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Big Capital and the Carceral State
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BIG CAPITAL & THE CARCERAL STATE Laura I Applemanf Who is accountable for the imposition of punishment in our carceral system? The answer used to be much simpler, as we held local, state, and federal government actors responsible. In recent decades, however, our correctional system has become increasingly privatized, with deeply troubling results. All aspects of the carceral state—whether prisons, jails, juvenile detention, rehabilitation, forensic hospitals, bail, or electronic monitoring—have dramatically increased their use of privatized correctional services. With this new world of privatized corrections, we frequently don’t know whom can be held accountable when wrongdoing occurs. The bulk of our correctional services are now provided by complicated web of private entities, some of them large and publicly held, some owned by private equity. I dub them “Big Capital.” Big Capital has invaded the carceral universe. Almost every aspect of correctional control has been outsourced to private companies somewhere. The normalization of private equity firms and enormous correction corporations partnering with public carceral institutions has resulted in a failure of basic incarceration services. Although private prisons, prison labor for private profit, and privatized services for inmates are nothing new, Big Capital’s recent infiltration into the carceral state has no historical parallel. This Article seeks to uncover these companies’ incursion into the realm of public corrections and detail the disastrous results for those under correctional control. In so doing, I also explais why allowing complicated private entities to control our carceral system has made matters far worse, violating fundamental U.S. philosophies about punishment and rehabilitation, creating conflicts of interest, undermining democratic legitimacy, and ultimately corrupting the administration of justice. Ó Laura I Appleman 2023. f Van Winkle Melton Professor of Law, Willamette University. J.D., Yale University; B.A., M.A., Univ. of Pennsylvania. Thanks to Emmanuel Arnaud, Paulina Arnold, Mike Cahill, Erin Collins, Michelle Dempsey, Jeffrey Fagan, Brenner Fissel, David Friedman, Brian Gallini, David Gray, Cynthia Godsoe, Brian Highsmith, Alexis HoagFordjour, Doug Husak, Elizabeth Kaplan, David Kwok, Ben Levin, Justin Murray, Anthony O’Roarke, Judith Resnik, Alice Ristroph, Anna Roberts, Ric Simmons, Jocelyn Simonson, Sarah Swan, and the participants in the Markelloquium 2023 and CrimFest 2022 for their helpful comments. Thanks also to Willamette for its research support. Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 3 Part I: Big Capital’s Investment in Punishment and the Loss of Accountability ........................... 5 A. Troubled Youth, Quick Profits: Juvenile Justice and Youth Detention Centers ................... 5 1. Juvenile Justice ................................................................................................................ 6 2. Juvenile Pre-Trial Detention …………………………………………………………10 B. Psychiatric Hospitals & Behavioral Services ....................................................................... 11 1. Psychiatric Care for At-Risk Youth .............................................................................. 11 2. Psychiatric Hospitals ..................................................................................................... 14 C. Correctional Control ............................................................................................................ 18 1. Bail Bonds ..................................................................................................................... 18 2. Electronic Monitoring ................................................................................................... 21 3. Alternative Corrections Services ................................................................................... 22 a. Private Probation .......................................................................................................... 22 b. Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation............................................................................... 22 D. Correctional Healthcare ....................................................................................................... 25 Part II: Who Owns This Stuff? Unwinding the Labyrinth .......................................................... 29 A. Private Equity ....................................................................................................................... 30 B. Large, Publicly Traded Corporations.................................................................................... 32 C. International Insurance Conglomerates ................................................................................ 34 Part III: Profits over People: Big Capital’s Growing Role in Criminal Justice........................... 34 A. Monopolistic Conditions ...................................................................................................... 36 B. Lack of Transparency .......................................................................................................... 38 C. Destruction/Dismantling of Services for Profit ................................................................... 42 D. Purchasing political favorability .......................................................................................... 44 E. Difficulty Divesting ............................................................................................................. 47 Part IV: Uncontrolled Profiteering in a World of Public Punishment.......................................... 49 A. Diminishes the Provision of Core Public Services ............................................................ 50 B. Democratic Concerns ........................................................................................................ 51 C. Who Imposes Punishment ? .............................................................................................. 53 Conclusion ..................................................................................................................................... 54 2 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 INTRODUCTION For centuries, the American system of incarceration and rehabilitation has centered on the public provision of punishment that follows from community sanctions. Of course, there have always been entanglements of public service with the private sector. At all levels, the government must contract with private firms for certain goods and services.1 In the carceral sector specifically, the bail system has extensively relied on private elements to make it work financially. Prisons have long sought to defray their cost of operations by selling the work and output of the incarcerated to private parties.2 Recently, however, something fundamental has changed. When federal, state, and local entities charged with punishment and rehabilitation began looking to the private sector to provide core services, a new set of for-profit entities emerged to bid on and perform it. Where there is a flow of public money, there is always a rush of capital flooding in to drink. There are, however, vastly different implications for privatizing correctional services than, for example, hiring private construction companies for public work, or contracting out the operation of highway rest stops. Here, a core power of administration of justice is being contracted out, largely to save money. If that is the fiscal choice, holding both public and private players accountable for the quality of their services becomes extremely important. Although much attention has been paid to holding military services contractors publicly accountable,3 much less has been paid to holding accountable those to whom we entrust our carceral system. In the for-profit corrections sector, we find that services are often being performed by “Big Capital” entities: subsidiaries of large publicly held corporations, privately-held portfolio companies held by secretive private equity firms, and large insurance companies. As I show in this Article, when things go wrong, it can be incredibly complicated to figure out who is accountable or determine how things have gone wrong. Moreover, the incentives to get things right are frequently missing. The carceral system was certainly imperfect before the large-scale privatization of its administration, but the influx of Big Capital into corrections has made life for justice-involved individuals even more difficult. This Article is the first piece of scholarship to comprehensively detail and trace how Big Capital furtively purchases and combines private correctional service companies, thereby transforming the carceral landscape in pursuit of profit. By tracing the tangled webs of private financing that underly so much of modern public punishment, we will be better able to understand the way the profit incentive continues to drive the carceral state. 1 Hadar Aviram discussed this aspect of privatized services in prisons, calling it “piecemeal privatization.” Hadar Aviram, Are Private Prisons to Blame for Mass Incarceration and its Evils? Prison Conditions, Neoliberalism, and Public Choice, 42 FORDHAM URB. L.J. 411, 411 (2014) 2 See generally Laura I Appleman, Bloody Lucre: Carceral Labor & Prison Profit, 2022 WISC. L. REV. 619 (2022). 3 See Charles Mahoney, How, and Why, to Hold Defense Companies Accountable, DEFENSE NEWS (June 1, 2017), https://www.defensenews.com/opinion/commentary/2017/06/01/how-and-why-to-hold-defense-companiesaccountable-commentary/ 3 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 These complicated private entities should be forbidden from providing private services to public corrections, because allowing them to do so violates fundamental American philosophies about punishment and rehabilitation, creates conflicts of interest, and ultimately corrupts the administration of justice. Incarceration should be focused on holding individuals accountable for their actions and providing them with opportunities for rehabilitation, not on partnering with Big Capital to generate profits. In Part I of this Article, I describe how our system of incarceration and rehabilitation has been privatized and the problems that emerge from that alone. Part II looks at different areas of the criminal justice system and exposes the complexity and diversity of the ownership of those entities that now provide the services. I discuss private prisons, treatment centers, juvenile services, mental health providers, and bail providers – and how private equity investors, publiclyheld corporations, and large insurers have altered the structure of how we provide services and manage accountability. Part III discusses the normalization of Big Capital partnerships with public carceral institutions, looking specifically at the results: not only a failure of basic correctional services, but also the relentless privileging of money-making over any other focus, benefiting only select private investors. In Part IV, I explain why having Big Capital take over correctional services violates fundamental American philosophies about punishment and rehabilitation, creates conflicts of interest, undermines democratic legitimacy, and ultimately corrupts the administration of justice. We have lost some of our public voice to profit-focused Big Capital entities that are almost completely opaque. In doing so, we have tied together the choices of private investors and the results of criminal justice, at the expense of our social contract. I conclude that although structural change may be slow, bringing as much transparency as we can to our current system is our fastest route to accountability, though it may not ultimately suffice. PART I: BIG CAPITAL’S INVESTMENT IN PUNISHMENT AND THE LOSS OF ACCOUNTABILITY Private equity firms, insurance firms, and large publicly held corporations (to which I collectively refer as “Big Capital”) have deeply invested in the various private correctional companies providing services to a wide variety of corrections, ranging from juvenile justice institutions, forensic psychiatric hospitals and behavioral services, to almost every aspect of correctional control, including bail bonds, electric monitoring, private probation, and halfway houses. Big Capital corrections services routinely cut staff and guards, fail to adequately maintain facilities, and eliminate needed safeguards and oversight, all in the name of increasing profit. The consequences for justice-involved individuals? Abuse, neglect, unsafe living conditions, serious health issues, and sometimes death. Although much attention has gone to the role of privatized prisons, less has been paid to the role of Big Capital in consuming entire areas of correctional services. Big Capital’s investment in corrections has largely flown under the radar, with troubling results. 4 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 A. Troubled Youth, Quick Profits: Juvenile Justice and Youth Detention Centers Big Capital has been increasingly investing in services for troubled youth, including children enrolled in foster care, juvenile justice, troubled teen programs.4 Youth behavioral health services, whether in juvenile justice facilities or youth detention centers, are a hot investment in the business world, especially for private equity firms.5 The number of private equity deals to purchase health care companies almost tripled between 2010 and 2021,6 including youth behavioral health services. The private equity model does not fit well with an approach that centers on child welfare, however. For one, private equity companies frequently have goals of doubling or tripling their investment over the course of 4-7 years.7 Chasing such large investment returns over a short period of time often requires cost-cutting in the institutions, which damages the type and quality of care provided.8 Additionally, private equity’s use of leverage to enhance returns requires high debt levels, which can divert available spending money from the actual daily operation of these institutions to the pockets of the private equity owners, who expect frequent interest payments and dividends.9 Private equity companies have made significant inroads in two different types of justiceinvolved youth services providers: juvenile justice and immigrant youth detention. As I reveal below, the change has not been salutary for the children involved. 1. Juvenile Justice Residential programs for children involved in the juvenile justice system have been a tempting area of investment for private equity firms. For several of these private equity companies, however, the programs that they took over resulted in abuse and neglect of the youth, forcing states to either close facilities or sever contracts.10 The impact on the children involved appears largely negative, posing a unique and significant risk to them.11 One repeat private equity-owned player has been Sequel Youth & Family Services, a leading provider of youth residential services, which includes housing children residing in juvenile 4 See Michelle Conlin, Private Equity’s Latest Play: The Troubled Kids Industry, REUTERS (February 17, 2022), https://www.reuters.com/business/private-equitys-latest-play-troubled-kids-industry-2022-02-17/ 5 See Fred Schulte, Sick Profits: Private Equity’s Stealthy Takeover Of Health Care In Multiple Cities, Specialties, USA Today (November 11, 2022), https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2022/11/13/private-equity-firmstakeover-health-care/8294483001/?gnt-cfr=1 6 See Schulte, supra note __, at id. 7 See Eileen O’Grady, The Kids Are Not Alright: How Private Equity Profits Off Behavioral Health Services for Vulnerable and At-Risk Youth 3, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (February 2022), https://pestakeholder.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/PESP_Youth_BH_Report_2022.pdf 8 O’Grady, supra note __, at id. 9 O’Grady, supra note __, at id. 10 O’Grady, supra note __, at 12. 11 See Confining Youth for Profit, NATIONAL JUVENILE JUSTICE NETWORK (September 2015), https://www.njjn.org/our-work/confining-youth-for-profit--policy-platform 5 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 justice facilities.12 Recently serving up to 10,000 youth at 50 separate locations in 21 states, Sequel is currently owned by Altamont Capital Partners, which purchased Sequel in August 2017 from Canadian private equity firm Alaris Royalty.13 Alaris profited tremendously from its ownership of Sequel, harvesting $71 million in profit—roughly 23% annual return--on its investment.14 State governments pay Sequel, and other for-profit, private-equity owned corrections companies, to house children who are involved in their juvenile justice systems.15 These companies have been associated with abuse, neglect, and death of youth for whose welfare they are responsible. For example, in April 2020, a teenager, Cornelius Fredericks, was tackled and restrained by at least six staff members at Sequel’s Lakeside Academy, a Kalamazoo, Michigan facility housing foster-care and juvenile-justice involved youth.16 The child’s alleged offense? Throwing a sandwich.17 Two of the staff members, who held Fredericks to the ground for several minutes, were charged with homicide, and a school nurse was charged with manslaughter for her failure to call 911 in a timely manner.18 The school nurse claims she thought the child was “faking unconsciousness.”19 Sequel’s response to this tragedy? They fired the staff members accused of killing the teen, but appeared to do little else to fix the problems at the facility.20 Indifference to children’s wellbeing seems to be an issue at Sequel facilities, where numerous juvenile justice detainees criticized the actions of Sequel staff members in multiple states, noting that they used inappropriate physical restraints to control their charges.21 Some restraint techniques were allegedly so violent that the children lost consciousness.22 The list of allegations against staff working in Sequel-owned and operated facilities is long and disturbing, including rape, sexual assault, injuries from severe restraint techniques, long-term seclusion, broken bones, and concussions.23 12 O’Grady, supra note __, at 12. See Altamont Capital Partners Invests in Sequel Youth & Family Services, PR Newswire (September 5, 2017), https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/altamont-capital-partners-invests-in-sequel-youth--family-services300513614.html 14 O’Grady, supra note __, at 12. 15 O’Grady, supra note __, at 4. 16 See Tyler Kingkade, Video Shows Fatal Restraint of Cornelius Frederick, 16, in Michigan Foster Facility, NBC NEWS (July 22, 2020), https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/video-shows-fatal-restraint-cornelius-fredericks16-michigan-foster-facility-n1233122 17 See Kingkade, supra note __, at id. 18 See Kingkade, supra note __, at id. 19 See Kingkade, supra note __, at id 20 See Kingkade, supra note __, at id 21 See Hannah Rappleye, Eric Salzman and Kate Snow, “They Told Me It Was Going to Be a Good Place:” Allegations of Abuse at Home for At-Risk Kids, NBC NEWS (March 16, 2019), https://www.nbcnews.com/news/usnews/they-told-me-it-was-going-be-good-place-allegations-n987176 22 See Rappleye et. al, supra note __, at id. 23 See Lee Rood, Clarinda Students Were Restrained and Injured as Punishment, Records Show, DES MOINES REGISTER (December 22, 2018), https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/investigations/readerswatchdog/2018/12/22/clarinda-academy-iowa-students-restrained-injured-punishment-investigation-woodwardacademy/2387163002/ 13 6 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Certainly, the public systems have problems, too.24 What is different about Big Capital? In part, private equity-owned, for-profit facilities tend to use short-term or shift workers, who may not properly trained to work with children who have serious behavioral challenges.25 Although publicly run juvenile justice centers are not without flaws, their staff tends to be more permanent.26 The more temporary workers working in Big Capital-funded juvenile justice may over-rely on restraint techniques for misbehaving children, frequently failing to follow the protocol required for proper behavioral interventions.27 The other problem with more involvement of Big Capital is the challenge of overseeing juvenile residential corrections, which involves complex and overlapping local, state, and federal regulation.28 Because there are so many different regulatory entities, consistent oversight of their operations can sometimes fall through the cracks.29 Private equity firms and other big capital companies have benefited from these gaps in oversight. Privatized youth confinement facilities are a common feature throughout the U.S., since almost half of the youth facilities in the country are privately operated.30 Profitability targets lead to pressure to maintain or increase the head count of confined children, while simultaneously cutting costs.31 The result is often is failure to meet the minimum standards normally required for state-run juvenile justice facilities, including benchmarks such as use of force standards, incident reporting, operating standards, minimum staffing ratios, medical standards, and emergency protocols.32 The absence of strong regulatory oversight has permitted companies like Sequel and their private equity investors to operate with limited restrictions. For the majority of Sequel’s twentythree years in operation, it neatly eluded public accountability.33 Although there were occasional news stories about individual abuses at various centers, “the full picture of the problems in Sequel’s programs was obscured by a patchwork of oversight bodies spread across multiple states and local jurisdictions.”34 The company would simply close a facility when conditions deteriorated. .35 24 Rikers Island, for example, was notoriously dangerous for juvenile detainees, leading to the permanent removal of young teens from the jail. See Christopher Robbins, Raise the Age Moves All Young Teenagers Off Rikers Island, Gothamist (October 1, 2018), https://gothamist.com/news/raise-the-age-moves-all-young-teenagers-off-rikers-island 25 Rappleye et. al, supra note __, at id. 26 See Kelan Lyons, Staffing shortages at NC juvenile detention centers: So bad that, ‘If you show up to work today, you get a bonus,’ NC POLICY WATCH (12/14/22), https://ncpolicywatch.com/2022/12/14/staffing-shortages-at-ncsjuvenile-detention-centers-reaches-crisis-levels/ 27 Rappleye et. al, supra note __, at id. 28 O’Grady, supra note __, at 4. 