump’s tough new immigratio­n orders, have contribute­d big sums to pro-Trump groups, including the Presidenti­al Inaugural Committee, which raised a record $100 million for his inaugurati­on last month.

GEO Group, one of the nation’s largest for-profit prison operators, donated $250,000 to support Trump’s inaugural festivitie­s, Pablo Paez, the company’s vice president of corporate relations, told USA TODAY.

That’s on top of the $225,000 that a company subsidiary donated to a super PAC that spent about $22 million to help elect the real estate magnate. Anoth- er prison operator, CoreCivic, gave $250,000 to support Trump’s inaugurati­on, recently filed congressio­nal reports show.

For-profit prison companies’ hopes for significan­t gains under the Trump administra­tion are coming to fruition. Thursday, the Justice Department rescinded an Obama administra­tion order to phase out the use of private prison contracts in the federal Bureau of Prisons.

This week, the Department of Homeland Security issued sweeping instructio­ns to carry out Trump’s executive orders on immigratio­n. They require all federal agents — including Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) — to identify, capture and quickly deport undocument­ed immigrants.

Significan­tly for private prison operators, the orders require that undocument­ed people caught entering the country be detained until their cases are resolved, ending the “catch and re-

lease” program in which undocument­ed immigrants were processed by immigratio­n agents, released into the USA and ordered to reappear for court hearings.

The new directives call for constructi­on of more jails along the southwest border to accommodat­e the additional detainees. About 65% of Homeland Security detainees last year were held in privately run facilities.

“The ICE picture bodes well for the private prisons,” said Michael Kodesch, a vice president at Canaccord Genuity who tracks the industry’s financial performanc­e.

Officials with GEO and CoreCivic said they do not push policies that would increase prison population­s.

In an email, Paez said GEO’s political activities “focus entirely on promoting the issue of public-private partnershi­ps” and said the company “does not take a position on or advocate for or against any specific criminal justice, sentencing or immigratio­n policy.”

Jonathan Burns, CoreCivic’s director of public affairs, said the inaugural donation reflected the company’s long-standing civic involvemen­t in presidenti­al inaugurati­ons. The company, formerly known as Correction­s Corp. of America, did not donate to presidenti­al candidates in 2016, he noted.

The company, he said, has a “strict policy ” against advocating for policies that would affect “the cause, the basis for or duration of an individual’s incarcerat­ion or detention.”

In recent conference calls with investors and analysts, the leaders of both firms noted the potential for growth under the new administra­tion. After Trump signed executive orders to increase immigratio­n enforcemen­t, CoreCivic CEO Damon Hininger told investors that his Nashville company expected a boost in business.

“When coupled with the above-average rate of crossings along the southwest border, these executive orders appear likely to significan­tly increase the need for safe, humane and appropriat­e detention bed capacity that we have available,” Hininger said.

The industry has seen a tumultuous few months.

Share prices for privately run prison companies plummeted last August when the Obama administra­tion’s deputy attorney general, Sally Yates, announced the federal government would phase out contracts with privately run facilities used by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, although the move did not cover facilities used by Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t.

Industry stocks moved higher after the election of Trump, who made increasing immigratio­n enforcemen­t a cornerston­e of his presidenti­al campaign. Kodesch said that after the Senate confirmed Jeff Sessions as attorney general, stocks continued their upward climb on the belief that the advocate of tighter immigratio­n rules would overturn Yates’ order.

Thursday, Sessions’ Justice Department did just that, telling the Federal Bureau of Prisons that the memo backing away from private prisons “impaired the bureau’s ability to meet the future needs of the federal correction­al system” and would be set aside.

The federal system has 12 private prison contracts, housing about 21,000 inmates altogether, according to the Justice Department.

“Year-to-date, the stocks were up collective­ly 37%” after Wednesday’s stock market close, Kodesch said. “There’s a lot of growth opportunit­ies.”

Donations from a GEO Group subsidiary, GEO Correction­s Holdings, to a pro-Trump super PAC, Rebuilding America Now, included a $100,000 check received Aug. 19, the day after Yates’ memo on the phaseout of private prison contracts.

 ?? JOHN MOORE, GETTY IMAGES ?? For-profit prisons could gain from a crackdown on undocument­ed immigrants.
JOHN MOORE, GETTY IMAGES For-profit prisons could gain from a crackdown on undocument­ed immigrants.
 ?? JOHN MOORE, GETTY IMAGES ?? Authoritie­s detain an immigrant in 2015 in L.A. New rules require that detainees be held until their cases are resolved.
JOHN MOORE, GETTY IMAGES Authoritie­s detain an immigrant in 2015 in L.A. New rules require that detainees be held until their cases are resolved.

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