Sunday, October 16, 2011

Private Prisons Profits



October 1, 2011


In Arizona, prison profiteers have embedded themselves within the capital and have been influencing our elected state officials. Influencing laws that go before lawmakers and whether they pass. Influence that contributes to the historic budget crisis significantly going on in Arizona.


Duly elected by Arizona voters to represent them, create & enact laws for them and govern, State legislators and the governor are in highly important and trusted public office positions. Additionally, the governor appoints/hires other to closely work in the official and political campaign offices.


Arizona Governor Janice Brewer's close ties to the private prison industry were revealed in an October 28, 2010 investigation by the National Public Radio (NPR), as well as Arizona State Senator, Senate President Russell Pearce and a number of other state lawmakers.


Gov. Brewer's staff of lobbyists and former lobbyists have been allowed to shape our laws and control decisions that affect the lives of countless Arizonians.


Brewer's staff of special interest lobbyists run the show, while Arizona and its citizens suffer the consequences. Schools, teachers, students, the sick, disturbed and dying. Everybody and everything most of us were taught to care for and protect has been suffering the most. Brewer's staff are just a few lobbying quietly behind the scenes with ties to private prisons:


Chuck Coughlin, Brewer's campaign manager: Registered Lobbyist, President of Highground Public Affairs Consultants (who has represented Corrections Corporation of America-CCA)

Doug Cole, Brewer's campaign spokesman: Registered Lobbyist for Highground

Paul Senseman, Brewer's communications director: Former Lobbyist for Private Prison

Eileen Klein, Brewer's chief of staff: Former Lobbyist

Mark Genrich, Brewer's deputy communications director: Registered Lobbyist

Richard Bark, Brewer's deputy chief of staff: Former Lobbyist

Kevin Kinsall, Brewer's policy advisor: Former Lobbyist


Revealed in the wake of 3 Arizona Dept. of Corrections prisoners' escape from a CCA facility in Kingman, AZ and brutal murder of an elderly couple, Arizona's use of private prisons was not cheaper, nor safer. Yet, the Governor, legislators and ADOC continue to pursue the use of private prisons in Arizona.


One of Arizona's most controversial pieces of legislation that ignited fiery protests felt around the world was quietly drafted and passed from behind the scenes with the help of an industry that stood to benefit from it: the private prison industry. Senate Bill 1070 was the legislation.


Requiring police to lock up anyone they stop who cannot show proof that they entered the country legally, private prisons potentially could receive hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants, meaning hundreds of millions of dollars in profits to private prison companies. It's no surprise that the private prison industry was involved in the drafting of and passing of SB 1070.


Arizona State Senator Russell Pearce, the self proclaimed creator of SB 1070, said that it's not about prisons, but what's best for the country. It's hard for most of us to believe Sen. Pearce on this, but even if his intentions weren't about money, appeasing his silent constituents (Big Business) or his racism, he has failed to show how this legislation is what's best for us as a country, rather than harmful. Strangely, Sen. Pearce took his "idea" first to a hotel conference room, instead of the Arizona statehouse floor.


In December, inside the Grand Hyatt in Washington, DC, there was a meeting of a secretive group called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). A membership organization of State legislators and powerful corporations and associations, there are numerous political players from Arizona that are members. Arizona State Senator, and Senate President Russell Pearce is just one. One of many. Tobacco giant Reynolds American Inc., Exxonmobil and the National Rifle Association are a few other members. Another member is the billion-dollar company, CCA. The largest private prison company in the country. ALEC member companies and organizations seem to have influence in the halls of the Arizona capital and legislative chambers. Or is it coincidence that they have seen laws adverse to them defeated and favorable passed?


"I did a presentation...went through the facts. I went through the impacts and they said, 'Yeah'." Pearse said about this presentation at the ALEC meeting of his immigration "idea". Sen. Pearce and CCA had been going to these meetings for years and both have seats on one of several ALEC boards.


According to CCA reports reviewed by NPR, during their investigations, executives believe immigrant detention is CCA's next big market. Expecting it to bring in a significant portion of their revenues from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).


During the meeting, the group decided to turn Pearce's "idea" into a "model" legislative bill. Discussing and debating the appropriate language, they then voted on it. "There were no 'no' votes...never had one person speak up in objection to this model legislation." Pearce said.


About 4 months later, the model legislation became, almost verbatim, Arizona's immigration law. They named it the "Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act."


According to Michael Hough, ALEC's Staff director of the December meeting, "ALEC is the conservative, free-market oriented, limited government group," Mr. Hough was also running for State delegate in Maryland and said if elected he plans to support similar law to Arizona's SB 1070. When asked if private companies usually get to write model bills for the legislators, Mr. Hough responded, "Yeah, that's the way it's set up...businesses and lawmakers should be at the same table, together."


Arizona Sen. Pearce claimed he wasn't concerned that it could appear private prison companies have an opportunity to lobby for legislation at the ALEC meetings, and claims to go to meet with other legislators and not private prison companies. That may be so, but there are 200 private companies paying tens of thousands of dollars to meet with legislators, like Sen. Pearce, at these meetings.