29 O’Grady, supra note __, at 4. 30 See Sarah Hockenberry, Melissa Sickmund, and Anthony Sladky, Juvenile Residential Facility Census, 2012: Selected Findings 2, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, US DOJ (March 2015), https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED590915.pdf 31 See Confining Youth for Profit, NATIONAL JUVENILE JUSTICE NETWORK (September 2015), https://www.njjn.org/our-work/confining-youth-for-profit--policy-platform 32 See Essential Public Interest Protections for Private Prison Contracts 7, IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST (October 2012), http://bit.ly/1JJzfc8. 33 See Gilbert & Dake, supra note __, at id. See Gilbert & Dake, supra note __, at id. 35 See Gilbert & Dake, supra note __, at id. 34 7 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Part of the public problem is that Sequel, and companies like it, are willing to house and oversee the troubled children that other treatment and residential centers either cannot or will not.36 This means that states are often reluctant to cut ties with them, despite knowledge of the abuse and mistreatment.37 The ultimate result, then is a “business model that banks on governments’ incapacity to create safe places for their most vulnerable children.”38 It is this precise business model that private equity firms have begun to monetize. By 2018, approximately 40% of all residential youth detention centers were operated by private, for-profit companies.39 A significant subset are controlled and owned by private equity firms.40 A troubled sector, privately run residential youth detention centers tend to be “buried under layers of bureaucracy,” and do not have to comply with open records laws, like state-run centers.41 Ultimately, the lack of accountability is the most dangerous factor for the children living in these centers.42 When there is an incident in state-run juvenile residential centers, there is usually a public investigation, and legislators and state government are quickly involved.43 With privately run juvenile residential centers, however, there is little oversight, and thus all but the most terrible incidents can be more easily concealed.44 The primary type of oversight for private facilities is created through the licensure and contracting process; this, however, only normally requires general oversight, mostly up-front, with considerable inconsistency.45 The lack of public oversight and state regulation can be deadly. At Lakeside Academy, where Cornelius Fredericks was killed, the staff’s alleged casual abuse of the children residing there was chilling. Improper restraining of youth, like the hold that killed Fredericks, was specifically taught to staff members to help “control” the residents.46 These dangerous holds are common among residential programs, particularly those who are not well regulated: “What happened to (Fredericks) happens in Sequel facilities, in juvenile justice facilities, in residential care facilities, in psychiatric facilities across the country multiple times a day … every day of the year.”47 Similarly, due to lack of oversight, private equity-owned juvenile justice facilities have hired staff members without background checks.48 In contrast, publicly owned juvenile detention centers normally screen their staff as a condition of hiring.49 36 See Gilbert & Dake, supra note __, at id. See Gilbert & Dake, supra note __, at id. 38 See Gilbert & Dake, supra note __, at id. 39 See Franco LaTona & Jos Fox, ‘I Can’t Breathe:’ Hidden Abuse in Some Private Detention Centers, KIDS IMPRISONED, NEWS 21, August 21, 2020, https://kidsimprisoned.news21.com/for-profit-juvenile-detention-centers/ 40 Get percentages. 41 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 42 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 43 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 44 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 45 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 46 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 47 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 48 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 49 See., e.g., Juvenile Justice Detention Officer I - 80003881 , State of Florida (Feb. 15, 2023), https://jobs.myflorida.com/job/DAYTONA-BEACH-JUVENILE-JUSTICE-DETENTION-OFFICER-I-80003881FL-32124/993876200/ 37 8 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Although Michigan health services required corrective action plans for each abusive episode at Lakeside Academy, nothing was made public.50 This secrecy, along with contracting with individually-run juvenile facilities, has allowed the existing private equity firms in charge to fly well under the radar.51 For example, Sequel, fully owned by Altamont Capital Partners, operates approximately 40 residential juvenile justice facilities around the country.52 Because each of the facilities is registered under a separate, independent name, it is difficult to trace back to the ultimate owner: the private equity investment firm. Moreover, the abusive treatment and lack of oversight tend to occur more frequently with high-needs children, who often have severe behavioral and psychological issues. Companies like Sequel particularly focus on serving these particular children, who are often sent to out-of-state residential care facilities as a last resort. Because these children are far from home and struggle with behavior, often the abuse is ignored, or goes unreported.53 When abuse does happen, the entity who runs the residential homes is almost never publicly blamed or held to account. The frequent sales and name changes of the private companies that run the troubled juvenile detention facilities makes tracking these entities difficult. For example, in 2022, Sequel, under fire for its abuse scandals, shut down approximately half of their centers, selling the rest to Vivant Behavioral Healthcare.54 Vivant Behavioral Healthcare, however, was founded in 2021 by Jay Ripley, one of three 1999 founders of Sequel.55 As Vivant, the company is using its technical change of ownership to fight litigation against treatment centers formerly owned by Sequel.56 The privatization rate of juvenile detention centers has risen, from 33% of facilities in 1999 to 40% in 2016.57 Outcomes for the minors assigned to their care and supervision have not improved. In 2012, the Department of Justice found that private juvenile facilities had twice the sexual abuse rate (8%) as public facilities (4%).58 Additionally, the death rate for juveniles detained in juvenile justice residential facilities was higher in private facilities as opposed to public (2.8% vs. 2.3%).59 The numbers are twice as worse in juvenile detention centers, where the death rate 50 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 52 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 53 See Tona & Fox, supra note __, at id. 54 See Curtis Gilbert, Under Scrutiny, Company That Claimed to Help Troubled Youth Closes Many Operations and Sells Others, APMREPORTS (April 23, 2022), https://www.apmreports.org/story/2022/04/26/sequel-closes-sellsyouth-treatment-centers 55 Gilbert, supra note __, at id. Ripley was also the original founder of another abuse scandal-ridden youth behavioral services company, Youth Services Industries, which was finally ceased operations in 2016. See John Kelly, Is Youth Services International Finally Out of Business, THE IMPRINT (March 21, 2016), https://imprintnews.org/justice/juvenile-justice-2/is-youth-services-international-finally-out-of-business/16785 56 Gilbert, supra note __, at id. 57 See Caitlin Curley, Why Is No One Paying Attention to Private Juvenile Detention Centers, GENBIZ (September 14, 2016), https://genbiz.com/no-one-paying-attention-private-juvenile-detention-centers 58 See Allen Beck and David Cantor, Sexual Victimization in Juvenile Facilities Reported by Youth 17, National Survey of Youth in Custody 2012, BJS (June 2013), https://bjs.ojp.gov/content/pub/pdf/svjfry12.pdf (nb: double check source) 59 See Sarah Hockenberry, Melissa Sickmund, and Anthony Sladky, Juvenile Residential Facility Census, 2012: Selected Findings 13, OFFICE OF JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION (March 2015), https://ojjdp.ojp.gov/sites/g/files/xyckuh176/files/pubs/247207.pdf 51 9 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 was 5.8% for privately-run detention centers compared to 3.1% for public detention centers. Though we cannot discern precisely why these results are so much worse, we should be able to know more. This baseline neglect and disturbing record of abuse is no surprise. As one observer has pointed out, “[p]rivate equity’s goal isn’t to provide a safe and comfortable environment for those in its care, it’s to make outsized returns.”60 Indeed, understaffing, lack of proper training, poor living conditions, physical and sexual abuse, and underreported use of restraints in these facilities continue apace. These problems are the specific “by-product of the private equity business model,” which increases profits by running unmonitored shoestring operations.61 One reason juvenile justice residential facilities are so appealing to private equity is due to the increasing amount of public subsidy directed at it over the past decade, courtesy of the Affordable Care Act.62 The revenue stream makes this segment of criminal justice ripe for private equity takeover.63 But what has been profitable for private investors has not proven beneficial for those children under correctional control. 2. Juvenile Pre-Trial Detention Services Large, publicly traded companies have also rolled up64 and invested in various private corrections companies which provide youth pre-trial detention services. In 2019, for example, CoreCivic, a multi-billion dollar publicly-held corrections corporation, entered into a five-year, $29 million contract with the U.S. Department of Justice for detention and transportation services at Otay Mesa Detention Center.65 Otay Mesa Detention Center provides pre-trial detention for juvenile offenders, among other services, and has been criticized for their poor treatment of individuals relegated to their care. Otay Mesa has recently come under fire for use of pepper spray on its juvenile detainees, despite San Diego commission requests for officers to limit and eventually eliminate its use.66 Additionally, the Center had limited nursing and clerical staff to help treat and document illnesses, and only minimally necessary medical equipment, potentially hampering emergency responses.67 60 See David Dayen, Private Equity Eyes Youth Treatment Centers as a Takeover Target, AMERICAN PROSPECT (Feb. 17, 2022), https://prospect.org/power/rollups-private-equity-eyes-youth-treatment-centers-as-takeover-target/ 61 Dayen, Takeover Target, supra note __, at id. 62 Dayen, Takeover Target, supra note __, at id. 63 Dayen, Takeover Target, supra note __, at id. 64 A roll up, or roll up merger, is when “an investor…. buys up companies in the same market and merges them together. Roll-up mergers, also known as a "roll up" or a "rollup," combine multiple small companies into a larger entity that is better positioned to enjoy economies of scale.” See James Chen, Investopedia (September 11, 2022), https://www.investopedia.com/roll-up-merger-definition-4683958 65 See DOJ Contract with CoreCivic, USA SPENDING, https://www.usaspending.gov/award/CONT_AWD_15M40021FA3500007_1544_70CDCR20D00000007_7012 66 See Jill Castellano, Youth in San Diego Detention Said Locked in Rooms Without Written Permission, TIMES OF SAN DIEGO (April 21, 2022), https://timesofsandiego.com/politics/2022/04/21/youth-in-sd-detention-said-locked-inrooms-without-written-justification/ 67 See Castellano, supra note __, at id. 10 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Finally, there was little to any tracking of the juvenile detainees after release, making it hard to ensure that they got proper rehabilitation and re-entry services.68 Given that CoreCivic is known for cost-cutting in the correctional facilities they serve,69 it is hardly a surprise that their pre-trial detention services for juveniles appear troubled.. B. Psychiatric Hospitals & Behavioral Services Behavioral health, psychiatric care, and forensic hospitals have also been attractive investment targets for big capital companies, as they are seen as ripe for purchase, streamlining, and profit extraction. The expansion of Big Capital into behavioral health has often been ruinous for the patients involved, who are frequently mentally fragile by the time they arrive at these institutions. Instead of providing assistance, proper forensic care, or comfort, however, the corrections behavioral health companies often have worsened an individual’s situation.70 Private provision of these public services again hampers our ability to monitor the provision of healthcare services, and oversee minimum levels of competence.71 1. Psychiatric Care for At-Risk Youth Behavioral services for teens and younger children have also been markets for investment for private equity firms, resulting in troubling provision of services for youth in need of psychiatric care. In Alabama, Sequel ran 4 child psychiatric residential treatment facilities, all of which were found to be “violent and chaotic places where youth are physically and emotionally abused by staff and peers, subjected to wretched living conditions, provided inadequate supervision and medical care, and subjected to illegal seclusion and restraint,”72 as alleged by the Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program. In 2019, for example, the Sequel-run teen facility in Courtland, Alabama allegedly failed to prevent repeated employee attacks on a boy under their care, possibly leading to his suicide attempt.73 Sequel’s services in housing foster youth and teens charged with crimes have been nothing short of a failure, as evidenced by the forced shutdown of 14 out of 36 residential facilities, including 5 facilities closed in 2021.74 After complaints of child sexual abuse by staff members, 68 See Castellano, supra note __, at id. See generally Laura I Appleman, Cashing in on Convicts: Privatization, Punishment, and the People, 2018 UTAH L. REV. 579 (2018). 70 See The Treatment Industrial Complex 14, Prison Policy (November 2014), https://www.prisonpolicy.org/scans/afsc/tic_report_online.pdf 71 See Eileen O’Grady, Understaffed, Unlicensed, and Untrained: Behavioral Health Under Private Equity, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (February 22, 2020), https://pestakeholder.org/reports/understaffedunlicensed-and-untrained-behavioral-health-under-private-equity/ 72 See Nancy Anderson, Letter to Alabama State Commissioners, ALABAMA DISABILITIES ADVOCACY PROGRAM (July 6, 2020), https://adap.ua.edu/uploads/5/7/8/9/57892141/letter_to_state_re_sequel.pdf 73 See Caroline Klapp, Abuse at Sequel Courtland Led Child to Attempt Suicide, WAFF48 (December 17, 2020), https://www.waff.com/2020/12/17/attorney-abuse-sequel-courtland-led-child-attempt-suicide/ 74 See O’Grady, Kids Are Not Alright, supra note __, at 16-17. 69 11 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 ignored by Sequel, eventually reached police, the media, and disability advocates, Sequel is essentially no more.75 Similarly, the Cornell Abraxas Group, a subsidiary of the Geo Group, runs various juvenile treatment and detention centers, with a division entitled Abraxas Youth and Family Services.76 Abraxas Youth and Family Services owns and runs the Abraxas Youth Center in South Mountain, Pennsylvania, a residential juvenile treatment center providing “secure youth treatment” on “the secluded grounds of the state owned, South Mountain Restoration Center.”77 The treatment provided includes secure residential treatment for male youth and secure detention services,78 and operates as a custodial facility for juvenile court adjudicated male youths, ages 12-18.79 According to allegations in a recent class action lawsuit, services provided at Abraxas, however, may have been harmful. According to the complaint filed in March 2022, staff repeatedly abused children at the Abraxas Western Pennsylvania juvenile detention center.80 The class action alleges physical, mental, and sexual abuse of the children while they were in custody of Abraxas.81 Specifically, the suit claims that the children residing at the Abraxas juvenile detention center in Pennsylvania were subjected to both physical and emotional abuse, excessive use of force, and abuse from staffers hired and trained by Abraxas.82 The South Mountain facility claimed to provide a rehabilitative base program for juveniles, and was lauded as “the Harvard of Reform Schools.”83 Partially based on this reputation, children from a variety of states were placed at the school.84 This reputation did not reflect myriad of abuses perpetuated on its juvenile residents, according to the plaintiffs. Children were abused sexually, physically, and mentally by staff members, repeatedly and over long periods of time.85 As the lawsuit alleges, “[u]nder a veneer of civility, there is a ‘Dickensian culture of violence’ and intimidation at the school that has severely impacted plaintiffs through systematic extensive force, threats of longer sentences for those who report the abuse, and detention beyond commitment dates for those students with injuries that would be noticed upon release from the School.”86 Violent restraints were used on the children routinely and abusively, despite the requirement that they be 75 See Curtis Gilbert, Under Scrutiny, Company That Claimed to Help Troubled Youth Closes Many Operations and Sells Others. AMPM REPORTS (April 26, 2022), https://www.apmreports.org/story/2022/04/26/sequel-closes-sellsyouth-treatment-centers 76 See ABRAXAS YOUTH AND FAMILY SERVICES, https://abraxasyfs.org/about.html (“a national leader in providing residential, community based and in home services for youth, adults and families.”) 77 See Abraxas Youth Center, ABRAXAS YOUTH AND FAMILY SERVICES, https://abraxasyfs.org/abraxas-youthcenter.html 78 See Abraxas Youth Center, supra note __, at id. 79 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 5. 80 See New Class Action Alleges Abuse at Pa. Juvenile Detention Center, THE LEGAL INTELLIGENCER (March 31, 2022), https://www.law.com/thelegalintelligencer/2022/03/31/new-class-action-alleges-abuse-at-pa-juveniledetention-center/?slreturn=20220611231359 81 See Abuse at Pa. Juvenile Detention Center, supra note __, at id. 82 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 4. 83 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 6. 84 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 6. 85 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 6. 86 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 8. 