
Illustration: AΓ―da Amer/Axios
A handful of American businesses have their fingers in almost every aspect of prison life, raking in billions of dollars every year for products and services β often with little oversight.
The big picture: Taxpayers, incarcerated people and their families spend around $85 billion a year on public and private correction facilities, bail and prison services, according to the Prison Policy Initiative.
- For-profit prison companies arose in response to the government's incapacity to handle the skyrocketing incarcerated population.
- Now entrenched, they've become "one more hurdle" to changing the American system of mass incarceration, Lauren-Brooke Eisen of the Brennan Center for Justice told Axios.
- These companies also have been known to cut corners β sometimes endangering people β in order to profit off of a system that disproportionately impacts the impoverished and marginalized.
Here's how they make money:
π Phone calls
About 80% of inmate calls go through Securus or GTL, both owned by private equity and known for sometimes charging outrageous fees ($8.20 for the first minute, in one case cited in a lawsuit).
- People in prison also can be charged extra to open and close phone accounts, plus a surcharge to fund them in the first place.
π Medical services
The largest private provider of medical services to prisons is believed to be Corizon Health, operating in 220 facilities in 17 states and owned by a New York City hedge fund.
- Pricing: Corizon was paid $15.16 per incarcerated person per day for medical staffing in Arizona's prisons, before being accused of cheating state monitors and losing the account to another private company.
π Food services
Two companies β Aramark and Trinity Services β provide meals in around 800 state and local facilities.
- The Michigan Department of Corrections awarded a $145 million contract to Aramark, then fired the company for everything from "meal shortages to maggots in the kitchen," and replaced the company with Trinity at an annual cost of $158 million.
- Problems persisted under Trinity, causing Michigan to abandon privatized food services in its kitchens.
π Transportation services
Tennessee-based Prisoner Transportation Services is the largest provider of transportation for jails and prisons.
- In 2016, PTS priced its services to Nevada at $1.05 per adult per mile, with higher rates for minors or those with mental disabilities. The minimum trip fee was $350.
- In the past several years, 14 women claimed to have been sexually assaulted by transportation guards and at least 4 people have died while being transported in PTS vehicles, per the Marshall Project.
π Clothes, toiletries, etc.
Incarcerated people and their families spend an estimated $1.6 billion every year on commissary items such as toiletries, clothes and games.
- While these items aren't generally marked-up, people in prison make very little money to afford what they need.
- Keefe Group and Bob Barker Company are two companies that specialize in producing secure items as well as supplying cell furniture, guard equipment and supplies.
Whatβs next: With bipartisan attention focused on fighting high recidivism rates, for-profit prison companies are expanding their businesses beyond prison walls.
- Theyβre running re-entry programs intended to prepare people in prison for life after prison, providing ankle bracelets and other monitoring devices for parole and probation, and operating immigrant detention spaces.
- A spokesperson for CoreCivic β one of the largest for-profit prison companies β told Axios one of the few areas they lobby for is re-entry programs at the state and federal level.
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