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Axel W. Caballero

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Immigrant Detention Business Is Booming, So Is Abuse

Posted: 09/30/11 08:52 AM ET

When there is a social issue brewing there is always somebody ready to make a buck off of it. That is the premise of how private prison companies operate in the U.S. and across the globe. The advent of anti-immigrant sentiment in many parts of the country -fueled in great by the detention multi-nationals themselves coupled with opportunist politicians - has given rise to a booming industry that relies solely on the persecution of the migrant community. Yet, the notion that private prison companies can provide legitimate and adequate facilities for the detention of immigrants and the idea that they have a vested interest in the direction of immigration policy is not only absurd but flat-out dangerous.

Such is the case, as reported today by The New York Times, with the global Florida-based company The GEO Group. The GEO Group is the nation's second largest for-profit prison company within a $5 billion industry, and is often said to have greater power than the governments of countries where it operates. =In many cases GEO has influenced and dictated what local, state or federal approaches would be used to fill the hundreds of thousands of bed spaces they own. As the article points out, GEO Group posted a "40% increase in second-quarter profits," pointing to immigrant persecution as the main driver for new profit. The more immigrants in, the more money goes to CEO pockets. This is a perfect money-machine and GEO knows it well. In fact, they have been associated with strong lobby and campaign contribution efforts in order to promote and advance both anti-immigrant legislation as well as state privatization of prison initiatives.

Their influence is present at every level, aided greatly by the secrecy upon which federal, local and state contracts are conceived. In Florida for example, Sen. Marco Rubio has not only received $50,000 from the GEO group in campaign contributions - purportedly for his support into fast-tracking privatization initiatives - but is also a targeted subject of an FBI investigation for his role in the Blackwater River Correctional Facility (CF), which opened its gates for operation in November 2010. The prison was designed and is operated by GEO, which has secured multi-year, multi-billion contracts across the country, paid for by good-old tax-payer money.

Immigrants For Sale
http://immigrantsforsale.org, the documentary investigation by the national Latino organization Cuéntame has catalogued hundreds of hours of footage and extensive research that consistently points to the detrimental effect GEO and other private prison operators have had on the national immigration debate. One of the most dangerous discoveries, on top of an already troublesome political influence, is that these operators have gone to great length to secure their profit often at the expense of the detainees' physical and mental integrity. These private facilities operate in the wild, without proper and necessary oversight. As such, they often cut medical services, food quality, hygienic conditions, trained personnel, and proper treatment of detainees to limit cuts and increase profit. This was certainly the case in Texas, where inmates broke out in riots in 2009 and 2010 "after several detainees died in solitary confinement."

Yet, private detention operators like the GEO Group continue to boast about their increasing share value. Time and again they point to the anti-immigrant legislation as a sure guarantee for ongoing business. They have billions at stake and they will do anything possible to keep it that way. This is the current state of our immigration system, one that puts profit over decency and greed over sensible policy. U.S. counties, states and the Department of Homeland Security have all been hijacked by big global prison corporations - like the GEO Group - who in turn are more than ready to transform a pressing social issue into an obscure and ruthless money scheme. It doesn't matter who they lock-up, how they lock them up or why they are locked-up. At $200 a night, they are making a killing - and YOU are paying for it.


 

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spytheweb
Black Democrat
06:16 PM on 10/03/2011
Detention of illegal aliens can be avoiled if they  just don't break the law. I do my best not to break laws everyday. Illegal aliens have a bigger problem. By them being in the country they are breaking the law just by waking up. What they must do now is to remain undiscovered. I favor instead of detention there should be a 72 hr window to deport these people if they are not held for reentry or sentenced to prison.

No one likes jails, they have a choice, cross the border and risk jail or stay home. They roll the dice and take their chances. I wish i could go to Vegas, bet money and then cry when i lose to get it back.
08:12 PM on 10/02/2011
I think it's a great use of taxpayers money. When you think about it, the American taxpayer is funding a large number of programs for (illegal) immigration: education, food stamps, medical care, housing and on and on. I hope GEO keeps building and incarcerating. At least that is a motivation to get the lawbreakers out of our communities and off our streets. Hopefully incarceration leads to deportation. Just think how many roofers, masons, electricians, plumbers, service and retail workers, etc. would be able to go back to work for a living wage.
03:27 PM on 10/01/2011
People or companies who are getting advantages of poor or un protected people such as illegal immigrants, immigrants or even poor people is just WRONG, UN FAIR & ABUSIVE. But once again for issues like this one that generates so many controversial comments is that is United States needs an Immigration reform.
09:32 PM on 09/30/2011
"Time and again they point to the anti-immigrant legislation as a sure guarantee for ongoing business."