When Pearce's bill hit the statehouse floor in January back in Phoenix, ALEC's influence was apparent too. Thirty six co-sponsors signed on. A number nearly unheard of in the capital. Revealed in NPR's investigations, two-thirds of them were also ALEC members or also attended the December meeting. The same week, CCA hired a powerful new lobbyist to work the AZ capital. CCA denied it has ever lobbied, nor had any outside consultants lobby on immigration law. CCA denies its lobbying on various issues relating to AZ laws, despite evidence indicating otherwise.


AZ politicians have received campaign donations from prison lobbyists and prison companies. 30 of the 36 co-sponsors of SB 1070 received donations over 6 months preceding the co-sponsoring. CCA, Management and Training Corp. and The Geo Group. SB 1070 hit the Governor's desk by April.


Gov. Brewer's own connections to private prison companies were already there. Brewer signed Senate Bill 1070, with the name Pearce, CCA and the others at the Hyatt gave it.


Within 60 days of Gov. Brewer signing SB 1070 into law, CCA and the Geo Group donated a combined $87,500 to the Republican Governor's Association (RGA). RGA has put significant resources into AZ to help elect Brewer.


Althoug SB 1070 continues to be challenged in courts, private prison companies are still capitalizing in Arizona. AZ lawmakerts authorized the ADOC to pay for 5,000 more private prison beds. Private prison companies submitted their bids on the contract from all over. The top three finalists for this contract worth millions of dollars? CCA, The Geo Group and Management and Training Corp. Yes, and if you find that disturbing, you'll find it even more disturbing to learn that even though 3 inmates escaped from a CA facility in Kingman AZ and murdered an elderly couple, as a result of security lapses, poor supervision and other failures by CCA staff, CCA was still a top finalist in the bid to get the contract. No company has been awarded the contract yet, but it's expected to be announced soon.


Sources: NPR; azdem.org ; Arizona Republic.

Sunday, October 02, 2011

Counting Anxiously

September 27, 2011

In less than seven months, I will be a free man. The day is getting near when I'll walk out of these gates and sigh a sigh of relief that its over and I'm on my way home. Home, where I'll walk around barefoot on my carpet. No more concrete floors beneath cheap flip flops. Home, where I watch what I want to watch on my tv. Home, where I can eat anything I choose at any time. Home, where I can pick up my phone and talk to my friends and family at any reasonable hour. Home, where I can feed birds in My yard, rather than sweat in the barren recreation yard waiting 2 hours to get off of it and into dorm. Yeah, I'm getting anxious to go home and live my life.

That is unless I make it home and there's somebody special waiting for me. Because let's face the fact guys...if you've got a woman you love in your life, she runs the show and simply lets you think you're in charge. LOL. I'm totally cool with that though. To be honest, I need some supervision when I get out, while I re acclimate myself with freedom. Until I'm back in the groove of society, I'll just act like I know where I'm going, what I'm doing and that I'm in charge. Hopefully my sweetheart will take pity on me and try to keep me near. However, my sister, niece and best bud Tony and his family will need to truly teach us and keep us both near. I'm certain they'll all be just a call away and ready to help. Everybody keep in mind that I'll have been in prison for nearly 10 years, so no laughing at me getting lost, being unable to work certain electronics/phones/pcs/etc, or things like that and don't be surprised if my woman, Ms. L, and I need your help often. Ms. L is a lot like me and you all know me...I'll try to do it, then ask how if I can't figure it out. No worries though...It's 100% legal for me, including driver's license, insurance and every other little rule and regulation. I won't take my shortcuts that'll jeopardize my freedom or loosing my wonderful woman. Although she's a fan of my blog, she's even more a fan of me, so I must leave her only as Ms. L, until she chooses to introduce herself. Unfortunately for you readers, she loves her privacy and I love her, so you'll have to wait and see. (Shhh...in time I'll have her joining in with our communicating. She'll come to the dark side of the blog! LOL)

I'm not entirely sure what the plans are for my first couple of days out. I know for sure that immediately upon walking out the gates I want to see my big sis, the lovely Ms L and my best friend Tony. Who picks me up is still uncertain. No matter what, these three people I want to see the day I am released. I'd add my friend Sue to that list but she isn't from Arizona, but she did promise me a visit after I'm out and I promised her that I'd show her the beauty of Sedona and elsewhere in Arizona. I'm hoping that within a month or so after my release I'll have all of my closest friends here to visit.

Aside from that fact that I want to get on with my life and be a happy, successful and free man, I want to show all of my friends and family that I made it and with their support. I want that normalcy and everyday joe kind of life in rural America. With a wee bit of funky stuff and good times mixed in. You know...lava lamps in my new house will be a start and all of that nature, nearby creek and lakes to fish in and take relaxing walks. Yeah, I bought a house where some people retire to, but I'll be just starting out there.

Well, I'm counting down the days, and preparing. BTW, I submitted my release information packet last week. That's when it really hit me that I'm really going home soon.

L&R,
Shannon