Amid a recent audit report released by the state which indicates private prisons in Georgia are costing more per inmate per day, AllOnGeorgia examined the influence private prison companies have on Georgia’s legislators.
The GEO Group and CoreCivic (formerly Corrections Corporation of America) both have automatically renewing contracts with the State of Georgia that are not negotiated annually and have been in place for over two decades. The contracts require that the four facilities under private supervision maintain a certain occupancy rate or the state faces a penalty.
Information from the Georgia Government Transparency and Campaign Finance Commission shows that the nation’s two largest private prison companies donated more than $174,000 to elected officials over the last two years.
Donations Cross Party Lines
Lawmakers on any particular side of the aisle were not exclusive recipients of donations from either company. Among the top recipients were Democrat Minority Leader Bob Trammell and Republican Speaker of the House David Ralston. Newly-elected Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan received $3,000 during the election cycle in 2018 from the GEO Group.
Also of note, soon-to-be former Governor Nathan Deal, who has prided his administration on criminal justice reform, received $6,100 from the GEO Group when he was first elected and the Georgia Republican Party received $70,000 from the GEO Group during the 2018 election cycle. Corecivic provided $1,500 to the Georgia Senatorial Committee as well and $2,000 to The Democratic Party of Georgia.
Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr also received $3,000 from the GEO Group in the General Election cycle while Governor-elect Brian Kemp brought in $6,600 from the GEO Group and $9,100 in from CoreCivic.
Additionally, House Appropriations Chairman Terry England received $2,500 from the GEO Group in 2017 and $2,600 in 2018. He was recently quoted in an AJC article regarding the legitimacy of the audit released citing private prisons as less cost-effective, saying it’s possible the report is not all-inclusive.
$15,000 was also donated to ‘Changing Georgia’s Future’, which was said to be a pro-Cagle PAC.
Numbers illustrate 2017 and 2018 donations per the Georgia Campaign Finance website. The numbers do not include the last quarter of 2018.
Democrat lawmakers
Sen. Gail Davenport | $1,000 |
Rep. Calvin Smyre | $1,000 |
Rep. Bob Trammell | $1,500 |
Sen. Valencia Seay | $1,000 |
Sen Freddie Powell Sims | $750 |
Sen. Stephen Henson | $1,000 |
$6,250 |
Republican lawmakers
2017-18 donations | |
Lt. Gov Casey Cagle | $13,500 |
Rep. Terry England | $7,600 |
Sen. Butch Miller | $5,100 |
Sen. Jack Hill | $4,500 |
Rep. John Burns | $4,000 |
Sen. Tyler Harper | $3,500 |
Sen. David Shafer | $3,500 |
Sen. John Albers | $3,000 |
Rep. Jan Jones | $3,000 |
Rep. David Ralston | $2,700 |
Sen. Bill Cowsert | $2,000 |
Rep. Matt Hatchett | $2,000 |
Rep. Alan Powell | $2,000 |
Sen. Jesse Stone | $2,000 |
Rep. Terry Rogers | $1,500 |
Sen. Blake tillery | $1,500 |
The Georgia House Republican Trust | $1,500 |
Georgia Senatorial Comm | $1,500 |
Rep. John Corbett | $1,000 |
Sen. Michael Dugan | $1,000 |
Sen. Chuck Hufstetler | $1,000 |
Sen. Burt Jones | $1,000 |
Sen. John Kennedy | $1,000 |
Rep. John Meadows | $1,000 |
Rep. Rick Williams | $1,000 |
Rep. Barry Fleming | $750 |
Rep. Jimmy Pruett | $750 |
Rep. Mandi Ballinger | $500 |
Rep. Geoff Cauble | $500 |
Rep. Geralde Greene | $500 |
Sen. Jeff Mullis | $500 |
Rep. Emory Dunahoo | $250 |
$75,150 |
In April 2018, the Corrections Accountability Project released the names of over 3,100 corporations—including over 2,500 privately traded companies—that profit from the United States prison system. (That report is here) The information detailed above only includes that of the two largest companies in the nation and the two with active contracts with the state of Georgia.
Related:
New audit says private prisons are not more cost-effective than state-run prisons
Jessica Szilagyi is a former Statewide Contributor for AllOnGeorgia.com.