What "anti-immigrant legislation"?
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The Ben Bernanke
AMI (American Monetary Institute)
09:21 PM on 09/30/2011
Profiting off a person's imprisonment is disgraceful...
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
06:38 PM on 09/30/2011
Hey Axel...what part of "illegal" do you just not "get"? Or, is it that you have a vested interest in portraying America's efforts to protect it's borders as somehow evil, criminal or racist. I would love to hear you "rant and rave" about Mexico's treatment of illegals who enter THAT country from Central and South America. Or, maybe you are just not interested in all "that". LOL. If you are SOOO concerned about this issue, let's have some comments about Mexico's treatment of illegals. Bet you won't do that.
By the way, interesting "name"....."Axel Caballeros".
08:37 AM on 10/01/2011
inthedesert

Great Post! Fanned!
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Walrus Man
04:13 PM on 09/30/2011
There are many illegal practices commited against the Illegals, it's always been that way and most people know it. Their status make them more vulnerable and make them cannon fodder. I'm Not justifying them, but we are in the most civilized country of the world and these practices are not what most American people proclaim.
10:19 AM on 10/01/2011
The most civilized country in the world?? What America have you been living in lately?
02:46 PM on 09/30/2011
Immigrant persecution?? Nowhere in this article does it mention if these so-called Immigrants are Illegal ... very blusterous, disingenuous article.

Perhaps if Activists like Mr Caballero didn't oppose Deportation so vigorously, the US Taxpayers wouldn't have to foot the bill for this imprisonment and boots these so-called evil profits. 30% of Federal Inmates are Illegals, Illegals from 3rd World Nations like Mexico commit crime at a much higher rate than the average American .. what's the Cost of that Axel ??
08:38 AM on 10/01/2011
gustavo.....

Well Said! Fanned!
02:40 PM on 09/30/2011
If we start jailing the illegal employers illegal immigration would plummet. Sending 100 illegal employers to jail would be more cost effective than deporting 10,000 illegal immigrants.
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markspence
08:23 PM on 09/30/2011
You might have something there - the problem is employers are fairly well connected politically.
02:29 PM on 09/30/2011
Cry me a river...
12:20 PM on 09/30/2011
Private prisons must be abolished. If the state is to have the authority to sentence people, it must also fully administer these sentences from beginning to end. A private company should have no role beyond sewing together guard uniforms or trucking in food and toilet paper.
02:38 PM on 09/30/2011
Private prisons make money, money they donate to politicians, politicians do what they are paid to do defend corporations' profits.
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darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
12:15 PM on 09/30/2011
Now you are finally figuring out what is driving this sudden immigration "crisis". Just like the other forms of the police/military/industrial complex immigration "enforcement" is going to have to be privatized since the work load exceeds the capacity of most local structures hence a giant BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY for mainly Conservative business donors.
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jkatt1
10:54 AM on 09/30/2011
NOT just Immigrants! this same scheme has been going on in Pennsylvania..Kash For Kids.Judges and local authorities making millions! off of this.What goes around comes around....Their time is up and they are headed to prison for a long long time!!
Zip Zinzel
If a Nation expects to be both Ignorant & Free . .
10:02 AM on 09/30/2011
Here is a better way to handle this and eliminate most of these costs.

IN ALMOST ALL CASES, the legality/illegality of the person's immigration status can easily be determined within a week.

The only real issue at dispute is whether or not they are allowed an exception to deportation.

We can eliminate almost all of these detention costs if we fast-track their deportation, and have them pursue their claims for exceptional treatment from within their country of origin.
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cerebrogasm
The sleep of reason produces monsters. - Goya
06:20 PM on 09/30/2011
Why would corporate America want to deport illegals? They work for peanut wages, have no rights, and are even made profitable if picked up by ICE and incarcerated in a private prison. "Show busts" are great for propaganda spreading to show that we're enforcing immigration laws - but there's just too much money to be made exploiting them for work and then further exploiting them by detention. They're a money maker coming and going. Do detention prison corporations care if their inmates are miss-treated, poorly fed, live without a decent hygienic environment? Of course not! They just have to keep them alive long enough to keep on billing. Yeah, I know they're here illegally and they're getting what they deserve: aren't you proud of what America now stands for? Profit at any price.
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cerebrogasm
The sleep of reason produces monsters. - Goya
08:19 PM on 09/30/2011
Zip Zinzel you wrote:

cerebrogas­m =
=======
Why would corporate America want to deport illegals? They work for peanut wages
==========­==========­====
MAYBE YOU DON'T KNOW THIS
. . . but they aint working for nobody in these For-Profit detention centers

You really should read the whole sentence before replying: especially where I wrote, "if picked up by ICE and incarcerated in a private prison." I know they "aint {sic} working for nobody" (that's a double negative) - but their mere presence is billable by the prison - that means the prison is more profitable the more detainees it has and the longer their incarceration - actually deporting them cuts into the prison's profits. Got it?
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HomeGrower
Independent - so both sides hate me
10:25 PM on 09/30/2011
If the govt would just address this issue....either fully enforce the laws already in place...or give amnesty. But they just refuse to deal with it...and the abuse continues.
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IllTakeTheRedEye
Do you know what a nonemployer business is?
09:19 AM on 09/30/2011
GEO Group and CCA cannot make a profit if people obey the law.

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