Log in

View Full Version : Prisons reap big profits on immigrants



Le Socialiste
2nd August 2012, 21:58
MIAMI (AP) — The U.S. is locking up more illegal immigrants than ever, generating lucrative profits for the nation's largest prison companies, and an Associated Press review shows the businesses have spent tens of millions of dollars lobbying lawmakers and contributing to campaigns.

The cost to American taxpayers is on track to top $2 billion for this year, and the companies are expecting their biggest cut of that yet in the next few years thanks to government plans for new facilities to house the 400,000 immigrants detained annually.

After a decade of expansion, the sprawling, private system runs detention centers everywhere from a Denver suburb to an industrial area flanking Newark's airport, and is largely controlled by just three companies.
The growth is far from over, despite the sheer drop in illegal immigration in recent years.

In 2011, nearly half the beds in the nation's civil detention system were in private facilities with little federal oversight, up from just 10 percent a decade ago. The financial boom, which has helped save some of these companies from the brink of bankruptcy, has occurred even though federal officials acknowledge privatization isn't necessarily cheaper.

This seismic shift toward a privatized system happened quietly. While Congress' unsuccessful efforts to overhaul immigration laws drew headlines and sparked massive demonstrations, lawmakers' negotiations to boost detention dollars received far less attention.

The industry's giants — Corrections Corporation of America, The GEO Group, and Management and Training Corp. — have spent at least $45 million combined on campaign donations and lobbyists at the state and federal level in the last decade, the AP found.

...

The detention centers are located in cities and remote areas alike, often in low-slung buildings surrounded by chain-link fences and razor wire. U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agents detain men, women and children suspected of violating civil immigration laws at these facilities. Most of those held at the 250 sites nationwide are illegal immigrants awaiting deportation, but some green card holders, asylum seekers and others are also there.

More here (http://news.yahoo.com/immigrants-prove-big-business-prison-companies-084353195.html).

brigadista
2nd August 2012, 22:15
in uk too privately owned and run

RedHammer
2nd August 2012, 22:16
This makes me sick.

Vladimir Innit Lenin
2nd August 2012, 22:18
Fucking shitheads. Below the radar as usual.

Red Commissar
3rd August 2012, 05:24
The growing privatization of prisons, like the same attempts with education, is probably the most powerful attacks against the working poor nowadays. This prison-industrial complex is getting stronger and stronger every year, and unfortunately a lot of it has to do with the apologetics the "tough on crime" crowd works on the populace. I remember fighting with people last year about the way these prisons have been getting illegal immigrants into the system now, and the same folk seem to think it's warranted since they "broke the law".

Unsurprisingly these people who tend to favor the heavy handed approach tend to come from communities that don't see the real nature of the police like immigrant and minority neighborhoods do.