12 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 used only as a last resort.87 This behavior allegedly continued on despite news reports,88 lawsuits,89 internal complaints,90 and reports from court monitors.91 As the pleading points out: The School, by contract and legislation in Pennsylvania, has been delegated a critical and legislatively mandated public function: (a) to provide a custodial setting for children adjudicated delinquent in juvenile court proceedings, as well as children at risk for delinquency or criminal conduct; and (b) to carry out legislatively mandated control and related services, and to provide appropriate sanctions and rehabilitation under the laws governing punishment and treatment of juveniles for criminal acts.92 Accordingly, whatever abuses were committed by the Pennsylvania detention center, which was run and staffed by Abraxas, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania should absorb some responsibility, since it had delegated its job to an outside, private corrections company. Nowhere in any of the media reports or allegations, however, is there anything that indicates that Abraxas is part of Cornell Abraxas LLC, which is part of GEO Group, one of the two largest private correctional services companies in the United States.93 Although the class action suit filed in 2022 names Cornell Abraxas LLC and the GEO Group in its class action complaint, there is no other indicator of Abraxas Youth and Family Services is part of a giant correctional control corporation Looking at the lawsuit alone will not tell you the full scope of the complicated ownership structure. Indeed, there is not even any mention of the GEO Group on the Abraxas Youth and Family Services website.94 As I explore in Part II, the GEO Group is another large, publicly traded corporation.95 . The GEO Group’s ownership of Abraxas Youth and Family Services, and thus its responsibility for what happened at the youth detention center, should have been front and center in the expose of the horrors occurring at South Mountain Facility, but was never once mentioned. It is another way that the invisible hand of Big Capital hides in plain sight. 87 See Carley Bonk, Stories of Abuse, Intimidation Revealed in Investigation of South Mountain Treatment Unit, CHAMBERSBURG PUBLIC OPINION (April 29, 2020), https://www.publicopiniononline.com/story/news/local/2020/04/30/pa-youth-treatment-facility-center-civil-lawsuitalleging-abuse-south-mountain/5030534002/ 88 See Bonk, Stories of Abuse, supra note __, at id. 89 See Complaint, Disability Rights Pennsylvania v. Pennsylvania Department of Human Services, U.S. Dist. Ct. (M.D. Pa) (April 30, 2019), 1:19-cv-00737-CCC, https://www.scribd.com/document/434652331/Disability-RightsPennsylvania-v-Pennsylvania-Department-of-Human-Services#from_embed 90 See Carley Bonk, Inside the Alleged Abuse of At-Risk Youth in Pa. Treatment Centers, CHAMBERSBURG PUBLIC OPINION (April 30, 2020), https://www.publicopiniononline.com/in-depth/news/local/2020/04/30/pennsylvaniayouth-treatment-centers-have-been-accused-abusing-kids-south-mountain/4084874002/ 91 See Van Buren, supra note __, at 9. 92 Class Action Complaint, Tobias Van Buren vs. Abraxas Youth and Family Services at 1, U.S. Dist. Ct (W.D. Pa) (March 28, 2022), 2:22-cv-499, https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mgEDjWUfXWsS-r4nBzf2E9V1BW2ICpBm/view 93 See Appleman, Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 40. 94 See Abraxas Youth and Family Services, About Us, https://abraxasyfs.org/about.html. 95 See Appleman, Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 40. 13 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 B. Psychiatric Hospitals Despite repeated abuse and neglectful behavior, the private equity-owned companies running psychiatric facilities continually close and reopen. “Sequel briefly reopened a psychiatric hospital in Ohio that had shut down in 2020 under state pressure after a nurse there was charged with assaulting a resident.96 The company rebranded Sequel Pomegranate as Torii Behavioral Health, but within months it notified the state that the facility was closing again.”97 The expansion of private equity owned correctional health companies should give us pause. In New Hampshire, for example, five children’s health organizations have asked the state to reconsider permitting Wellpath, a correctional healthcare company owned by private equity firm HIG Capital,98 to take over a children’s psychiatric hospital, given its troubling track record in providing care at Bridgewater State Hospital. Wellpath’s contracted with Bridgewater State to provide mental health services to those under correctional control.99 Among the issues regarding Wellpath’s running of the hospital were allegedly dangerous levels of mold growth, “illegal chemical and physical restraint and seclusion practices, [and] the pervasive culture of punishment and intimidation,” as alleged by Disability Law Center.100 In particular, Wellpath’s repeated use of isolation tactics, punitive restraint through physical and chemical means, and overmedication of patients transferred from correctional facilities allegedly created an unsafe and untherapeutic facility, a status quo that persisted for over eight years.101 And yet this level of alleged malfeasance has not stopped Wellpath from continuing to expand into new areas of mental health provision for state forensic hospitals and correctional services. Indeed, despite protests from various organizations, Wellpath still won the contract to run Hampstead Hospital in New Hampshire.102 Likewise, GEO Care, a wholly-owned subsidiary of GEO Group, has also allegedly mistreated incarcerated patients in forensic psychiatric hospitals. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, GEO Care provided substandard care for the patients at the Montgomery County Mental Health Treatment Facility in Texas, including overuse of restraints without appropriate 96 See Hana Ikramuddin and Curtis Gilbert, Sequel to Close New Mexico Youth Facility Amid More Abuse Allegations, APM REPORTS (December 21, 2021), https://www.apmreports.org/story/2021/12/03/sequel-bernalilloacademy-abuse-allegations 97 Ikramuddin & Gilbert, supra note __, at id. 98 See Wellpath, HIG Private Equity, https://higprivateequity.com/portfolio/company/403 99 See AnnMarie Timmins, Organizations Call on Executive Council to Reconsider Wellpath Contract for Hampstead Hospital, NEW HAMPSHIRE BULLETIN (May 3, 2022), https://newhampshirebulletin.com/briefs/organizations-call-on-sununu-councilors-to-reject-wellpath-contract-forhampstead-hospital/ 100 See Disability Law Center Finds Serious Health and Safety Concerns at Bridgewater State Hospital, Confirming Widespread Mold and Improper Use of Restraint, DISABILITY LAW CENTER (February 9, 2022), https://www.dlcma.org/2022/02/09/disability-law-center-finds-serious-health-and-safety-concerns-at-bridgewater-state-hospitalconfirming-widespread-mold-and-improper-use-of-restraint/ 101 Serious Health and Safety Concerns, supra note __, at id. 102 See Annmarie Timmins, After Assurances From AG, Council Approves Wellpath Contract for Hampstead Hospital, NEW HAMPSHIRE BULLETIN (May 4, 2022), https://newhampshirebulletin.com/briefs/after-assurancesfrom-ag-council-approves-wellpath-contract-for-hampstead-hospital/ 14 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 physician’s orders, neglect of mentally disturbed patients, and repeatedly keeping patients in the facility for months after they had been found competent to stand trial.103 This privately-run, publicly-funded psychiatric hospital, focused on treating mentally incompetent defendants, racked up multiple violations of state law, such as improper restraints and insufficient monitoring.104 Nonetheless, GEO Care was the only company to bid for the contract, and as the state insisted privatizing one state hospital and cutting costs by 10%, it was essentially the only option.105 Despite the poor showing in Texas, Geo Care continues to run private psychiatric hospitals for states. In Florida, for example, the Treasure Coast Forensic Treatment Center (TCFTC), which houses those found not guilty by reason of insanity and rehabilitates arrestees’ mental health in order to undergo felony trial, was reportedly plagued by GEO Group’s typical understaffing and neglectful care.106 In seven years that Geo Care had assumed responsibility for the forensic hospital, one patient had died from assault by another patient.107 Several more had been maimed, including one patient who hit other inmates in the face, poked them in the eye, and bit off chunks from their ears.108 This operation was profitable, however; the TCFTC produced an estimated annual revenue of $577 million under Geo Care’s supervision.109 The level of care at TCFTC did not improve when CorrectCare (also owned by HIG Capital) came to take over from GEO Group, retaining many of the same staff and management.110 Half the fines, a third of the reported assaults and two of the four patient deaths occurred between 2015 and 2018.111 The officer to patient ratio was low, with uncertified officers and high staff turnover.112 In addition, as of 2017, the TCFTC was not registered with the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (HCA), as required by state law.113 This meant that Correct Care (now 103 See Ryan Meltzer, Is Patient Care – Or Profits – The Priority at Privatized Montgomery County Mental Health Treatment Facility In Conroe?, ACLU TEXAS (August 12, 2012), https://www.aclutx.org/en/news/patient-care-orprofits-priority-privatized-montgomery-county-mental-health-treatment-facility 104 See Lomi Criel, Conroe Psychiatric Hospital May Face Big Fines, HOUSTON CHRONICLE (July 26, 2012), https://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Conroe-psychiatric-hospital-may-face-big-fines-3739104.php 105 See Criel, supra note __, at id. 106 See Lucas Daprile, Dangerous Detention: Treasure Coast mental hospital lacks staff, training, licensing, funding, TREASURE COAST PALM (January 21, 2018), https://www.tcpalm.com/story/news/investigations/2018/01/21/treasure-coast-mental-hospital-not-enough-stafftraining-equipment-funding-tcpalm-investigation-find/921183001/ 107 Emily Bowhatch, After nearly two years, man charged with murder at Indiantown mental health facility, TREASURE COAST PALM (October 31, 2017), https://www.tcpalm.com/story/news/crime/martincounty/2017/10/31/after-nearly-two-years-man-charged-murder-indiantown-mental-health-facility/818284001/ 108 See Leonora Anton, Michael Braga, & Anthony Cornier, Insane, Invisible, In Danger, TAMPA BAY TIMES/HERALD TRIBUNE (October 29, 2015), https://projects.tampabay.com/projects/2015/investigations/floridamental-health-hospitals/cuts/ 109 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 110 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 111 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 112 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 113 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 15 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Wellpath)114 was not subject to the HCA’s annual inspections and $25,000 maximum fines for violations not swiftly remedied.115 CorrectCare ran the South Florida state hospital in a similar fashion, resulting in multiple patient deaths in 2011 and 2013 due to poor staffing and neglect of patients.116 Despite these tragedies, Wellpath still runs this particular psychiatric hospital today, along with three others in the state of Florida.117 Correct Care/Wellpath’s chronic understaffing may have been dangerous for both staff and patients, but it has been profitable for HIG Capital: in a year and a half’s worth of time, the company saved $545,801 from payroll, even after paying fines to the state.118 For every $1 it spends on fines Correct Care/Wellpath saves $4 in payroll savings from hiring fewer employees, thus making profit on the backs of the mentally ill.119 Florida entered into contracts with both Geo Care and Correct Care/Wellpath because they were the cheapest operators available to run a forensic psychiatric hospital.120 Due to chronic underfunding for mental health services, Florida, and a number of other states look for the lowest bidder to provide these services.121 Since 2009, Florida has cut $100 million from their psychiatric hospital budget,122 allowing private equity owned companies to run their hospitals for the monetary savings. As a Florida state audit admitted, “The absence of sufficient (DCF) oversight may also have contributed to the deficiencies.”123 Time after time, facility after facility, Big Capital companies such as Wellpath or Geo Care have wreaked havoc on state forensic psychiatric hospitals. In Massachusetts, Wellpath’s operation of Bridgewater State Hospital, a facility for mentally ill men who are incarcerated, involuntarily committed or awaiting pretrial evaluations, has been continually substandard.124 By January 2022, conditions had become so bad at the hospital that the Disability Law Center called 114 See Joel Stinnett, One of Nashville's Largest Private Companies Merges with California Firm, Changes Name, Nashville Business Journal (November 8, 2018), https://www.bizjournals.com/nashville/news/2018/11/07/one-ofnashvilles-largest-private-companies-merges.html 115 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 116 See Anton et. al., Death on the Wards, supra note __, at id. 117 See South Florida State Hospital Receives Full Accreditation from the Joint Commission, CISION (January 9, 2018), https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/south-florida-state-hospital-receives-full-accreditation-from-thejoint-commission-300579881.html 118 Daprile, Correct Care Solutions profited $546,000 by understaffing in violation of state contract, TREASURE COAST PALM (February 1st, 2018), https://www.tcpalm.com/story/news/investigations/2018/01/21/dangerousdetention-treasure-coast-mental-hospital-profits-understaffing-despite-fines-workers-comp/922682001/ 119 Dapril, Correct Care Solutions, supra note__, at id. 120 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 121 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 122 See Leonora Lapeter Anton, Michael Braga & Anthony Cormier, Death on the Wards: 14 People Who Didn’t Have to Die at Florida’s Mental Hospitals, TAMPA BAY TIMES/HERALD TRIBUNE (October 29, 2015), https://projects.tampabay.com/projects/2015/investigations/florida-mental-health-hospitals/14-patients-died/ 123 Daprile, Dangerous Detention, supra note __, at id. 124 Haley Cornell, Safety Report Calls for Shutdown of Bridgeport State Hospital, PATCH (February 9, 2022), https://patch.com/massachusetts/brockton/safety-report-calls-shut-down-bridgewater-state-hospital 16 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 for its closure.125 According to reports, Wellpath had allowed the hospital to become a “broken facility,” riddled with toxic mold, potential asbestos, and filth, which endangered patients and staff.126 In addition, Wellpath was charged with abusive and cruel behavior in its treatment of patients sentenced to Bridgewater State Hospital.127 The company’s methods allegedly included repeated use of chemical and physical restraints where there was no threat of imminent harm, which violates Massachusetts law.128 Wellpath also allegedly forced the use of psychotropic medication on patients in unsanctioned circumstances and non-emergency situations, according to Disability Law Center.129 In addition, Wellpath allegedly imposed improper and unnecessary seclusion on many patients for infractions such as throwing a glass of water, despite the lack of any recorded imminent threat of physical harm.130 As the Disability Law Center noted in their detailed report, a culture of intimidation pervaded the hospital: “Even [patients] who simply express frustration, anger, or distress are likely to face [staff] outfitted in tactical gear prepared to force them into submission through the use of ETOs, manual holds, mechanical restraint, and seclusion.”131 Finally, Wellpath allegedly limited access to medical care for patients,132 presumably to save money. Patients were not allowed to seek out the medical staff on their own.133 If seeking medical care or advice, a patient had to approach a staff member in the middle of other duties to report symptoms or request facility medical staff, which created a low likelihood that their medical issue would be reported or addressed.134 Their other option was to file a formal written grievance to the Person Served Advocate, a non-medical staff member who processes all the grievances for the forensic hospital, which has a low likelihood of response.135 The level of care and proper treatment of patients sentenced to forensic mental hospitals run by privately owned big correctional companies has been simply shameful. Even given the often low level of care provided at state forensic hospitals, the services provided by Wellpath/Correct Care and Geo Group are inferior. Big Capital’s takeover of correctional psychiatric treatment is likely poised to grow from here; between 2010 and 2019, these types of private equity deals in health care in general almost tripled in value, growing from $42 billion to 125 Cornell, Safety Report, supra note __, at id. See Shira Shoenberg, Pervasive Mold Plagues State Hospital for Mentally Ill Detainees, COMMONWEALTH (February 8, 2022), https://commonwealthmagazine.org/courts/pervasive-mold-plagues-state-hospital-for-mentallyill-detainees/ 127 Shoenberg, Pervasive Mold, supra note __, at id. 128 See Public Report: Efficacy of Service Delivery Reforms at Bridgewater State Hospital (BSH) and Continuity of Care for BSH Persons Served 16, DISABILITY LAW CENTER MASS. (January 2022), https://www.dlc-ma.org/wpcontent/uploads/2022/02/DLC-BSH-January-2022-Public-Report-2.9.2022.pdf 129 See Bridgewater State Hospital, supra note __, at 17, 21. 130 See Bridgewater State Hospital, supra note __, at 22, 23. 131 See Bridgewater State Hospital, supra note __, at 25, 26. 132 Cornell, Safety Report, supra note __, at id. 133 See Bridgewater State Hospital, supra note __, at 30. 134 See Bridgewater State Hospital, supra note __, at 30. 135 See Bridgewater State Hospital, supra note __, at 30 -31. 126 17 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 $120 billion.136 Indeed, the “profit-making goals of private equity are …. at odds with the needs of patients and the rules of government-financed health care programs.”137 Whether owned by private equity firms or large, publicly traded companies, the private correctional companies providing forensic psychiatric services to patients under correctional control seem focused on profits, not care. C. Correctional Control Big Capital has also expanded into the ever-growing field of correctional control: the oversight and surveillance of those individuals still involved in the corrections system. Correctional control encompasses everything from bail bonds to electronic monitoring after release to mandatory rehabilitation services, and as this sector grows, so too does the investment by private equity. None of this is beneficial to the people under the yoke of profit. 1. Bail Bonds Despite the recent movement towards eliminating money bail,138 the bail bond industry is still alive and well. Most courts assign cash bail as a condition of pre-trial release.139 A substantial majority of individuals arrested for alleged crimes, however, cannot afford to pay their bail in order to be released from jail before trial.140 The commercial bail bond industry helps to secure the release of some of these pre-trial detainees, loaning them the necessary bail amount in return for specific collateral, such as a car, house, or valuables.141 In exchange for a premium fee, the commercial bail agents enter into an agreement with the court that they will pay an individual’s full bail amount if they fail to appear.142 This non-refundable fee is usually 10 to 15 percent of the bond amount.143 Since courts frequently set bail amounts quite high, many borrowers must pay back the sum in installments, which come with high interest rates.144 136 See Jeanne Markey and Raymond Sarola, Private Equity, Health Care, And Profits: It’s Time to Protect Patients, STAT NEWS (March 24, 2022), https://www.statnews.com/2022/03/24/private-equity-health-care-profits-time-toprotect-patients/ 137 Markey & Sarola, supra note __, at id. 138 See Will Snowden, Money Bail is Unjust and Should End, FORBES (October 1, 2021), https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbeseq/2021/10/01/money-bail-is-unjust-and-should-end/?sh=652bec366f06 139 See Allie Preston & Rachael Eisenberg, Profit Over People: Primer on U.S. Cash Bail Systems, CENTER FOR AMERICAN PROGRESS (July 6, 2022), https://www.americanprogress.org/article/profit-over-people-primer-on-u-scash-bail-systems/ 140 See Laura I Appleman, Justice in the Shadowlands: Pretrial Detention, Punishment, & the Sixth Amendment, 69 WASH. & LEE L. REV. 1297, 1305 (2012). 