How come no outrage over private prisons?

deprave

New Member
Yesterday, the Justice Policy Institute (JPI) released a report chronicling the political strategies of private prison companies “working to make money through harsh policies and longer sentences.” The report’s authors note that while the total number of people in prison increased less than 16 percent, the number of people held in private federal and state facilities increased by 120 and 33 percent, correspondingly. Government spending on corrections has soared since 1997 by 72 percent, up to $74 billion in 2007. And the private prison industry has raked in tremendous profits. Last year the two largest private prison companies — Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and GEO Group — made over $2.9 billion in revenue.JPI claims the private industry hasn’t merely responded to the nation’s incarceration woes, it has actively sought to create the market conditions (ie. more prisoners) necessary to expand its business.


According to JPI, the private prison industry uses three strategies to influence public policy: lobbying, direct campaign contributions, and networking. The three main companies have contributed $835,514 to federal candidates and over $6 million to state politicians. They have also spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on direct lobbying efforts. CCA has spent over $900,000 on federal lobbying and GEO spent anywhere from $120,000 to $199,992 in Florida alone during a short three-month span this year. Meanwhile, “the relationship between government officials and private prison companies has been part of the fabric of the industry from the start,” notes the report. The cofounder of CCA himself used to be the chairman of the Tennessee Republican Party.


The impact that the private prison industry has had is hard to deny. In Arizona, 30 of the 36 legislators who co-sponsored the state’s controversial immigration law that would undoubtedly put more immigrants behind bars received campaign contributions from private prison lobbyists or companies. Private prison businesses been involved in lobbying efforts related to a bill in Florida that would require privatizing all of the prisons in South Florida and have been heavily involved in appropriations bills on the federal level.
In October 2011 President Obama tapped Broderick Johnson as a senior advisor for his re-election campaign. According to OpenSecrets, a clearinghouse for lobbying data, Johnson lobbied extensively on behalf of the GEO Group since the
mid-1990s
. And Johnson’s so-called “advisorship” comes on the heels of President Obama’s 2010 nomination of Stacia Hylton as the new Director of the United States Marshals Service (USMS). Just months before her nomination Hylton started a private prison consulting firm— Hylton Kirk and Associates—while working at the Department of Justice (DOJ) as the Federal Detention Trustee. After retiring as a trustee, Hylton agreed to a consulting contract with The GEO Group worth $112,500.
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
Say a person gets convicted of anything. Depending on the crime. Now it's harder to get a job with a record and more likely for them to engage in illegal activity in order to survive.
And with today's internet
and more courts putting their records online
You live with your mistakes for the rest of your life
 

deprave

New Member
Since President Obama’s first day in office the Corrections Corporation of America and The GEO Group have been awarded $1.7 and 1.8 billion dollars in federal contracts, respectively. And beginning in October 2011 the Corrections Corporation of America has taken its place as the government’s top contractor whereas the GEO Group comfortably maintains the third-place position. Finally, according to USAspending, over one-quarter of private prison contracts have been established under “non-compete” agreements.The Obama Administration’s complicity with the private prison industry must not go unnoticed today or this November. For more information on private prison divestment please visit the National Prison Divestment Campaign’s website at http://prisondivestment.wordpress.com.
 

lifegoesonbrah

Well-Known Member
In October 2011 President Obama tapped Broderick Johnson as a senior advisor for his re-election campaign. According to OpenSecrets, a clearinghouse for lobbying data, Johnson lobbied extensively on behalf of the GEO Group since the
mid-1990s
. And Johnson’s so-called “advisorship” comes on the heels of President Obama’s 2010 nomination of Stacia Hylton as the new Director of the United States Marshals Service (USMS). Just months before her nomination Hylton started a private prison consulting firm— Hylton Kirk and Associates—while working at the Department of Justice (DOJ) as the Federal Detention Trustee. After retiring as a trustee, Hylton agreed to a consulting contract with The GEO Group worth $112,500.
 

