What Happens When Prisoners Become Dollar Signs?
It's a dubious distinction at best. Ohio became the first and only state to sell a prison to a private company. The short documentary "Prisons for Profit" produced by the ACLU of Ohio, examines the first 18 months after Corrections Corporation of America purchased the Lake Erie Correctional Institution (LaECI) in 2011 from the state of Ohio. The film chronicles the disturbing and oftentimes dangerous set of events that unfolded in the aftermath of that sale.
Prisons for Profit was awarded a Bronze Prize by the Atlanta Underground Film Festival and is a Silver Award Winner in the 2015 Spotlight Documentary Film Awards.
Senior Policy Director Mike Brickner talks to Democracy Now! on February 23, 2016 about what happens when a state lets prisoners become dollar signs for the private prison industry.
You can request a speaker to present information on prison privatization and to screen our documentary, Prisons For Profit, for students, re-entry professionals, or other advocates.
Crisis in Conneaut View the timeline of events at LaECI.
Often those who are housed in the prisons, those who work there, and those who live around the prison are the first to suffer from unsafe and inhumane conditions. In addition, prisons for profit only create an incentive for corporations to lobby for stricter laws to criminalize more people and feed our already bloated criminal justice system.
Family members of people incarcerated in the prison, former corrections officers and local officials were interviewed about their experiences with the private prison. While each of these people have had very different experiences with the prison, they are all unified in their belief that when prisons are operated for profit, they bring with them a host of troubles. ”Prisons for Profit” ends with a call-to-action for community members to stand up against private prisons and ensure that our liberty is not traded for profit. The 22-minute film was chosen to premiere at the 39th Cleveland International Film Festival and was shown on March 26, 2015 as part of the festival's Ohio Shorts Program 3.
Something Must Be Done!
Private prisons put their own profit ahead of good public policy:
- Prisons for profit add to our state’s serious mass incarceration problem. The United States has 25 percent of all the world’s prisoners but only has 5 percent of its population, and making prisoners a source of revenue for private companies creates a financial incentive to keep people behind bars with prisons for profit lobbying for stricter criminal sentencing laws. Many private prison contracts in America even require the government to pay for at least 90 percent of prison beds, whether they are filled or not.
- Cities that house private prisons find that the big promises soon become stark realities of higher crime, increased burdens on local government, and unsafe conditions—for prisoners, employees, and the surrounding community.
CCA promised to save Ohio money. Instead they continue to cut corners while keeping the profits and shifting the responsibility back to the taxpayers. It’s time for Ohio to stop the prison- for-profit experiment and end its contracts with private prison operators.
- Allowing State Prisoners in Federal Private Prison a Mistake for Ohio, Says ACLU - December 1, 2016
- Civil Rights Groups Urge Federal Government Not to Hold Immigrants in Youngstown Prison for Profit - November 21, 2016
- Ohio’s Selling Another Prison to A For-Profit Company – And No One Noticed-August 2016
- Legislators Sneak Through Another Prison for Profit-June 2016
- Another Bad Inspection for CCA-Owned Lake Erie Correctional Institution–February 2013
- Inspection Brief–February 2013
- Conneaut Officials Ask State for Help After Increase in Crime Around CCA-Owned Private Prison January 2013
- Conneaut City Councilman Neil A. LaRusch Letter to Governor John Kasich-January 2013
- Conditions Continue to Worsen at Privately Owned Lake Erie Correctional Institution-January 2013
- Prisons for Profit Report: A Look at Prison Privatization–2011