141 See Sara Murphy, Reforming the Cash Bail System Benefits Both the Accused and Taxpayers, BEACON MAGAZINE (February 9, 2021), https://www.savannahnow.com/in-depth/special/2021/02/09/reforming-cash-bailsystem-benefits-both-accused-and-taxpayers/3948807001/ 142 See Will Kenton, Bail Bond, Investopedia (November 24, 2020), https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/bailbond.asp#toc-what-is-a-bail-bond 143 See Murphy, Cash Bail, supra note __, at id. 144 See Profiting Off Misery: Endeavour Capital and the Predatory Bail Industry 3, ACLU SMART JUSTICE (December 2019), https://www.aclu.org/report/profiting-misery 18 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 The commercial bail bond industry is almost entirely unregulated and frequently corrupt.145 This is because “bail bondsmen hold an immense amount of power over the bailees, despite the bondsmen's lack of legal, political, or police authority.”146 There is little to no regulation on the power of bail bondsmen to revoke bail and return the arrestee to jail, which can cost the individual thousands of dollars.147 The lack of supervisory authority means that bail bond companies are held accountable by any poor decisions of their employees in revoking bail or surrendering an arrestee, all of which means profit for the company.148 Given that the commercial bail bond industry “traps people who cannot afford cash bail premiums in a predatory cycle of debt and incarceration,”149 it is unsurprising that private equity has stepped in to invest. Aladdin Bail Bonds, the largest bail bond company in the country, operating in nine states, was owned by private equity firm Endeavour Capital, from 2012-2020.150 During its period of acquisition, Endeavour Capital expanded its bail bond company to several additional states, spending millions on lobbying to expand the bail bond industry to states where it is currently illegal.151 In addition, Endeavour Capital pushed back hard against any efforts to reform the bail bond industry in general.152 After considerable negative press, however, Endeavour Capital sold Aladdin Bail Bonds, disliking the controversy that accompanied the industry.153 Randall & Quilter, a global non-life specialty insurance company, apparently has not been deterred by this controversy. In 2014, Randall & Quilter acquired Accredited Surety, one of the nine main bail bond insurance companies that underwrite the bail bond companies.154 Accredited Surety, as a major backer of many commercial bail bond companies, was sued by the National Consumer Law Center in 2019 for price-fixing and maintaining a long-running anticompetitive conspiracy to keep bail bond premiums artificially high.155 As the complaint details, the surety coonspirators, through the bail agents they control, required an inflated percentage of the bond—up to 10%—as a non-refundable premium, and refuse to compete to lower prices.156 In California 145 See Appleman, Shadowlands, supra note __, at 1307. Appleman, Shadowlands, supra note __, at 1307. 147 Appleman, Shadowlands, supra note __, at 1307. 148 Appleman, Shadowlands, supra note __, at 1310. 149 Profit Over People: The Commercial Bail Industry Fueling America’s Cash Bail Systems, Center for American Progress (July 6, 2022), https://www.americanprogress.org/article/profit-over-people/ 150 See Following ACLU Report, Endeavour Capital Exits Bail Bond Investment, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (March 5, 2020), https://pestakeholder.org/news/following-aclu-report-endeavour-capital-exits-bail-bondinvestment/ 151 See Bail Bond Investment, supra note __, at id. 152 See Bail Bond Investment, supra note __, at id. 153 See Lauren Kusisto, Criminal Justice Changes Are Sweeping the Bail Bond Industry, WALL ST. J. (February 21, 2020), https://www.wsj.com/articles/criminal-justice-reforms-are-squeezing-the-bail-bond-industry-11582299332 154 See Udi Ofer, 9 Major Insurance Companies Are Profiting the Most Off the Broken Bail System, ACLU (February 12, 2018), https://www.aclu.org/news/smart-justice/9-major-insurance-companies-are-profiting-mostbroken-bail-system 155 See Crain v. Accredited Surety, et. al, Class Action Complaint, Case No RG1900-4509 (January 29, 2019), https://www.nclc.org/images/pdf/litigation/complaint-crain-vs-accredited-jan2019.pdf 156 See Press Release, Insurance Companies Conspired to Inflate Bail Bond Premiums Contends Lawsuit Brought by Lieff Cabraser, National Consumer Law Center and Other Public Interest Groups, NATIONAL CONSUMER LAW CENTER (January 30, 2019), https://www.nclc.org/media-center/pr-insurance-companies-conspired-to-inflat-bail146 19 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 alone, the bail bond companies collected $308 million from non-refundable premium fees, from the poorest and most vulnerable individuals involved in the criminal justice system.157 The class action “seeks damages for many thousands of Californians who allege they have overpaid for unlawfully inflated bail bond premiums due to the elimination of competition in the market for bail bonds.”158 Between bail bond companies and insurance backers, the commercial bail industry collects somewhere around $1.4 billion to $2.4 billion a year.159 And who else can claim profit? Large international insurance companies, another kind of Big Capital in corrections. There are nine large insurance companies that dominate the underwriting of the U.S. bail bond industry.160 Of these nine companies, the largest, Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd161 is a large international holding company. These global insurance companies often have structures and reinsurance arrangements that make it difficult to clarify the specifics of their involvement. There is minimal state or federal regulation of the bail bond insurance industry; because the bail bond insurance industry is relatively small part of the insurance business regulated by state insurance divisions, it tends to get little notice.162 Thus, abuses that occur are often ignored.163 Moreover, the piecemeal regulatory system overseeing the bail bond industry, which varies from state to state, means that many detrimental policies and practices fall between the cracks.164 In part, this is because bail bond companies and their insurers exist in an nebulous middle ground between criminal courts and state insurance departments.165 Although states are usually charged with regulating them, they seldom do.166 The loose regulation and high profits from bail bond companies and their insurers has unsurprisingly resulted in big capital investments.167 These insurance companies, with help from the bail bond industry, collects approximately $2 billion a year, primarily from the poor and disadvantaged.168 Because there is so little risk—many bail bond insurance underwriters have had bond-premiums-contends-lawsuit-brought-by-lieff-cabraser-national-consumer-law-center-and-other-publicinterest-groups.html 157 See Inflate Bail Bond Premiums, supra note __, at id. 158 See Inflate Bail Bond Premiums, supra note __, at id. 159 See Selling Off Our Freedom: How Insurance Corporations Have Taken Over Our Bail System 9, ACLU/COLOR OF CHANGE (May 2017), https://d11gn0ip9m46ig.cloudfront.net/images/059_Bail_Report.pdf 160 See Bryce Covert, America is Waking Up to the Injustice of Cash Bail, Nation (October 19, 2017), https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/america-is-waking-up-to-the-injustice-of-cash-bail/ 161 Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited, a Canadian-owned holding company, states that its corporate objective is “to achieve a high rate of return on invested capital and build long-term shareholder value.” See Company Profile, Fairfax Financial Holdings, https://www.fairfax.ca/Corporate/company-profile/default.aspx All of Fairfax’s investments are managed by their own in-house investment company, Hamblin Watsa Investment Counsel Ltd., 162 See Selling Off Our Freedom, supra note __, at 36. 163 See Selling Off Our Freedom, supra note __, at 36. 164 See Selling Off Our Freedom, supra note __, at 36. 165 See Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Shaila Dewan, When Bail Feels Less Like Freedom, More Like Extortion, New York Times (March 31, 2018), https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/31/us/bail-bonds-extortion.html 166 See Silver-Greenberg & Dewan, supra note __, at id. 167 See Silver-Greenberg & Dewan, , supra note __, at id. 168 See Selling Off Our Freedom, supra note __, at 9. 20 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 no losses for decades—the industry is extremely profitable.169 The gross profit margin of bail bonds averages around 83%, after claims and related expenses are paid.170 Since 2019, bail insurers increased their premium income by 8%,171 a significant jump. In an arena where liberty is at stake, especially for those who have not been convicted of a crime, the presence and incentives for profit may distort incentives away from pure notions of justice and fairness. Again, it is also difficult to see who specifically profits from this system and how. 2. Electronic Monitoring One recent investment area for Big Capital is in the growing field of electronic monitoring. In 2017, Apax Partners, a private equity firm, acquired Attenti from 3M for $200 million dollars.172 Attenti provides a variety of electronic monitoring technologies for those individuals under correctional control, including Global Positioning Systems (GPS), Radio Frequency (RF), and alcohol verification monitoring and tracking services.173 As I have discussed elsewhere, the cost of electronic monitoring is frequently foisted on individuals under probation or post-release supervision, since many courts require them to pay for the full costs of GPS monitoring, drug testing, and alcohol monitoring.174 For example, a GPS-enabled electronic monitoring device can cost hundreds of dollars a month.175 As electronic monitoring technology profits are derived from such costs, the more monies created by exorbitant fees, the better the bottom line for the company itself.176 And since so much of the profit is extracted from those under correctional control, there is little incentive to stop it.177 3. Alternative Corrections Services Private equity firms have also invested in companies providing alternative corrections services, often mandatory parts of prisoners’ sentences upon release. Alternative corrections services such as probation, rehabilitation and halfway houses, and diversion programs, have been 169 See Silver-Greenberg & Dewan, Less Like Freedom, supra note __, at id. See Alwyn Scott and Suzanne Barlyn, U.S. Bail-Bond Insurers Spend Big to Keep Defendants Paying, REUTERS (March 26, 2021), https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-insurance-bail-jails-insight/u-s-bail-bond-insurers-spendbig-to-keep-defendants-paying-idUSKBN2BI1BP 171 See Scott & Barlyn, U.S. Bail-Bond Insurers, supra note __, at id. 172 See Jim Baker, Continuing Incarceration: Apax Partners Digital Shackles 1, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (October 2019), https://pestakeholder.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Continuing-Incarceration-ApaxPartners-PESP-100319.pdf 173 See Funds Advised by Apax Partners to Acquire 3M’s Electronic Monitoring Business, APAX PARTNERS (June 1, 2017), https://www.apax.com/news/press-releases/2017/funds-advised-by-apax-partners-to-acquire3m%E2%80%99s-electronic-monitoring-business/ 174 See Laura I Appleman, Nickeled and Dimed into Incarceration: Cash Register Justice in the Criminal System, 57 B.C.L. REV. 1483, 1508 (2016). See also HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, PROFITING FROM PROBATION: AMERICA’S “OFFENDER-FUNDED” PROBATION INDUSTRY 33 (2014). 175 See Baker, Continuing Incarceration, supra note __, at 2. 176 See Appleman, Cash Register Justice, supra note __, at 1509. 177 See Appleman, Cash Register Justice, supra note __, at 1508. 170 21 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 outsourced to private companies, many of which have been purchased by various private equity firms and other global investment firms.178 I describe a few examples below. a. Private Probation State and local governments routinely use private probation companies to provide services such as drug testing, addiction services, and behavioral-therapy to those individuals who have been released from formal incarceration but are still under correctional supervision.179 These private probation companies are popular because many of the costs of misdemeanor probation are shunted to the probationers themselves, thus saving state and local considerable monies.180 Private equity firms have invested in private probation companies, most notably Sentinel Offender Services, which partners with community corrections, courts, and law enforcement.181 Sentinel is owned by Bison Capital Asset Management, a private equity firm.182 b. Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Big Capital has also begun acquiring drug and alcohol rehabilitation centers, with a wave of investments in recent years.183 This new interest is largely due to the growing need for more recovery services, both in and outside of the carceral context, and private equity is inevitably drawn to a “hole in the market.”184 According to private equity analysts, addiction treatment remains an “extremely immature market,” but with “great opportunity remaining,” especially for those firms who aren’t afraid to buy up distressed assets for pennies on the dollar.185 Some states, like California, now divert people convicted in drug court to treatment programs rather than sending them to prison.186 Oregon gives people caught with small amounts of illegal drugs a ticket and a reference to rehab.187 This push towards rehabilitation rather than 178 See Laura I Appleman, The Treatment-Industrial Complex: Alternative Corrections, Private Prison Companies, & Criminal Justice Debt, 55 HARV. C.R.-C.L. 1, 6 (2020). 179 See Sharon Cohen, Poor Offenders Pay High Price When Probation Turns on Profit, THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW (Mar. 12, 2016), http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2016/mar/12/ poor-offenders-pay-high-price-when-probation-turns/ 180 See Appleman, The Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 7. 181 See Fact Sheet: Private equity-owned firms dominate prison and detention services, PE Stakeholder (September 17, 2018), https://pestakeholder.org/reports/fact-sheet-private-equity-owned-firms-dominate-prison-and-detentionservices/ 182 https://bisoncapital.com/portfolio-items/sentinel-offender-services/ 183 See Phil Albinus, Alcohol and Drug Treatment Centers Draw Private Equity Backing, MIDDLE MARKET GROWTH (March 10, 2021), https://middlemarketgrowth.org/the-round-alcohol-and-drug-treatment-centers-drawprivate-equity-backing/ 184 Albinus, supra note __, at id. 185 See Nick Jaworski, The Pitfalls Private Equity Firms Need to Avoid When Evaluating an Addiction Treatment Center, CIRCLESOCIAL INC, https://www.circlesocialinc.com/the-pitfalls-private-equity-firms-need-to-avoid-whenevaluating-an-addiction-treatment-center/ 186 Appleman, Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 13. 187 In 2020, Oregon passed Measure 110, which decriminalized simple possession of drugs, including cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, and other controlled substances. Instead of being charged with a misdemeanor, people caught in possession of these drugs are issued a civil citation, along with a small fine. Penalties are waived if the person underwent a health assessment at an addiction-recovery center. See Sophie Quinton, Oregon’s Drug 22 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 incarceration means that the market for treatment programs is increasing, a state of affairs about which Big Capital is well aware. The aforementioned Wellpath is the biggest provider of correctional rehabilitation, both in and outside of prisons and jails, in the United States.188 Its owner HIG Capital is one of the largest private equity investors in corrections companies.189 Wellpath has gained notoriety even among correctional healthcare and rehabilitation services for its shoddy dealings and poor service. In March 2022, its CEO and founder Gerald Boyle pled guilty to federal bribery charges for participating in a 12 year bribery scheme with the sheriff of the Norfolk, Virginia jail in order to obtain the jail’s medical services contracts.190 Between 2014-18, Wellpath was sued at least 70 times for its negligence in contributing to deaths for those under correctional control.191 When operating under its former name pre-merger, CorrectCare, it was sued 1,395 times in federal court from 2003 – 2018.192 Halfway houses and re-entry centers are also tempting targets for large, publicly owned corrections corporations. Geo Group, for example, now owns a collection of “community re-entry services” and treatment programs, having purchased the country’s largest electronic-monitoring firm, BI Incorporated, in 2011.193 Likewise, in 2017, CoreCivic acquired halfway houses in Georgia, North Carolina, and Colorado for nearly $22 million.194 Over 30% of all halfway houses nationwide are owned and operated by Community Education Centers,195 a private company recently acquired by Geo Group.196 Halfway houses are supposed to provide safe housing, job placement assistance, and other social services for people Decriminalization Might Spread, Despite Unclear Results, PEW (November 3, 2021), https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2021/11/03/oregons-drug-decriminalizationmay-spread-despite-unclear-results 188 “Headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee, and maintaining a strong presence in San Diego, California, Wellpath provides localized, high-quality, compassionate healthcare to nearly 300,000 patients daily in more than 550 health clinics and hospitals across nearly 40 U.S. states and Australia.” See Wellpath, HIG Capital, https://higcapital.com/portfolio/company/403 189 See Founder of HIG Capital-Owned Wellpath Indicted on Federal Bribery Charges, PE STAKEHOLDER (December 5, 2019), https://pestakeholder.org/news/founder-of-hig-capital-owned-wellpath-indicted-on-federalbribery-charges-2/ 190 See Brian Farrell, Man to Spend 3 Years in Prison, Pay $35K After Bribing Former Norfolk Sheriff Bob McCabe, 13 NEWS NOW (February 25, 2022), https://www.13newsnow.com/article/news/crime/ceo-sentenced-formernorfolk-sheriff-bob-mccabe-bribery-case/291-22a0b296-fd5f-45ef-aab6-a1f0b9fc109e 191 See Blake and Ellis, Before It’s Too Late, supra note __, at id. 192 See Heidi Beetle, A Look at Suicide and Death Statistics in Colorado Jails, COLORADO SPRINGS INDY (February 3, 2021), https://www.csindy.com/news/local/a-look-at-suicide-and-death-statistics-in-coloradojails/article_b285ff5e-6585-11eb-81de-bb2024f40e8e.html 193 Appleman, Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 14. 194 See Geert de Lombaerde, CoreCivic Buys Halfway Houses in Three States, NASHVILLEPOST (Nov. 9, 2017), https://www.nashvillepost.com/business/area-stocks/article/20982163/corecivic-buys-halfway-houses-in-three-states 195 See LAUREN SUKIN, THE CENTURY FOUND., WHEN JAIL IS THE BETTER OPTION: THE FAILURE OF HALFWAY HOUSES (June 23, 2015), https://tcf.org/content/commentary/when-jail-isthebetter-option-the-failure-of-halfway-houses/ 196 See The GEO Group Announces $360 Million Acquisition of Community Education Centers, BUSINESS WIRE (February 22, 2017), https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170222005729/en/The-GEO-Group-Announces360-Million-Acquisition-of-Community-Education-Centers 23 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 on parole as they prepare to leave correctional control.197 CEC halfway houses across the country, however, are notorious for their inhumane conditions.198 In 2011, for example, an Indiana CEC inhabitant died from problems arising from an untreated pregnancy.199 CEC-run halfway houses in Colorado have suffered from assaults, gang violence and rampant drug use.200 Likewise, CEC halfway houses in California have been plagued by inadequate clinical programs, routine violence, and residential drug and alcohol abuse.201 The halfway houses run by Avalon Correctional Services, owned by CoreCivic, appear no better. Avalon owns and manages private halfway houses through subsidiaries in Oklahoma, Texas, and Wyoming, with a gross profit margin of 36.3%, as compared to the industry average of 32.3%.202 Allegations of mismanagement include reports of “insufficient security, unqualified staff, falsified drug tests, sexual relations between staff and prisoners, and inadequate recordkeeping.”203 Today, these same halfway houses, currently run by CoreCivic itself, have a high failure rate in preventing residents from recidivating.204 The privately-owned intensive residential treatment programs in Colorado suffer from many of the same problems. One in five residents in Colorado’s halfway houses are serving a sentence related to substance abuse.205 The treatment they receive at the court-ordered halfway houses is often rudimentary, however, with ineffective programs which capture residents in a revolving door of prison and residential treatment stays, increasing profits for the companies that own the programs.206 Additionally, 38% of the residents in diversion programs failed out in 2020 due to minor technical violations, such as breaking curfew or violating other minor rules.207 In other words, there is financial incentive for keeping inmates in a cycle of treatment and incarceration.208 Of the 29 residential community correction facilities in the state, 24 are privately run.209 197 See Anat Rubin, California Relies on Halfway House Operator with Troubled Past, SFGATE (Apr. 11, 2015), https://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/California-relies-on-halfwayhouseoperator-with-6193752.php 198 See Appleman, Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 16. 