Moses Mobetta

Well-Known Member
And with today's internet
and more courts putting their records online
You live with your mistakes for the rest of your life
It's like a life sentence for things like petty theft. Ridiculous. If you have a felony your screwed. Make one mistake and your screwed. Poor people who have no money for lawyers get slammed, whether they are guilty or not in many cases. Police often arrest a person who is convienent and not necessarily guilty.
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
It's like a life sentence for things like petty theft. Ridiculous. If you have a felony your screwed. Make one mistake and your screwed. Poor people who have no money for lawyers get slammed, whether they are guilty or not in many cases. Police often arrest a person who is convienent and not necessarily guilty.
Poor people get
Public Pretenders for legal defense
Public Pretenders are interested in clearing their work load not justice
and work hand in hand with the DA in figuring out plea agreements
The defendant has two choices in most cases
Take the deal
Or get totally fucked by going to trial
 

lifegoesonbrah

Well-Known Member
Poor people get
Public Pretenders for legal defense
Public Pretenders are interested in clearing their work load not justice
and work hand in hand with the DA in figuring out plea agreements
The defendant has two choices in most cases
Take the deal
Or get totally fucked by going to trial

Thank you Obama for supporting the system.

 

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
Poor people get
Public Pretenders for legal defense
Public Pretenders are interested in clearing their work load not justice
and work hand in hand with the DA in figuring out plea agreements
The defendant has two choices in most cases
Take the deal
Or get totally fucked by going to trial
Or they can learn about JURY NULLIFICATION. check out fija.org or nhjury.com
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
Thank you Obama for supporting the system.
RON PAUL IS STILL TAKING CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS FROM WHITE SUPREMACISTS
Remember in 2008 when Ron Paul was catching hell for accepting a $500 donation from Stormfront owner Don Black? Well since that time Virginia Abernethy, board member and currently vice-presidential candidate of the White Supremacist political party American Third Position (A3P) has donated over $4000 to Rep. Paul, $2275 for his currently presidential campaign alone. To all his supporters trying to defend him against the racism charge, it just got harder

http://www.onepeoplesproject.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=940:ron-paul-is-still-taking-campaign-contributions-from-white-supremacists&catid=29:antifa-news&Itemid=14
 

deprave

New Member
Yesterday, the Justice Policy Institute (JPI) released a report chronicling the political strategies of private prison companies “working to make money through harsh policies and longer sentences.” The report’s authors note that while the total number of people in prison increased less than 16 percent, the number of people held in private federal and state facilities increased by 120 and 33 percent, correspondingly. Government spending on corrections has soared since 1997 by 72 percent, up to $74 billion in 2007. And the private prison industry has raked in tremendous profits. Last year the two largest private prison companies — Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and GEO Group — made over $2.9 billion in revenue.JPI claims the private industry hasn’t merely responded to the nation’s incarceration woes, it has actively sought to create the market conditions (ie. more prisoners) necessary to expand its business.


According to JPI, the private prison industry uses three strategies to influence public policy: lobbying, direct campaign contributions, and networking. The three main companies have contributed $835,514 to federal candidates and over $6 million to state politicians. They have also spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on direct lobbying efforts. CCA has spent over $900,000 on federal lobbying and GEO spent anywhere from $120,000 to $199,992 in Florida alone during a short three-month span this year. Meanwhile, “the relationship between government officials and private prison companies has been part of the fabric of the industry from the start,” notes the report. The cofounder of CCA himself used to be the chairman of the Tennessee Republican Party.


The impact that the private prison industry has had is hard to deny. In Arizona, 30 of the 36 legislators who co-sponsored the state’s controversial immigration law that would undoubtedly put more immigrants behind bars received campaign contributions from private prison lobbyists or companies. Private prison businesses been involved in lobbying efforts related to a bill in Florida that would require privatizing all of the prisons in South Florida and have been heavily involved in appropriations bills on the federal level.
Mother Jones
[h=1]Obama Budget: Grow Prisons and Keep Gitmo[/h]
Mother Jones said:
President Obama's budget request for fiscal year 2013 includes cuts to everything from Medicare and Medicaid to defense and even homeland security. But federal prisons are among its "biggest winners," according to an analysis by the Federal Times. The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) is seeking a 4.2 percent increase, one of the largest of any federal agency, which would bring its total budget to more than $6.9 billion.



So what kind of criminals are we spending all this money to incarcerate? If you're thinking terrorists and kidnappers, think again. According to the Sentencing Project, only 1 in 10 federal prisoners is locked up for a violent offense of any kind. More than half are drug offenders—hardly surprising, since federal prosecutions for drug offenses more than doubled between 1984 and 2005. The 1980s also produced mandatory minimum sentences, which meant we were not only sending more people to prison, we were keeping them there far longer—a perfect formula for an exploding prison population.


