Call to Action by ACLU National Prison Project - "Privatization"

Call to Action by ACLU National Prison Project

The United States today imprisons far more people — both per capita and in absolute terms — than any other nation, including Russia, China and Iran. Corrections Corporation of America, the largest private incarceration company in the world, makes matters worse by operating prisons around the nation that rely on keeping large numbers of people behind bars. Today, CCA convened its annual shareholder meeting to discuss operations and profits. One thing that won't be on the agenda, however, is the question of whether private prisons should exist at all.  That's because CCA and other private prison companies prefer to go about their business behind closed doors, shielded from public scrutiny, all the while raking in billions of taxpayer dollars each year and imprisoning nearly 130,000 men and women. The ACLU believes it is an unconscionable affront to civil liberties and to taxpayers' wallets to turn incarceration over to private companies that operate in secrecy and admit their business model depends on high rates of incarceration. That's why, as director of the ACLU National Prison Project, I've challenged the president of CCA to a public debate. Send a message urging Damon Hininger, President and CEO of CCA, to publicly debate the merits of private for-profit prisons in America. (Do not forward: This link will open a page with your information already filled in. To spread the word, use the icons below.) Over the past four decades, imprisonment in the U.S. has increased explosively, spurred by criminal laws that impose steep sentences for low-level, non-violent offenses. Those same laws seriously curtail opportunities for probation and parole. We can't solve America's over-incarceration crisis by lining the pockets of secretive private companies whose existence depends on America's addiction to incarceration. We believe that the taxpayers who finance private prisons, the families of those incarcerated in these facilities, the people who work in them, and the communities where private prisons set up shop deserve a full, fair and public examination of prison privatization. If you agree, urge Damon Hininger of CCA to accept our invitation to a public debate. The role that for-profit companies play in America's incarceration expansion is a vitally important topic. It's time to air this issue in an open public debate. Let's make it happen. Sincerely, David Fathi, Director ACLU National Prison Project.

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Urge Damon Hininger of Corrections Corporation of America to accept our invitation to a public debate.
Private Prison Showdown: Will CCA Go Head-to-Head with the ACLU

At a time when Americans are being incarcerated at record levels at great cost to the liberties of citizens and wallets of taxpayers, private prison companies have a business model that depends on locking up more and more people.

That's why the ACLU has invited the president of Corrections Corporation of American (CCA), the largest for-profit prison company in the nation, to a public debate over the merits of private prisons. CCA has repeatedly swept aside criticism of the private prison industry, but now it's time for a real discussion.

We believe that the taxpayers who finance private prisons, the families of those incarcerated in these facilities, and the communities where private prisons set up shop deserve a full, fair and public examination of prison privatization. If you agree, take action now by urging the president of CCA to accept our invitation to debate. Let's find out if private prisons can defend their actions. The public deserves to know.   Send a message to Damon Hininger

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