199 See Anat Rubin, A Record of Trouble, THE MARSHALL PROJECT (Apr. 11, 2015), https:// www.themarshallproject.org/2015/04/11/a-record-of-trouble 200 See Rubin, Record of Trouble, supra note __, at id. 201 See Rubin, Halfway House Operator, supra note __, at id. 202 See Avalon Correctional Services Inc., INVESTIGATE AFSC, https://investigate.afsc.org/company/avaloncorrectional-services 203 See Avalon Correctional Services Inc., supra note __, at id. 204 See Moe Clark, “Another Place to Warehouse People”: The State Where Halfway Houses Are a Revolving Door to Prison, PROPUBLICA (September 16, 2022), https://www.propublica.org/article/colorado-halfway-houses-prisoncommunity-corrections 205 See Clark, Place to Warehouse People, supra note __, at id. 206 See Clark, Place to Warehouse People, supra note __, at id. 207 See Moe Clark, Colorado’s Halfway Houses Receive Millions in State Fund Every Year Despite Poor Outcomes, COLORADO NEWSLINE (April 20, 2021), link. 208 See Clark, Place to Warehouse People, supra note __, at id. 209 See Clark, Colorado’s Halfway Houses, supra note __, at id. 24 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Unsurprisingly, two of the publicly held corporations involved in managing Colorado’s halfway houses are Geo Group and CoreCivic.210 Geo Group and CoreCivic run the majority of the halfway houses in Colorado, excluding the city of Denver.211 Denver stopped using the private prison industry to run its halfway houses in 2019, because of their terrible track record including poor sanitary conditions, lack of sufficient food, and forced labor.212 Moreover, the high rate of recidivism for released residents – 50% vs. 40% -- demonstrates the failure of the privatized halfway house system in Colorado.213 CoreCivic and the Geo Group appear to have serious challenges managing and operating halfway houses around the nation. Incidents at Denver, Boulder, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, and Casper, Wyoming halfway houses, all run by the two private corrections giants, have included rampant drug use, incessant fighting, violent attacks, several escapes, and numerous medical emergencies.214 The fiscal bottom line of having a state correctional halfway house run by Big Capital may be positive, but the short- and long-term effects on the residents is certainly not. D. Correctional Healthcare Inmate healthcare has been another primary focus of expansion for Big Capital.215 A majority of states have outsourced their correctional healthcare to private companies in an attempt to cut costs.216 Private healthcare in the correctional space is notoriously poor, and hundreds of lawsuits have been filed as a result.217 Despite the litigation, however, data on private prison healthcare has been difficult to obtain.218 Wellpath is the largest of the private correctional health care providers.219 Among correctional healthcare providers, Wellpath is notorious for abuse and neglect.220 Wellpath was created by private equity firm H.I.G. through purchasing and combining two separate prison health companies, CorrectCare Solutions and Correctional Medical Group Companies.221 This was part 210 See Clark, Place to Warehouse People, supra note __, at id See Ali Budner, Denver Didn’t Want the Private Prison Industry to Run Its Halfway Houses. Now Who’s Going to Do It?, COLORADO PUBLIC RADIO (March 6, 2020), https://www.cpr.org/2020/03/06/denver-didnt-want-theprivate-prison-industry-to-run-its-halfway-houses-now-whos-going-to-do-it/ 212 See Budner, supra note __, at id. 213 See Budner, supra note __, at id. 214 See Chad Marks, Private Halfway Houses Plagued with Escapes, Drugs, Sex and Violence, PRISON LEGAL NEWS (May 3, 2019), https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2019/may/3/private-halfway-houses-plagued-escapes-drugssex-and-violence/ 215 See Alan Greenblatt, America Has a Health-Care Crisis — in Prisons, GOVERNING (July 29, 2019), https://www.governing.com/archive/gov-prison-health-care.html 216 See Greenblatt, supra note __, at id. 217 See Greenblatt, supra note __, at id. 218 See Victoria Law, Health Care in Jails and Prisons Is Terrible. The Pandemic Made It Even Worse, VOX (June 28, 2022), https://www.vox.com/23175978/health-care-prison-jail-covid-pandemic 219 See Michaela Gelman, Note: Mismanaged Care: Exploring the Costs and Benefits of Private vs. Public Healthcare in Correctional Facilities, 95 NYU L. REV. 1386, 1396 (2020). 220 See Blake Ellis & Melody Hinken, CNN Investigation Exposes Preventable Deaths and Dangerous Care that Government Agencies Have Failed to Stop, CNN (June 2019), https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2019/06/us/jailhealth-care-ccs-invs/ 221 See O’Grady, Understaffed, Unlicensed, and Untrained, supra note __, at 8. 211 25 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 of a larger trend of private equity companies making equity deals in health care, at the expense of those who need medical care and treatment.222 Indeed, “[w]hen private equity buys a health care company, patients often pay the price.”223 This has certainly been the case with Wellpath.224 Over the past several years, there have been repeated concerns about the private company’s provision of sufficient and adequately trained healthcare staff at facilities it serves.225 Wellpath’s substantial correctional healthcare footprint includes jails, detention centers, state and federal prisons, and state psychiatric hospitals.226 It is currently the largest private entity in the correctional healthcare market, and has been subject to at least 1400 lawsuits from 2018 onwards,227 alleging, among other things, negligence and lack of timely access to health care.228 In 2021, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) issued a stinging report of Wellpath’s failures in its provision of medical care at the San Luis Obispo County Jail in California.229 The DOJ concluded that Wellpath’s practices failed to provide basic medical care or mental health care to prisoners, used excessive force, overused restrictive housing, and failed to properly accommodate prisoners with disabilities.230 In part, this was in reaction to the 16 prisoner deaths in jail custody between 2012 - 2020.231 The DOJ investigation found that prisoners suffered substantial risk of serious harm from Wellpath’s failure to provide adequate medical care, including lack of screening, little continuity of care, poor medication management, and significant delays and deficiencies in what minimal care was provided.232 DOJ also concluded that Wellpath inadequately staffed, monitored, and oversaw the medical care provided at the San Luis Obismo County Jail.233 Perhaps most damningly, the DOJ found that Wellpath did all of these things intentionally.234 222 See Jeanne A. Markey and Raymond M. Sarola, Private Equity, Health Care, and Profits: It’s Time to Protect Patients, STAT NEWS (March 24, 2022), https://www.statnews.com/2022/03/24/private-equity-health-care-profitstime-to-protect-patients/ 223 See Markey & Sarola, Private Equity, supra note __, at id. 224 See Vanessa Murphy, Mother Files Lawsuit Following Daughter’s Death In Las Vegas Jail Cell, 8 TEAMS NOW INVESTIGATES (July 21, 2021), https://www.8newsnow.com/investigators/i-team-mother-files-lawsuit-followingdaughters-death-in-a-las-vegas-jail-cell/ 225 See Jails and Prisons Served by H.I.G. Capital-owned Wellpath face COVID-19 outbreaks, deaths, concerns regarding staffing levels, PE Stakeholder (July 8, 2020), https://pestakeholder.org/news/jails-and-prisons-served-byh-i-g-capital-owned-wellpath-face-covid-19-outbreaks-deaths-concerns-regarding-staffing-levels-2 226 See Jim Baker, HIG Capital’s and Wellpath’s Correctional Healthcare Investment Risks 1, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (July 2019), https://pestakeholder.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/HIG-CapitalsCorrectional-Healthcare-Investment-Risks-PESP-070819.pdf 227 See Andy Pierrotti, It Could Have Been Prevented: Medical Staff Didn’t Take Inmate’s Complaints Seriously, He Died Hours Later, Officer Said, 11 ALIVE (November 23, 2021), https://www.11alive.com/article/news/investigations/the-reveal/medical-staff-did-not-take-inmates-complaintsseriously/85-b3600969-f619-4113-b603-b2719a3a6731 228 See Baker, HIG Capital, supra note __, at 1-2. 229 See Investigation of the San Luis Obispo County Jail, U.S. DOJ CIVIL RIGHTS DIV. (August 31, 2021), https://www.justice.gov/crt/case-document/file/1429036/download 230 See San Luis County Jail, supra note __, at 1. 231 See San Luis County Jail, supra note __, at 3. 232 See San Luis County Jail, supra note __, at 6-9. 233 See San Luis County Jail, supra note __, at 14, 18, 26. 234 See San Luis County Jail, supra note __, 18, 26. 26 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Denying or limiting healthcare boosts profit. By controlling when corrections residents are seen by doctors and sent to the hospital, a private company can cut many costs.235 The fewer hospital trips, the more money saved.236 This has resulted in inadequate and untimely health care, where prisoners are refused anything but the most minor aspects of basic health care, with little follow-up care and sometimes even failure to follow basic sanitary procedures.237 The motivations to curb costs by denying medical procedures and limit hospital and emergency room trips are strong.238 Sometimes Wellpath will even try to cut a deal with the correction facility, offering to split the savings made by curbing off-site medical care, in order to fully incentivize them.239 The end results have led to severe illness, injury and death for those prisoners under Wellpath’s medical care.240 Public records laws do not apply to private corrections health care companies, so there is little oversight or regulation about the health care provided in correctional settings.241 Granted, the Vermont Supreme Court recently held that Wellpath might be subject to the state’s public records law given that it was working for the state.242 That decision is an outlier, however, and represented six years of litigation by the Human Rights Defense Center to obtain Wellpath records.243 Even so, the Vermont Supreme Court didn’t decisively rule that the documents sought were in the public record, instead sending the case back down to the lower court to determine what is eligible for public release.244 Wellpath is not alone in its poor correctional health services. As of 2017, five corporations—Corizon Health, NaphCare, Wexford Health, Centurion Health, and Wellpath Holdings—are collectively responsible for prison health care in 28 states and 62% of jail health care in the United States, pocketing 40% of all correctional spending.245 The corporate focus on 235 See Pierrotti, Could Have Been Prevented, supra note __, at id. See Susan Sharon, 'It's Horrible' — Report Alleges Improper Care by Private Health Provider in Maine State Prison, MAINE PUBLIC RADIO (March 8, 2021), https://www.mainepublic.org/health/2021-03-08/its-horrible-reportalleges-improper-care-by-private-health-provider-in-maine-state-prison 237 See Sharon, Improper Care, supra note __, at id. 238 See Beth Healy and Christine Willemson, Pain and Profits: Sheriffs Hand Off Care to Private Health Companies, WBUR (March 24, 2020), https://www.wbur.org/news/2020/03/24/jail-health-companies-profitsheriffs-watch 239 See Healy & Willemson, supra note __, at id. 240 See Healy & Willemson, supra note __, at id. 241 See Healy & Willemson, supra note __, at id. 242 See Alan J. Keays, High court finds private health care contractor for state subject to public records law, VT. DIGGER (September 5, 2021), https://vtdigger.org/2021/09/05/high-court-finds-private-health-care-contractor-forstate-subject-to-public-records-law/ 243 See Keays, supra note __, at id. 244 See Keays, supra note __, at id. 245 The Prison Industry: How it Started. How it Works. How it Harms, WORTH RISES 76 (Dec. 2020); Kil Huh, et al., Prison Health Care: Costs and Quality - How and Why States Strive for HighPerforming Systems, The Pew Charitable Trusts (Oct. 2017); https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2017/10/sfh_prison_health_care_costs_and_quality_final.pdf. 236 27 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 jail healthcare is growing.246 In part, this is because jails are attractive targets, since they frequently involve higher profit margins.247 Corizon Health is another corrections healthcare behemoth with many pending lawsuits and a troubling track record.248 From Mississippi to Maine, from Pennsylvania to Arizona, Corizon has had hundreds of lawsuits filed against it for faulty delivery of care to inmates and inhumane conditions.249 Owned until recently by BlueMountain Capital Management, a private equity firm, Corizon is now solely owned by Flacks Group, an investment firm that specializes in turnarounds.250 Flacks calls itself a “special situations” investor, focusing on acquiring struggling companies and increasing their profits.251 This may be great for investors, but has not proven particularly beneficial to inmates in Corizon-served corrections facilities. A review of incarcerated deaths from 2016-18 covering 500 jails found that state jails using these five private correctional services companies for health care had far higher rates of death.252 “The death rates were 18% to 58% higher, depending upon the company.”253 In part, this is because private corrections companies often lack quantified standards for care in their contracts, leaving such critical aspects as staffing requirements, protocols for inmate health evaluations, and hospitalization policy vague.254 Such vagueness allows Big Capital to make economies on prisoner health care, to ultimately benefit the company’s bottom line.255 “It is a one to one, dollar to dollar, relationship between denying care and profit.”256 There is unquestionably a low standard of medical care provided in America’s state and federal corrections system.257 But private correctional healthcare providers tend to do even poorer job providing medical services to those under correctional control.258 Big Capital correctional healthcare providers, however, provide the most minimal healthcare of all. Given that goals of 246 See Marsha McLeod, The Private Option, ATLANTIC (September 12, 2019), at https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2019/09/private-equitys-grip-on-jail-healthcare/597871/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us&client=firefox-b-1-d 247 See McLeod, supra note __, at id. 248 See Sarah Solon and Jesse Lava, Meet the Company Making $1.4 Billion a Year off Sick Prisoners, ACLU (October 8, 2013), https://www.aclu.org/news/smart-justice/meet-company-making-14-billion-year-sick-prisoners 249 See Dan Christenson, Florida Prison Officials Didn’t Ask, Companies Didn’t Tell About Hundreds Of Malpractice Cases, FLORIDA BULLDOG (October 2, 2013), https://www.floridabulldog.org/2013/10/florida-prisonofficials-didnt-ask-companies-didnt-tell-about-hundreds-of-malpractice-cases/ 250 See Matt Blois, Investment Firm Acquires Corizon, NASHVILLE POST (June 30, 2020), https://www.nashvillepost.com/investment-firm-acquires-corizon/article_eeba5a0a-486c-5779-886c2d50b1befc5a.html 251 Blois, Investment Firm, supra note __, at id. 252 See Jason Szep, Ned Parker, Linda So, Peter Eisler, and Grant Smith, U.S. Jails Are Outsourcing Medical Care — And the Death Toll Is Rising, REUTERS (October 26, 2020), https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-jailsprivatization-special-repor/special-report-u-s-jails-are-outsourcing-medical-care-and-the-death-toll-is-risingidUSKBN27B1DH 253 See Szep et. al, Outsourcing Medical Care, supra note __, at id. 254 See Szep et. al, Outsourcing Medical Care, supra note __, at id. 255 See Szep et. al, Outsourcing Medical Care, supra note __, at id. 256 See Szep et. al, Outsourcing Medical Care, supra note __, at id. 257 Appleman, Cashing in on Convicts, supra note __, at 600. 258 Appleman, Cashing in on Convicts, supra note __, at 599. 28 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Big Capital—that is, extracting value—are largely antagonistic to the needs of both patients and correctional health care programs, this should come as no great surprise.259 PART II: WHO OWNS THIS STUFF? UNWINDING THE LABYRINTH Although Big Capital invests in a variety of public corrections services, unwinding which for-profit entity owns what corrections company can be labyrinthine. As we saw in Part I, corrections services are often being performed by entities that are subsidiaries of large publicly held companies, or by privately held portfolio companies held by secretive private equity firms. We also saw how large global insurance companies, though not owners, provide the risk backing that enables the private bail system to work. When things go wrong, however, it can be a real struggle to figure out who is accountable, and to determine who is ultimately responsible when things have gone wrong. Due to these complicated layers of ownership structure, we often do not know who ultimately is responsible for delivering the amount and quality of correctional services, services that enable retention of the public-private contracts, and what the incentives might be. We do not know to whom to complain, because critical correctional services are now provided by a byzantine web of private companies, some of them large and publicly-held corporations, some owned by private equity, and others floating on a financial system backed by international insurers. In the public arena where punishment and correctional services are meted out, we normally hold state officials and elected officials accountable. Today, instead, we increasingly can only hold them accountable for those with whom they contract. But figuring out correctional accountability is extremely complex, what with private money, global financial structures, and frequent renaming and restructuring of private correctional companies. There are three main players in Big Capital Corrections, each with its own area of obfuscation and complexity: Private equity firms; large, publicly held private companies; and international insurance firms. Below I seek to expose the complexity and diversity of correctional services company ownership, and how these large profit-seeking entities have fundamentally altered the structure of how we provide services and manage accountability. A. Private Equity Who are the private equity firms most invested in public corrections? The firms include BlueMountain Capital Management, H.I.G. Capital, American Securities, and Platinum Equity, all of which own portfolio companies that provide a wide range of services to prisons.260 259 260 See Markee and Sarola, Private Equity, Health Care, & Profits, supra note __, at id. See Valadares, Prisoner’s Misery, supra note__ at id. 29 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 HIG Private Equity, the private equity arm of HIG Capital LLC,261 is the creator and owner of Wellpath, the largest correctional healthcare company in the United States, serving 10% of counties nationwide.262 Wellpath was formed by rolling up three smaller correctional healthcare companies to create it: Correct Care, purchased by HIG in 2018; Correctional Medical Group Companies, acquired by HIG in 2013, and California Forensic Medical Group, which was previously acquired by Correctional Medical Group Companies.263 Recently, Moody’s downgraded Wellpath’s Corporate Family Ratings Inc. from a B2 to a B3, and Probability of Default Rating from a B2 to a B3, although the ratings outlook remained stable.264 This is because Moody’s anticipates that Wellpath’s earnings and cash flows will continue to be pressured due to the company’s elevated expenses, stemming from labor shortages and wage inflation, as well as slower receivables collections.265 Wellpath’s thin margins and work in the highly volatile correctional healthcare market make it challenging to maintain a high level of profit, given that providing healthcare in myriad correctional facilities across the country continues to be an “ongoing challenge,” presenting “unique complexities.”266 These issues illustrate the problem with having such a behemoth company oversee any one individual correctional institution’s healthcare, since earnings and cash flow pressure can affect the level of care offered. HIG also controls TKC Holdings, a Delaware corporation and holding company that provides products and services to correctional and lodging markets,267 which has, as two of its wholly owned subsidiaries, Trinity Service Group and Keefe Group.268 Recently TKC Holdings took out a five year $320 million pay-in-kind-toggle term loan, with the proceeds earmarked for a shareholder dividend.269 HIG also owns Access Corrections, one of the three major money transfer services in the U.S.270 Access Corrections charges high rates to deposit money in an inmate’s bank account, ranging from 5% to 37%, thus squeezing money out of the impoverished.271 In addition, the Keefe group holds ICSolutions, a wholly-owned subsidiary providing telecom services to 261 See H.I.G. Capital Acquires Wellpath, Mergr (October 1, 2018), https://mergr.com/h.i.g.