Protesters detained after blocking CoreCivic headquarters in Nashville
Officers worked for hours Monday to unchain protesters as they occupied the property of a private prison company’s corporate headquarters, shutting down Nashville-based CoreCivic’s office building for the day.
As of Monday afternoon, the Metro Nashville Police Department had arrested at least 19 of the few dozen protesters on trespassing charges, some of whom had locked themselves to cement-filled barrels to block parking garage entrances to the office.
One protester, a woman sitting atop a 20-foot tripod fashioned from wooden beams, was brought down by special operations officers after nine and a half hours and the use of the department’s mobile ramp truck.
CoreCivic, formerly known as Corrections Corporation of America, is one of the nation’s largest owners and operators of private prisons, operating roughly 65 facilities across 19 states, including the Silverdale Detention Center in Hamilton County and the Metro Davidson County Detention Facility on Harding Place.
The company contracts with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and runs eight immigration detention centers, but has repeatedly declined to provide current copies of its contracts to operate those facilities.
In a statement, CoreCivic said activists are distorting the private prison operator’s role in immigration detention.
“CoreCivic plays a valued but limited role in America’s immigration system, which we have done for every administration — Democrat and Republican — for more than 30 years,” said company spokeswoman Amanda Gilchrist in an email Monday morning.
“While we know this is a highly charged, emotional issue for many people, much of the information about our company being shared by special interest groups is wrong and politically motivated, resulting in some people reaching misguided conclusions about what we do.”
Ashley Dixon, a former CoreCivic correctional officer who worked at the state’s largest private prison, Trousdale Turner Correctional Center, until she quit about eight months ago, was among the protesters arrested.
“I quit because I witnessed two people die due to medical neglect,” she said. Two of the dozens of tombstone signs protesters put up bore the names of those two inmates, Jonathan Salada and Jeff Mihm.
Dixon made similar allegations in late 2017 during a legislative hearing. CoreCivic said it investigated her statements and was unable to find sufficient evidence to substantiate several of her claims.
Nashville police on Monday afternoon said they would be tallying how many officers and man hours were used to respond to the protest, though that information wasn’t immediately available.