"Increasing funding for more prison beds has been shown to be a self-fulfilling prophecy," notes the Justice Policy Institute. "If you build it, they will come."


Indeed, the federal prison population ballooned from fewer than 25,000 inmates in 1980 to 210,000 in 2010—an eightfold increase—while the federal prison budget grew by a whopping 1,700 percent. Nowadays, as state prison populations have begun to fall for the first time in decades—the product of a steady decline in violent-crime rates, lawsuits over prison conditions, and deficits that have forced state officials to rethink their incarceration policies—the number of federal inmates continues to grow by about 3 percent a year. The projected 2013 federal prison population is 229,268 inmates—6,500 or more than in 2012. "Increasing funding for more prison beds has been shown to be a self-fulfilling prophecy," notes the Justice Policy Institute. "If you build it, they will come."


According to Obama's new budget, new federal prisons opening in Mississippi and West Virginia will house some 2,500 of those additional prisoners. Another 1,000 will be placed in private prisons—which now hold 18 percent of federal prisoners, far more than most state systems. The remainder of the new inmates will presumably be jammed into the existing federal prison facilities, which are already operating at 142 percent of capacity.

Factored into the budget request is $44 million in savings from an expansion of programs that let prisoners shave time off their sentences by behaving well and participating in educational and vocational programs, plus a compassionate release program for seriously ill inmates who have served most of their time—a smart move for the BOP, since it would shift its costliest medical cases onto Medicaid. But there's no guarantee that these "program offsets" will pass, especially given that Congress nixed similar proposals last year.


Conspicuously absent from the Obama budget is an item the administration requested for 2011 and 2012: money to purchase and retrofit a disused Illinois prison to serve as Gitmo North, a home for detainees now held at Guantanamo Bay. Since late 2009, Obama has floated plans to buy Thomson state prison and convert it into a second supermax for Gitmo residents who were tried and convicted on American soil. But Congress has yet to come through with the cash, and it seems, at least in this budget, that the White House has thrown in the towel.

If the federal government acquires Thomson, it will not be for the purpose of replacing Guantanamo, but "to meet critical federal prison capacity needs," a Department of Justice spokesperson told TPM. In other words, we could end up with Gitmo on top of a new federal supermax like the one in Florence, Colorado—the closest thing to a torture chamber that exists in America today.
 

Moses Mobetta

Well-Known Member
RON PAUL IS STILL TAKING CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS FROM WHITE SUPREMACISTS
Remember in 2008 when Ron Paul was catching hell for accepting a $500 donation from Stormfront owner Don Black? Well since that time Virginia Abernethy, board member and currently vice-presidential candidate of the White Supremacist political party American Third Position (A3P) has donated over $4000 to Rep. Paul, $2275 for his currently presidential campaign alone. To all his supporters trying to defend him against the racism charge, it just got harder

http://www.onepeoplesproject.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=940:ron-paul-is-still-taking-campaign-contributions-from-white-supremacists&catid=29:antifa-news&Itemid=14
Right but as long as the current leadership remains we have the same old crap. Prison populations made up of over 50% latinos in my state who are not truly representative of crimes comitted in the community just easy targets - targets of convienence. No money for defense atty's and poor English in some cases = prison.
 

deprave

New Member
RON PAUL IS STILL TAKING CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS FROM WHITE SUPREMACISTS
Remember in 2008 when Ron Paul was catching hell for accepting a $500 donation from Stormfront owner Don Black? Well since that time Virginia Abernethy, board member and currently vice-presidential candidate of the White Supremacist political party American Third Position (A3P) has donated over $4000 to Rep. Paul, $2275 for his currently presidential campaign alone. To all his supporters trying to defend him against the racism charge, it just got harder

http://www.onepeoplesproject.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=940:ron-paul-is-still-taking-campaign-contributions-from-white-supremacists&catid=29:antifa-news&Itemid=14
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
Obama supports the Prison Industrial Complex....Something which you were strongly opposed to about 20 minutes ago....
I still am against it

But from What i understand

SB1070 is a law in Arizona that was created by the Prison Industry
and Fought by the Obama administration

Any thoughts on that?
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
And how does this work out?
Obama has announced that we will not detain Illegal Immigrants unless they are criminals

Since most private prison inmates (fact) are illegal immigrants

Wouldnt that be bad for private prisons bottom line?
 
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