-capital-acquireswellpath-holdings 262 See McLeod, supra note __, at id. 263 See Private Equity Firms Rebrand Prison Healthcare Companies, But Care Issues Continue, supra note __, at 5. 264 See Moody's downgrades Wellpath Holdings, Inc.'s Corporate Family Rating to B3, Outlook Stable, Moody’s (July 11, 2022), https://www.moodys.com/research/Moodys-downgrades-Wellpath-Holdings-Incs-CorporateFamily-Rating-to-B3--PR_467713 265 Moody’s, supra note__, at id. 266 Moody’s, supra note__, at id. 267 See Private Equity Firms Rebrand Prison Healthcare Companies, supra note __, at 2. 268 See Ella Millburn, Are Prison Services Companies the Next Frontier for Responsible Investment in the Age of Black Lives Matters?, RESPONSIBLE INVESTOR (October 19, 2020), https://www.responsible-investor.com/areprison-services-companies-the-next-frontier-for-responsible-investment-in-the-age-of-black-lives-matter/ 269 See Jonathan Hemingway, TKC Holdings Completes Upsized $320M Pay-In-Kind-Toggle Term Loan; Terms, S&P GLOBAL MARKET INTELLIGENCE (Feb. 8, 2022), https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/newsinsights/latest-news-headlines/tkc-holdings-completes-upsized-320m-pay-in-kind-toggle-term-loan-terms-68800135 270 See Evan Weinberger, Inmate Families Face Cash-Transfer Fees ‘Just to Stay Connected,’ Bloomberg Law (January 11, 2022), https://news.bloomberglaw.com/banking-law/inmate-families-face-cash-transfer-fees-just-tostay-connected 271 See Weinberger, supra note __, at id. 30 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 correctional facilities.272 In other words, ICSolutions is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Keefe Group, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of TKS Holdings, which is indirectly controlled by HIG Capital LLC.273 Another private equity company, Platinum Equity, owns Aventiv, which contains three separate correctional companies, each of which are wholly owned subsidiaries. 274 First is Securus, which provides correctional monitoring, biometrics, and communication products for inmates.275 Next is JPay, providing correctional technologies for prisoner payment, email, and tablet use.276 Aventiv’s last wholly owned subsidiary is AllPaid, a government services provider that provides payment processing services for inmates.277 American Securities, another private equity firm, owns Global Tel Link (GTL), the largest correctional telecommunication provider.278 American Securities recently rebranded GTL into Viapath Technologies, which now provides communication services to incarcerated individuals and tablets to assist with re-entry.279 Nowhere on Viapath’s website does it have any mention or reference to it being a wholly owned subsidiary of a private equity firm, however.280 BlueMountain Capital Management owned YesCare/Corizon, the second largest correctional healthcare company, until 2020, when it was sold to the Flacks Group.281 Upon acquisition, the Flacks Group noted that it views itself as a “‘special situations’ investor and focuses on acquiring struggling companies or divisions and turning them around.282 By the end of 2021, Corizon was insolvent and heading towards bankruptcy, so restructured its organization through a Texas “divisional merger,” dividing itself into two companies.283 After undergoing the divisional merger, Corizon Health survived, while also creating a new corporation, CHS TX, Inc., to which the bulk of the assets were assigned.284 Corizon retained all of its expired contracts and 272 See Lily Chahine & Afia Akosah Bempah, Distortion On the Inside: How Commissary Privatization Skews the Worth of Time, COLLEGE HILL INDEPENDENT (April 29, 2022), https://www.theindy.org/article/2693 273 See Public Notice, Applications Filed for the Transfer of Control of Centurylink Public Communications, Inc. to Inmate Calling Solutions, Llc D/B/A ICSolutions, FCC (June 25, 2020), https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DA20-673A1.pdf 274 See Aventiv, Our Company, PLATINUM EQUITY, https://www.platinumequity.com/our-company/aventiv/ 275 See id. 276 See id. 277 https://www.aventiv.com/allpaid/ 278 See American Securities Big Bet on Prison Phone Calls 2, PE STAKEHOLDER (February 2020), https://pestakeholder.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/American-Securities-Big-Bet-on-Prison-Phone-Calls-PESP022020.pdf 279 See GTL Becomes ViaPath Technologies, Launches Expanded Reentry Services, AMERICAN SECURITIES (Jan. 4, 2022), https://www.american-securities.com/en/press-releases/gtl-becomes-viapath-technologies-launchesexpanded-reentry-services 280 https://www.viapath.com 281 See Matt Blois, Investment Firm Acquires Corizon, Nashville Post (June 30, 2020), https://www.nashvillepost.com/investment-firm-acquires-corizon/article_eeba5a0a-486c-5779-886c2d50b1befc5a.html 282 See Blois, supra note __, at id. 283 ORDER ON PLAINTIFF'S MOTION FOR SUBSTITUTION (ECF NO. 25), Kelly v. Corizon Health Inc., 2:22cv-10589, at 1, (E.D. Mich. Nov. 1, 2022), https://casetext.com/case/kelly-v-corizon-health-inc-1 284 Corizon Health, at 2. 31 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 their corresponding liabilities.285 Post divisional merger, YesCare, Inc. acquired CHS TX, and CHS TX began informally doing business under its parent company's name.286 Nowhere on YesCare’s website is there any mention of the Flacks Group or its previous life as Corizon.287 Finally, as noted earlier, Aladdin Bail Bonds, the largest bail bond company in the country, was owned by Endeavour Capital, a Portland, Oregon-based private equity firm, from 20122020.288 B. Large, Publicly Traded Corporations The two largest corrections corporations in the U.S. are CoreCivic and Geo Group. Geo Group, a publicly traded international C corporation,289 has many shareholders and institutional investors. Institutional shareholders own 76.58% of the corporation, with mutual fund owners holding 42.92% of shares.290 The three largest public owners are BlackRock Fund Advisors (14.1%), the Vanguard Group (10.99%), and iShares Core S&P Small Cap ETF (7.07%).291 Geo Group recently changed its corporate structure from a pass-through REIT to a C corporation, in part to free up cash flow and address future debt maturities.292 Geo Group owns a large number of smaller, private companies providing health care, juvenile justice, and other correctional services, making difficult for consumers and justiceinvolved individuals to ascertain true ownership. Until 2021, for example, Geo Group owned Cornell Abraxas, which runs juvenile justice centers for “hard to place” youth.293 During that time, however, it was virtually impossible for the average person to find out who truly owned the company. Abraxas Youth and Family Services stated on its website that it is a “nonprofit provider of a diversified array of services to over 6,500 youth, adults and families each year.”294 Its legal name is “The Cornell Abraxas Group, LLC,” and it is now incorporated as a non-profit company in Delaware, corporation number S52PMDBXDLW7.295 But nowhere on the website does it ever 285 Corizon Health, at 2. Corizon Health, at 2. 287 https://www.yescarecorp.com/about 288 See Following ACLU Report, Endeavour Capital Exits Bail Bond Investment, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (March 5, 2020), https://pestakeholder.org/news/following-aclu-report-endeavour-capital-exits-bail-bondinvestment/ 289 See The GEO Group Announces Change in Corporate Structure, BUSINESS WIRE (December 2, 2021), https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211202005319/en/The-GEO-Group-Announces-Change-in-CorporateStructure 290 See Geo Group, CNN BUSINESS (February 10, 2023), https://money.cnn.com/quote/profile/profile.html?symb=GEO 291 See Top 10 Owners of Geo Group, CNN BUSINESS (February 10, 2023), https://money.cnn.com/quote/shareholders/shareholders.html?symb=GEO&subView=institutional 292 See Change in Corporate Structure, supra note __, at id. 293 See The Geo Group Inc., Investigate, AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE, https://investigate.afsc.org/company/geo-group 294 See id. 295 See Abraxas Youth and Family Services, OPENGOVUS (July 26, 2022), https://opengovus.com/samentity/S52PMDBXDLW7 286 32 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 mention that Cornell Abraxas Group, LLC was recently a wholly owned subsidiary of the GEO Group,296 or that its non-profit status is extremely new. In addition, GEO Group is the biggest provider of alternative corrections, as it owns, leases, and manages 49 residential community corrections/reentry centers and 84 non-residential reentry centers or Day Reporting Centers (DRCs).297 It gained this position by purchasing both Cornell Companies298 and Community Education Centers (CEC).299 CEC owns and operates over 30% of all halfway houses nationwide.300 The Geo Group also owns the country’s largest electronic-monitoring firm, BI Incorporated.301 BI Incorporated monitors justice-involved individuals through various technology products including radio frequency, GPS, and alcohol monitoring devices.302 CoreCivic, formerly the Corrections Corporation of American, is a publicly traded government solutions C corporation.303 The largest correctional services company in America, CoreCivic is primarily owned by shareholders, with 81.89% institutional owners,304 52.63% of them mutual funds.305 In 2020, CoreCivic decided to change its corporate structure from a passthrough REIT to a C corporation, in order to reduce debt and then to return more capital to shareholders.306 Like Geo Group, CoreCivic has invested in community corrections companies, owning and operating 26 residential reentry centers around the country, including Correctional Alternatives, Avalon Correctional Services Inc., Correctional Management Inc., and Rehabilitation Services Inc.307 CoreCivic has also acquired two electronic monitoring companies, Recovery Monitoring 296 See The Geo Group, Inc., Subsidiaries, SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (July 26, 2022), https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/923796/000119312517056831/d320699dex211.htm 297 See Geo Group Inc, AFSC, supra note __, at id. 298 See Tess Stynes, GEO Group Agrees to Acquire Cornell in $385 Million Deal, WALL ST. JOURNAL (April 19, 2010), https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704671904575193643911801532 299 See The GEO Group Closes $360 Million Acquisition of Community Education Centers, Business Wire (April 16, 2017), https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170406005543/en/The-GEO-Group-Closes-360-MillionAcquisition-of-Community-Education-Centers 300 See SUKIN, supra __, at id. 301 Appleman, Treatment-Industrial Complex, supra note __, at 14. 302 See https://bi.com/ 303 See Company Description, CoreCivic, CNN Business (February 10, 2023), https://money.cnn.com/quote/profile/profile.html?symb=CXWhttps://money.cnn.com/quote/profile/profile.html?sy mb=CXW 304 See CXW Institutional Holdings, NASDAQ (February 10, 2023), https://www.nasdaq.com/marketactivity/stocks/cxw/institutional-holdings 305 See Institutional Ownership, CoreCivic, CNN Business (February 10, 2023), https://money.cnn.com/quote/shareholders/shareholders.html?symb=CXW&subView=institutional 306 See CoreCivic Announces Change in Corporate Structure and New Capital Allocation Strategy, CORECIVIC (August 5, 2020), https://www.globenewswire.com/en/news-release/2020/08/05/2073709/0/en/CoreCivicAnnounces-Change-in-Corporate-Structure-and-New-Capital-Allocation-Strategy.html 307 See CoreCivic Inc., Investigate, AFSC, https://investigate.afsc.org/company/corecivic 33 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Solutions and Rocky Mountain Offender Management Systems.308 Also in CoreCivic’s portfolio is TransCor America, one of the largest private providers of prisoner and detainee transportation.309 C. International Insurance Conglomerates Major insurance firms back the bail bond industry. These major insurance firms are themselves owned by enormous investment companies. For example, Randall & Quilter, a global insurance company, acquired Accredited Surety & Casualty Co. in 2014, one of the nine main bail bond insurance companies that underwrite the bail bond industry.310 Other bail bond insurance companies include Fairfax Financials Holdings LTD, which owns Crum & Forester and Bail USA; and IAT Insurance Group, which owns AIA Surety. 311 These corporate “holdings are often murky because global insurers build in several layers of opaque corporate structures between their corporate brand, bond-insurance operations, and bail-bonds storefronts.”312 It is extremely difficult to determine who is the ultimate owner of any one bail bond company, especially for the unsophisticated consumer. Ultimately, by allowing these secretive, for-profit entities to provide a substantial segment of correctional services, a core power of administration of justice is being bid out, with little recourse when they fail. If that is the fiscal choice, then being able to hold the public and private players accountable for the quality of their services becomes extremely important. PART III: PROFITS OVER PEOPLE: BIG CAPITAL’S GROWING ROLE IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE The recent, overwhelming expansion of Big Capital into the services and operational sector of the incarceration and correctional control landscape has no parallel. The rise of enormous corporations and private equity firms as owners and operators of a realm of correctional services means oversight and regulation of these companies is increasingly important. And yet there is little supervision over what these companies actually do and how they are structured. Private equity firms in particular are uniquely situated to extract profits from the carceral world. Private equity firms do not have stockholders and are not publicly traded. Instead, they are privately funded by institutions or wealthy individuals, and invest their money in buying, restructuring, merging, and selling other companies within a short period of time.313 Private equity 308 See id. See id. 310 See Udi Ofer, 9 Major Insurance Companies Are Profiting the Most Off the Broken Bail System, ACLU (February 12, 2018), https://www.aclu.org/news/smart-justice/9-major-insurance-companies-are-profiting-mostbroken-bail-system 311 See Factbox: Major Insurers of U.S. Bail Bonds, REUTERS (March 26, 2021), https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-insurance-bail-jails-factbox/factbox-major-insurers-of-u-s-bail-bondsidUSKBN2BI1DR 312 See Gillian White, Who Really Makes Money Off of Bail Bonds, ATLANTIC (May 12, 2017), https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/05/bail-bonds/526542/ 313 See Felix Barber and Michael Goold, The Strategic Secret of Private Equity, HARV. BUS. REV. (September 2007), https://hbr.org/2007/09/the-strategic-secret-of-private-equity 309 34 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 funds frequently purchase controlling interests in companies for a short time, then implement drastic cost-cutting measures, including loading them with debt, selling off company assets, charging high fees, and ultimately selling the stripped-down companies at a profit.314 Since private equity firms are structured as private partnerships, this gives them important tax and regulatory advantages over public companies.315 In addition, the regulation of Big Capital corrections, by either state or federal government, is fairly minimal.316 This ensures that the dominance of Big Capital corrections is poised to grow, and as well as their penchant of “cutting costs and corners and jobs to extract financial gain.”317 Given that private equity companies and large, publicly-traded corporations own a majority share in a huge segment of the corrections industry,318 this is a troubling oversight. Ultimately Big Capital corrections utilize their dominant market power to profit from millions made off of individuals under correction control, their families, and their communities.319 The profit-making affiliation between Big Capital and public corrections has become standard throughout the entire criminal justice system, from bail to jail, arrest to incarceration, and throughout all aspects of correctional control.320 Big Capital threads through every level of criminal process as well, from the local to the state and federal.321 In short, private industry’s investment of money into carceral services has ballooned over the last 10-15 years.322 Private equity firms, large, publicly traded corporations, and insurance conglomerates all have several advantages in the financial market, including the potential for monopolies in specified areas, lack of transparency, minimal income tax, and huge amounts spent in governmental lobbying and campaign contributions. Over the past twenty years, Big Capital-owned correctional services companies have become “a quasi-oligopolistic market force across the carceral economy.”323 Below I discuss how and why. 314 See Elizabeth Warren, Letter to BlueMountain 2, September 30, 2019, https://www.warren.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2019-0930%20Letters%20to%20PE%20Firms%20re%20Prison%20Services.pdf 315 Barber & Goold, Private Equity, supra note __, at id. 316 See Hannah Levintova, The Smash and Grab Economy, MOTHER JONES (May-June 2022), https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/05/private-equity-buyout-kkr-houdaille/ 317 Levintova, supra note __, at id. 318 See Hannah Levintova and Tim Murphy, Everything Everywhere All at Once: How Private Equity Rules Your World, MOTHER JONES (May-June 2022), https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/05/private-equity-citypensions-burger-king-roark-liverpool-yale/ 319 See Warren, supra note __, at 4 320 See Jacob Swansen and Mary Fainsod Katzenstein, Turning Over Keys: Public Prisons, Private Equity, and Normalization of Markets Behind Bars, 19 PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS: SPECIAL ISSUE: RACE AND POLITICS IN AMERICA 1247, 1249 (December 2021), https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592721002218. 321 Swansen & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1249. 322 Swansen & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1248. 323 Swansen & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1247. 35 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 A. Monopolistic Conditions Private equity firms and large, publicly traded corporations have long been a force for consolidation, higher prices, and fewer choices for the captive consumer.324 The frequent mergers and acquisitions of similar companies by Big Capital has become a systemic problem.325 Big Capital controls a large part of U.S. corrections, and its reliance on the “extractive business model” means it gobbles up more and more companies each year.326 The private equity industry in particular has a protracted history of adding on and rolling up companies into a single entity, a practice that has been criticized for contributing to monopolistic conditions in various industries.327 Private equity works through buying up various independent companies in the same sector, extracting value from them by restructuring, frequently firing existing workers, hiking prices, avoiding regulation, and diverting the revenue directly back to the PE firm.328 In addition, the PE industry consolidates its profits by acquiring numerous similar companies, and placing them in a portfolio, draining revenues from all of them.329 This results in poorer services for clients and fewer options for alternate providers.330 All too frequently, clients have no choice but to submit to the market power wielded by private equity firms in hyper local markets,331 particularly when that market is an highly specialized one, such as correctional services. This often results in the creation of a dominant player in the market, with a substantial market share and the ability to exert significant control over prices and other market conditions. The private equity industry’s “practice of ‘add on and roll up’” bundles fragments of competing local or regional players into consolidated entities. Accordingly, through both vertical and horizontal consolidation, a private equity-owned corporation can “forge near-monopolistic conditions.”332 Specifically, company acquisitions by private equity firms frequently bundle complementary services into a larger, interconnected dominant firm.333 We see similar practices when it comes to large, publicly-owned corporations, such as CoreCivic and Geo Group, who dominate the correctional-services market.334 Over the last 12 years, these for-profit corrections corporations have rolled up the smaller private correctional 324 See Natalia Renta, Antitrust Authorities Turn Focus to Private Equity Role in Monopolies, Our Financial Security (July 2022), https://ourfinancialsecurity.org/2022/07/blog-antitrust-authorities-turn-focus-to-private-equity-role-inmonopolies/ 325 See Letter to FTC & Department of Justice, Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, Americans for Financial Reform (April 21, 2022), https://ourfinancialsecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/4.21.22-PE_AFRCEPR-UFR-Comment-DOJ-FTC-mergers.pdf 326 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 1. 327 See David Dayen, Cut Off Private Equity’s Money Spigot, American Prospect (July 28, 2022), https://prospect.org/economy/cut-off-private-equitys-money-spigot/ 328 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 2. 329 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 3. 330 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 3 331 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 4. 332 Swansen & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1248 333 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 9. 334 See Tim Requarth, How Private Companies Are Turning Public Prisons into Big Profits, THE NATION, (Apr. 30, 2019), https://www.thenation.com/article/prison-privatization-private-equity-hig/ 36 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 services companies into larger, wholly owned subsidiaries, which then have been structured into the two behemoths.335 Roll-ups are often viewed as efficient ways to streamline services.336 With correctional services, however, “the most common expression of this efficiency is simply abusive market power over consumers.”337 Although the underlying theory for roll-ups is a gain of efficiency through economies of scale, in reality the result is usually lower-quality service.338 Both private equity firms and large public corporations often look to extract value from the companies they acquire through cost-cutting measures, such as layoffs and asset stripping.339 In the world of corrections, profits are extracted not only from public sites of incarceration, but also from the incarcerated individuals themselves. Private equity particularly enables the expansion of private corrections companies.340 HIG Capital, for example, which manages over $30 billion in assets, has helped consolidate small corrections-industry companies into huge entities that dominate their markets.341 The role of private equity firms in helping broker rollups has transformed the private correctional-services industry.342 These practices can erase any competition between companies, allowing private equity-owned corrections companies to create a “vicious cycle of monopolization.”343 For example, the market for corrections healthcare has been consolidating rapidly over the last 10 years, eliminating the smaller rivals.344 Private ownership of correctional services companies has made the services provided far worse, because the monopolies and duopolies created simply do not provide any competition.345 The massive consolidation created by Big Capital in the correctional services space has translated into worse services at higher prices for incarcerated individuals.346 B. Lack of Transparency Transparency is key to proper operation of correctional facilities, because public scrutiny is essential to ensure that public institutions are accountable to the commuity, not “hidden, 335 See Requarth, Big Profits, supra note __, at id. See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 9 337 Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 9. 338 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 9. 339 See Eileen Applebaum & Rosemary Pratt, Private Equity Buyouts in Heathcare: Who Wins, Who Loses 7-8, 12,16, INSTITUTE FOR NEW ECONOMIC THINKING (March 15, 2020), https://www.cepr.net/wpcontent/uploads/2020/03/WP_118-Appelbaum-and-Batt.pdf 340 See Laura I Appleman, The Treatment-Industrial Complex: Alternative Corrections, Private Prison Companies, & Criminal Justice Debt, 55 HARV. C.R.- C.L. L. REV. 1, 41 (2020). 341 See Requarth, Big Profits, supra note __, at id. 342 See Requarth, Big Profits, supra note __, at id. 343 See Request for Information on Merger Enforcement, supra note __, at 2. 344 McLeod, The Private Option, supra note __, at id 345 See Milburn, Prison Service Companies, supra note __, at id. 346 See Milburn, Prison Service Companies, supra note __, at id. 336 37 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 mysterious places on the far edge of democracy.”347 Privatized operations of public corrections have even more need for transparency, to make sure that the private companies operating the carceral sites further such critical goals like rehabilitation, safety (for both the public and those incarcerated), health, and reduction of recidivism.348 Most private correction companies, however, do not comply with FOIA or state reporting statutes because they claim it does not apply to them. They claim that FOIA sec. 4 exempts any private companies from FOIA’s reporting requirements. FOIA sec. 4 protects "trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person [that is] privileged or confidential."349 The majority of sec. 4 exemptions fall under confidential commercial and financial information, which tends to be widely interpreted.350 Private corrections companies tend to make similar arguments regarding state open records laws. The majority of private correctional companies refuse to comply with state open records law as well.351 This means that documentation that used to be available for public review and examination is now frequently hidden behind the walls of private corrections companies.352 When private corrections companies are running or providing services for prisons and jails, the records are frequently inaccessible, in part because the goals of private correctional companies are frequently oppositional to the purpose of public records laws.353 In addition, private equity operations in particular are far from transparent themselves, with limited reporting requirements, whether to the Securities Exchange Commission or to a formalized stockholder entity.354 Because the growth of private equity correction services companies has been largely administrative, much of their expansion has gone relatively unnoticed.355 Thus much of the expansion of private equity operations have been out of the public spotlight, unhampered by most reporting requirements.356 This has resulted in private equity companies making decisions about services in public correctional facilities that are not subject to either accountability statues or any public investigatory body.357 347 See Sarah Geraghty and Melanie Velez, Bringing Transparency and Accountability to Criminal Justice Institutions in the South, 22 STAN. L. & POL'Y REV. 455, 456 (2011). 348 See Geraghty and Velez, , supra note __, at 473. 349 See 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4) (2006), amended by OPEN Government Act of 2007, Pub. L. No. 110175, 121 Stat. 252. 350 See Exemption 4, Dep’t of Justice Guide to the Freedom of Information Act 266-67, https://www.justice.gov/archive/oip/foia_guide09/exemption4.pdf 351 See Stephen Raher, The Business of Punishing: Impediments to Accountability in the Private Corrections Industry, 13 RICH. J.L. & PUB. INT. 209, 240-47 (2010). 352 See Matthew Bunker & Charles Davis, Privatized Government Functions and Freedom of Information: Public Accountability in an Age of Private Governance, 75 JOUR. & MASS COMM. Q. 464, 466 (1998). 353 See Bunker & Davis, Privatized Government Functions, supra note __, at 466. 354 Swanson & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1248. 355 Swanson & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1249. 356 Swanson & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1249. 357 See Andrea Headley, Jean-Claude Garcia-Zamor, The Privatization of Prisons and its Impact on Transparency and Accountability in Relation to Maladministration, 8 INT’L J. HUM. SOC. SCI. & EDUC. 23, 28 (2014). 38 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Private equity usually acquires businesses below the federal regulatory radar.358 One investigation found that more than 90% of private equity takeovers or investments fall underneath the transaction threshold, the level that initiates an antitrust review by the FTC and the DOJ.359 Under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvement Act,360 any proposed merger must be reported to the FTC and the Justice Department antitrust division for review, in order to prevent deals that could hinder marketplace competition.361 But the reporting threshold for such deals must be above $101 million at the time of closing,362 a number that private equity firms carefully avoid.363 Private equity firms have long been accused of operating with impunity, largely immune from consequences for their actions. This is particularly evident when it comes to investigations or fraud lawsuits brought by the federal government.364 Despite facing allegations of wrongdoing, few private equity firms actually end up paying fines in these cases. This is because the private equity-owned companies themselves pay the fines.365 Private equity firms are notoriously difficult to regulate.366 They operate in a largely opaque and secretive manner, making it difficult for regulators to gather sufficient evidence to pursue enforcement action.367 Additionally, private equity firms often have complex corporate structures and offshore subsidiaries, which can make it difficult to track and hold them accountable for their actions.368 Nonetheless, even with false billing complaints, most private equity firms manage to avoid scrutiny.369 From 2013 - 2021, although 25 private equity-backed health care companies paid $573 million in government fraud settlement, there were only three private equity firms themselves that paid any fines at all.370 Furthermore, even when regulators are able to build a case against a private equity firm, the firms often have the resources and legal expertise to drag out the process for 358 See Schulte, supra note __, at id. See Schulte, supra note __, at id. 360 5 U.S.C. § 18a. 361 See Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, Federal Trade Commission, https://www.ftc.gov/legal-library/browse/statutes/hart-scott-rodino-antitrust-improvements-act-1976 362 See HSR threshold adjustments and reportability for 2022, Federal Trade Commission (February 11, 2022), https://www.ftc.gov/enforcement/competition-matters/2022/02/hsr-threshold-adjustments-reportability-2022 363 See Schulte, supra note __, at id. 364 See Schulte, supra note __, at id. 365 See Schulte, supra note __, at id. 366 See Leah Nylen and Todd Shields, US Is Focused on Regulating Private Equity Like Never Before, Bloomberg Finance (Nov. 22, 2022), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-22/private-equity-regulation-becomesbiden-administration-focus?leadSource=uverify%20wall 367 Nylen & Shields, supra note __, at id. 368 See Renee Butler, Grasp the Accounting of Private Equity Funds, Investopedia (May 31, 2021), https://www.investopedia.com/articles/active-trading/121015/understanding-accounting-private-equity-funds.asp 369 See Private Equity Loses Its Shield as U.S. Cracks Down on Fraud, Bloomberg Law (February 22, 2021), https://news.bloomberglaw.com/private-equity/the-feds-pierce-private-equitys-defenses-against-whistleblowers 370 See Private Equity Loses Its Shield, supra note __, at id. 359 39 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 years.371 This effectively wears down the regulatory agency, making it less likely that a fine will be imposed.372 Likewise, publicly traded corporations such as CoreCivic and Geo Group have fought any transparency into their workings, refusing to share data on any incidents,373 covering up dangerous living conditions,374 collecting private data from their electronic monitoring companies without supervision or regulation,375 and ignoring multiple OSHA workplace safety violations.376 Their fierce opposition to FOIA requests377 and other basic information about their inner workings is simply antithetical to entities working in a public system of punishment. This lack of transparency is particularly troubling. The relentless privatization of correctional services makes it difficult to find reliable data on their size and profit margins.378 Additionally, the ultimate ownership of these correctional services companies by both private equity firms and public corporations is shielded information, extremely difficult to obtain and clarify. In general, Big Capital is too often a “black hole of information.”379 Federal FOIA reporting requirements are usually inapplicable to private correctional services companies, despite their operating in the service of the justice system.380 Although there have been several attempts to expand FOIA to include information from private correctional companies, 371 See Private Equity Loses Its Shield, supra note __, at id. See Private Equity Loses Its Shield, supra note __, at id. 373 See, e.g., Scathing State Audit Slams Tennessee Prisons, CoreCivic For Staffing, Sexual Assaults, and Deaths in Jails, NEWSCHANNEL5 NASHVILLE (January 21, 2020), https://www.newschannel5.com/news/scathing-state-auditslams-tennessee-prisons-corecivic-for-staffing-sexual-assaults-and-deaths-in-jails 374 See Advocacy Groups Submit Records Requests Seeking Transparency in Troubled Torrance Detention Center, ACLU-New Mexico (May 13, 2022), https://www.aclu-nm.org/en/news/advocacy-groups-submit-records-requestsseeking-transparency-troubled-torrance-detention-center 375 See Johana Bhuiyan, Poor Tech, Opaque Rules, Exhausted Staff: Inside the Private Company Surveilling US Immigrants, GUARDIAN (March 7, 2022), https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/mar/07/us-immigrationsurveillance-ice-bi-isap 376 See OSHA News Release—Region 4, OSHA (February 27, 2014), https://www.osha.gov/news/newsreleases/region4/02272014-0 377 See Press Release, Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Government Transparency Against Private Prison Corporations, CENTER FOR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS (October 10, 2017), https://ccrjustice.org/home/presscenter/press-releases/supreme-court-rules-favor-government-transparency-against-private 378 See Chahine and Bempah, Distortion on the Inside, supra note __, at id. 379 See Todd Frankel, The Search for Oligarchs’ Wealth in U.S. is Hindered by Investment Loopholes, WASHINGTON POST (March 16, 2022), https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2022/03/16/private-equity-regulation-gap/ 380 See Matt Stroud, Updated: Private Prisons Are Exempted From Federal Disclosure Laws; Advocates Say That Should Change, FORBES (Feb.7,2013), http://www.forbes.com/sites/mattstroud/2013/02/07/private-prisons-areexempted-from-federal-disclosure-laws-advocates-say-that-should-change/#31bbd463 372 40 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 most recently in November 2021,381 so far, such efforts have not been successful.382 State FOIA reporting laws and other open records law usually also do not apply to such PE-run companies.383 For example, in Texas, the state government has the ability to remove prison wardens and demand prison transparency and accountability in its state prisons.384 For correctional facilities run by private equity firms, however, there is no such power.385 Only Connecticut, Florida, and South Carolina require their private corrections companies to disclose information under public records laws.386 Regulating these large private corrections companies is extraordinarily challenging. One prime example is Sequel Youth and Family Services, a behavioral health services company owned/funded by Altamont Capital. Sequel has proven to be difficult to regulate, in part because so many different governmental entities oversee different aspects : “Because it operates in so many states, Sequel is overseen by a dizzying array of government agencies: state departments of human services, corrections, health and education, county probation, social services and courts, local police and sheriff’s offices, and the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, to name just a few. But each agency regulates only a sliver of the company’s operations. The full picture is visible to none of them.”387 Because Big Capital corrections companies are paid with public funds for providing services to public corrections, at minimum their work should fall under governmental accountability services. As more and more private correctional service companies fulfill public criminal justice functions—thereby acting as a government proxy—it is all the more important that there is public access to the information revealing the inner functioning of these companies.388 381 See Press Release, Cardin, Leahy, Raskin Introduce Legislation to Improve Transparency for Prisoners and Detainees In Private Facilities, Leahy Senate Office (November 4, 2021), https://www.leahy.senate.gov/press/cardin-leahy-raskin-introduce-legislation-to-improve-transparency-forprisoners-and-detainees-in-private-facilities 382 H.R.5853 - Private Prison Information Act of 2021, which was introduced on Nov. 4, 2021, was immediately referred to the Judiciary Committee, where it still sits. See https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/housebill/5853/all-info 383 See Michelle Rindels, Transparency Advocates Concerned About Nevada's New Partnership with Private Prison, Which Is Exempt from Public Records Law, NEVADA INDEPENDENT (Oct. 22, 2017), https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/transparency-advocates-concerned-about-nevadas-new-partnership-withprivate-prison-which-is-exempt-from-public-records-law 384 See Privatization of Correctional Operations & Services Handing Over Control to Private Businesses Is Dangerous for Texas 3, TEXAS CRIMINAL JUSTICE COALITION (May 2011), https://www.texascjc.org/system/files?file=publications/Privatization%20of%20Correctional%20Operations%20Ser vices%20%28May%202011%29.pdf. 385 See Dangerous for Texas, supra note __, at 3. 386 See Lauren-Brooke Eisen, Private Prisons Lock Up Thousands of Americans With Almost No Oversight, Brennan Center (Nov. 8, 2017), https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/private-prisons-lock-thousandsamericans-almost-no-oversight 387 See Gilbert & Dake, You Were Abused There, supra note __, at id. 388 See Geraghty and Velez, supra note __, at 476. 41 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Overall, the lack of consequences for Big Capital corrections when it comes to investigations undermines the integrity of their financial system, leaving those reliant on their private correctional companies vulnerable to abuse. Regulators must take steps to increase transparency and accountability, including the imposition of more substantial penalties for wrongdoing. C. Destruction/Dismantling of Services for Profit The speed in which Big Capital corrections often purchases and then dismantles or strips companies providing services in the incarceration space means that many justice-involved individuals pay the price, all while profits stream into the pockets of private equity fund investors. Simply put, obtaining a good deal for investors does not mean that other stakeholders in incarceration services are being equally well-served.389 Indeed, in the market for incarceration, justice-involved individuals are almost always the loser. As discussed in Part I, Big Capital has honed in on several different areas of private corrections services, including juvenile justice, behavioral and psychiatric services, correctional control, and correctional healthcare. The private equity firms, large corporations, and insurance conglomerates in each of these areas have purchased and consolidated various smaller private businesses to create far larger enterprises. This is cause for concern, especially given that Big Capital has a history of purchasing companies, stripping them of assets while loading them with debt, and extracting exorbitant fees before selling them for a profit.390 The investors make money, but those under correctional control suffer. Private equity firms in particular tend to buy up assets on the cheap, frequently targeting companies that are struggling, and holding on to them for a while before selling them.391 When corrections businesses are taken over by private equity firms, they inevitably raise prices while providing fewer services and diminished quality of care.392 For example, Endeavor Capital purchased Aladdin Bail Bonds in 2012, along with Seaview Insurance, a related insurer.393 After purchase, Endeavor expanded Aladdin to several more states,394 spending an enormous amount of money in order to defeat California’s SB 10, which in 2018 granted judges much more discretion in setting terms of pretrial release for most defendants, 389 See Emily Stewart, What is Private Equity, and Why Is It Killing Everything You Love, VOX (January 6, 2020), https://www.vox.com/the-goods/2020/1/6/21024740/private-equity-taylor-swift-toys-r-us-elizabeth-warren 390 See Matthew Clark, Members of Congress Investigate Private Equity Firms that Own Companies Providing Prison Services, PRISON LEGAL NEWS (February 4, 2020), https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2020/feb/4/members-congress-investigate-private-equity-firms-owncompanies-providing-prison-services/ 391 See Ben Protess and Isaac Bevacqua, A Primer on Private Equity, DEALBOOK: NEW YORK TIMES (June 25, 2016), https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/26/business/dealbook/what-is-private-equity.html 392 See Fred Schulte, Sick Profit: Investigating Private Equity’s Stealthy Takeover of Health Care Across Cities and Specialties, KHN (November 14, 2022), https://khn.org/news/article/private-equity-takeover-health-care-citiesspecialties/ 393 See Ted Sickinger, ACLU Urges Oregon to Leave Bail Bond Industry Out of Pension Investments, OREGONIAN (September 20, 2018), https://www.oregonlive.com/politics/2018/09/oregon_pension_managers_ask_to.html 394 See Sickinger, Bail Bond Industry, supra note __, at id. 42 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 all but the ones charged with crimes of serious violence.395 This massive reduction of cash bail was fiercely opposed by the bail bond industry, who backed a voter referendum to overturn the law.396 Triton Management, also owned by Endeavor, was the largest contributor, donating almost $800,000.397 Where did the money come from to fund the referendum to reinstate cash bail in California? From the heavy costs imposed on criminal defendants by the bail bond companies (as discussed in Part I), all of which eventually redounded to Endeavor. After the California bail bond reform law was repealed,398 Endeavor ultimately sold its stake in Aladdin in 2020, having extracted as much profit as was possible.399 Other major investors in bail bond companies have followed suit by divesting, now that the industry is not reaping profits as it once used to.400 Likewise, HIG Capital has purchased and consolidated a large subset of private correctional services companies, exploiting justice-involved individuals in areas as diverse as food, communications, and healthcare.401 Through this consolidation, HIG’s correctional services companies have taken over their markets while lowering the quality of the services and increasing prices for the incarcerated and their families.402 Over the past 18 years, HIG has consolidated prison telephony, correctional food services, and correctional health care, creating private companies that dominate all three industries and have reshaped the correctional landscape.403 By dramatically cutting staffing and increasing prices for the incarcerated, HIG has made the correctional service industry simultaneously more profitable for its investors and worse for its actual consumers, both in terms of financial costs and quality of service, whether food, communication, or healthcare.404 Wellpath, HIG’s correctional healthcare company, made approximately $1.6 billion in revenue as of 2019. The Wellpath healthcare actually provided to carceral institutions, however, has been abysmal.405 The complaints about minimal or non-existent correctional staffing and training, abusive practices, both physical and mental, and ever-increasing use of restraints, 395 See Michael Hiltzik, Facing Eradication, the Bail Industry Gears Up to Mislead the Public About Its Value, L.A. TIMES (October 4, 2019), https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2019-10-04/hiltzik-bail-industry-eradication 396 Hiltzik, supra note __, at id. 397 Hiltzik, supra note __, at id. 398 See Scott Rodd, Cash Bail Survived the Ballot, But Reformers Say the Battle to End It Isn’t Over, CAP RADIO (November 12, 2020), https://www.capradio.org/articles/2020/11/12/cash-bail-survived-the-ballot-but-reformerssay-the-battle-to-end-it-isnt-over/ 399 See Laura Kusisto, Criminal-Justice Changes Are Squeezing the Bail-Bond Industry, WALL STREET JOURNAL (February 21, 2020), https://www.wsj.com/articles/criminal-justice-reforms-are-squeezing-the-bail-bond-industry11582299332 400 Kusisto, supra note __, at id. 401 See David Dayen, Rollups: Private Equity Eyes Youth Treatment Centers as a Takeover Target, AMERICAN PROSPECT (Feburary 17, 2022), https://prospect.org/power/rollups-private-equity-eyes-youth-treatment-centers-astakeover-target/ 402 See Tim Requarth, How Private Equity Is Turning Public Prisons Into Big Profits, INVESTMENT WATCH BLOG (May 7, 2019), https://www.investmentwatchblog.com/how-private-equity-is-turning-public-prisons-into-bigprofits/ 403 Requarth, Public Prisons, supra note __, at id. 404 Requarth, Public Prisons, supra note __, at id. 405 See infra Part I, B and D. 43 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 isolation, and neglect have continued to multiply over the years.406 Private equity firms like HIG have extracted billions of dollars from these industries, funneling the money to dividend and management payments.407 All of this is a “by-product of the private equity business model.”408 This is because private equity’s goals are to make large returns for investors.409 The merging of companies ends up creating even more consolidation.410 In part, this is because Big Capital Corrections tends to operate by buying up and rolling up industries, to make them hyper-efficient.411 Private equity firms, to take one example, do so by creating a platform company and then purchasing several similar companies to run as one.412 For a company like HIG, the goal is to double or triple profits from the initial investment to the sale of the newly consolidated industry.413 Many of these profits are obtained by slashing staffing, which can be some of the highest costs.414 By providing low wages for labor and cutting many staff positions, private equity firm are able to extract high returns for their investors.415 In doing so, however, the individuals who are served by private equity-owned correctional services companies suffer from “inadequate staffing and training, substandard living conditions, physical and sexual abuse, and the growing use of restraints and solitary confinement.”416 All this is simply seen as a regrettable byproduct of private equity rollups.417 These rollups, combining smaller and more fragmented regional companies into much larger conglomerates, have dramatically reshaped the world of private correctional services.418 None of this has been for the benefit of justice-involved individuals. A. Purchasing political favorability Part of Big Capital’s ability to quickly dominate the privatized corrections market is due to their influence in Congress. The federal government’s extremely limited regulation of political money essentially permits Big Capital to purchase influence over correctional policymaking. Through campaign contributions and lobbying, private corrections companies can massage criminal justice policy to eradicate any time of challenge to policies supporting mass incarceration.419 For example, in the 2016 election cycle, Geo Group donated $1.2 million to various politicians, and CoreCivic contributed $1.1 million to lobby against then-President 406 Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id 408 Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 409 Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 410 McLeod, supra note __, at id 411 McLeod, supra note __, at id 412 See Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 413 McLeod, supra note __, at id. 414 See Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 415 See Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 416 Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 417 See Dayen, Rollups, supra note __, at id. 418 See Requarth, Public Prisons, supra note __, at id. 419 See Christopher Hartley & Caroline Glessman, Prison Bed Profiteers: How Corporations Are Reshaping Criminal Justice in the U.S., NAT’L COUNCIL ON CRIME & DELINQUENCY, 13-14 (May 2012). 407 44 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 Obama’s effort to withdraw from private federal prisons.420 In 2022, CoreCivic spent $1.8 million on federal lobbying, employing 12 lobbyists to push issues as varied as law enforcement and crime, finance, and homeland security.421 Likewise, Geo Group spent $920,000 on federal lobbying in 2022, employing 12 lobbyists on pending bills such as the 2023 Homeland Security Appropriations Act and Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act.422 As for the private equity industry, it employs almost 200 lobbyists and has paid over $600 million in campaign contributions over the last ten years,423 making it highly unlikely that any real scrutiny of their carceral strategies will happen. Because private equity firms do not directly lobby any groups, leaving that to the companies they own and control, their power is largely anonymous, allowing them to apply pressure to government under the radar.424 Wellpath, for example, makes considerable donations through the Wellpath PAC.425 Since 2015, the Wellpath PAC has given out over 100 payments to various groups and individuals, including vendor fees, other PAC contributions, and donations to judicial, legislative, and executive candidates at both state and local levels.426 Payment and attention to state legislatures also continues apace, greasing the wheels for the continued takeover of the correctional market. In Texas, for example, a 2006 amendment to the Texas Local Government Code allowed profits that Texas jails made from a lucrative private phone provider contract to be spent on jailhouse operations, not inmate welfare, as the law had formerly required.427 Individual private equity firms ensure that their specific companies can continue to operate for profit in state correctional systems by focusing on not only state legislatures but also the state executive. For example, Apax Partners, which owns electronic monitoring company Attenti, utilizes widespread lobbying to ensure their products continue to be used in state corrections. In Florida between 2017-19, Apax paid Southern Strategy Group, their registered lobbyist, up to $30,000 for their executive branch work and between $20,000 and $50,000 for their legislative branch work.428 In Michigan, Apax’s lobbyist spent nearly $48,000 total on the state’s legislature 420 See Sara Swann, For-Profit Prisons: Background, OPEN SECRETS (May 2017), https://www.opensecrets.org/industries/background.php?cycle=2018&ind=G7000 421 https://www.opensecrets.org/federal-lobbying/clients/summary?cycle=2022&id=D000021940 422 https://www.opensecrets.org/federal-lobbying/clients/bills?cycle=2022&id=D000022003 423 See Private Equity and Investment Firms, OPEN SECRETS (Feb. 1, 2022), https://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2020&ind=F2600 424 See Ben Protess et al, How Private Equity Found Power and Profit in State Capitols, DEALBOOK: NEW YORK TIMES (July 14, 2016), https://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/15/business/dealbook/private-equity-influence-fortressinvestment-group.html 425 See Michael Fenne, Private Equity Companies Rebrand Prison Healthcare Companies, But Care Issues Continue 17, PRIVATE EQUITY STAKEHOLDER PROJECT (November 2022), https://pestakeholder.org/wpcontent/uploads/2022/11/Wellpath_HIG_12-2022.pdf 426 See Fenne, supra note __, at 17. 427 Swanson & Katzenstein, supra note __, at 1250. 428 See Baker, Continuing Incarceration, supra note __, at 7. 45 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 and executive branches during 2017 and 2018.429 Apax paid $30,000 to its Mississippi lobbyist in 2018.430 Such lobbying also extends to ensuring that FOIA laws continue to be inapplicable to private corrections companies. Between 2007 – 2014, for example, Geo Group spent about $7 million successfully lobbying against legislation that would have subjected its prisons to FOIA reporting obligations.431 Many of these Big Capital corrections companies have engaged in various forms of pay to play to support their contracting efforts. Wellpath, for example, has a long and clearly reported pay for play history using campaign contributions to secure government contracts, including bribing a Norfolk, VA sheriff to ensure Wellpath got the contract to provide medical services for Norfolk City Jail;432 and donating heavily to a Loudoun County, VA sheriff’s 2014 re-election campaign to maintain their contract providing medical and mental health care to detainees at the Loudoun County Adult Detention Center.433 Indeed, at least six Virginia sheriff candidates have taken approximately $41,000 in contributions from Wellpath and its predecessors between 2007 and 2019.434 Lobbying is also a familiar path for bail bond insurance companies. In the lucrative bail bond insurance industry, for example, there is an insurance industry group, the American Bail Coalition (ABC), which has lobbied heavily against any attempts to eliminate or restrict for-profit bail.435 ABC’s efforts were crucial in derailing California’s attempt to eliminate cash bail. In 2018, California passed a law replacing cash bail with a system that allowed judges, with help from a computer algorithm, to determine flight risk.436 The new system no longer required cash bail for most misdemeanors.437 Since this new law was directly against the financial interests of both the bail bond providers and their insurance backers, ABC quickly went to work. ABC spent $2.8 million, raised primarily from their enormous surety underwriters, to gather enough signatures for a ballot initiative which would let voters to decide on the bill.438 After ABC spent over $7 million more, 429 See Baker, Continuing Incarceration, supra note __, at 7. See Baker, Continuing Incarceration, supra note __, at 7. 431 See WAREHOUSED AND FORGOTTEN: IMMIGRANTS TRAPPED IN OUR SHADOW PRIVATE PRISON SYSTEM 58, ACLU (June 2014), https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/files/assets/060614-aclu-car-reportonline.pdf 432 See Margaret Kavanaugh, Former Norfolk Sheriff Indicted on Public Corruption Charges, WTKR (October 25, 2019), https://www.wtkr.com/2019/10/24/former-norfolk-sheriff-indicted-on-public-corruption-charges 433 See David Reutter, Major Prison Health Care Companies Funnel Campaign Contributions to Sheriffs, Get Rewards, Prison Legal News (March 3, 2020), https://www.prisonlegalnews.org/news/2020/mar/3/major-prisonhealth-care-companies-funnel-campaign-contributions-sheriffs-get-rewards/ 434 See Aaron Morrison, Virginia Sheriff Seeking Re-election Took Campaign Donations from Healthcare Provider For Jail He Oversees, THE APPEAL (Oct. 17, 2019), https://theappeal.org/virginia-sheriff-loudoun-county-campaignmoney/ 435 See Scott & Barlyn, supra note __, at id. 436 See Scott & Barlyn, supra note __, at id. 437 See Scott & Barlyn, supra note __, at id. 438 See Scott & Barlyn, supra note __, at id. 430 46 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 donated from bail bond companies and their sureties, to persuade voters to say no, the initiative was defeated, keeping cash bail in place for most crimes within California.439 The bail bond industry has done similarly in other states to defeat the elimination of cash bail, spending over $23 million on lobbying, campaigns and candidate contributions over the past 10 years.440 ABC alone has 234 lobbyists working in 14 states.441 The time and money invested by Big Capital to ensure that it is awarded state and federal corrections contracts is one reason why these private entities are so hard to eliminate. B. Difficulty Divesting Although much press has covered the recent divestment movement of retirement funds, universities, and individuals from private prison stocks, a similar call for the public to divest from private equity firms controlling privatized correction services will be far harder to achieve. Eliminating such industries would affect not only private equity firms such as HIG Capital or DC Capital, but also many retirees and pension owners from across the country. This is because defined contribution retirement plans are now permitted to indirectly invest in private equity companies,442 many of which provide private prison services. For example, in 2020, Vanguard began allowing institutional clients like pension funds to access private-equity investments through HarbourVest Partners, an $85 billion, independent global private markets investment firm.443 Fidelity and Schwab have done likewise.444 Courtesy of the Labor Department, mutual plan sponsors are now permitted to allow private-equity investments within definedcontribution plans as part of professionally managed asset- allocation funds, generally known as target-date funds.445 Given how hard private equity firms are pushing to be part of defined contribution retirement plans, it seems inevitable that their reach will soon extend to many more 401(k) 439 See Scott & Barlyn, supra note __, at id. See Scott & Barlyn, supra note __, at id. 441 Ciara O’Neill, Bail Bond Businesses Buck for Bookings, Appendix B: Bail Bond Companies’ Lobbyists, 20092017, FOLLOW THE MONEY (June 7, 2018), https://www.followthemoney.org/research/institute-reports/bail-bondbusinesses-buck-for-bookings 442 See DOL Creates Path for 401(k) Plans to Offer Private Equity Investment Options, NAT’L L. REV. (Sep’t 11, 2020), https://www.natlawreview.com/article/dol-creates-path-401k-plans-to-offer-private-equity-investmentoptions 443 See Debbie Carlson, As Vanguard Pushes into Private Equity, Some Fans Get Queasy, MARKETWATCH (Dec. 7, 2021), https://www.marketwatch.com/story/as-vanguard-pushes-into-private-equity-some-fans-get-queasy11638828074 444 See Brooke Southall, Vanguard Group’s Private Equity Retail Push Gets Real as It Launches Buyer-Beware Products This Summer to its Brokerage Account as Prelude to Selection for ‘Suitability’ Through Its Ria, RIABIZ (May 25, 2021), https://riabiz.com/a/2021/5/26/vanguard-groups-private-equity-retail-push-gets-real-as-it-launchesbuyer-beware-products-this-summer-to-its-brokerage-accounts-as-prelude-to-selection-for-suitability-through-its-ria 445 See Carlson, supra note __, at id. 440 47 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 retirement accounts.446 In 2021, for example, the average state and local pension fund had 11.9% of its assets allocated to private equity, a little more than double the amount allocated in 2011, which was 5.6%.447 For example, CalPers, the California pension plan, one of the largest state pension plans in the nation, is invested in HIG Europe, with $105,050,973 committed in state funds.448 Likewise, in 2021, the New York State Teachers Retirement System allocated $200M to HIG Capital.449 And a collection of diverse organizations including the Knight Foundation, the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Police & Fire Pension Association of Colorado, and the Producer-Writers Guild of America Pension Plan all are invested in HIG.450 Many analysts argue that 401(k) participants should be able to likewise invest in PE funds. In addition, the Retirement Savings Modernization Act has been proposed to incentivize retirement investment in private equity funds.452 An amendment to ERISA, the bill would clarify that fiduciaries managing defined contribution plans can invest in a variety of assets.453 It is likely that the integration of private equity funds into 401(k) plans will continue to grow.454 451 The business of profitmaking can create some strange incentives for investors. For example, the stock of private prison companies can fluctuate wildly due to the actions of day traders, who often look for “heavily shorted stocks to pile into, forcing some [private prison] investors to buy back stock for higher prices and causing share values to rapidly soar.”455 In other words, money managers might hold onto private prison stocks hoping for a rise in prices from a short squeeze.456 Although this might be profitable for individual traders and money managers, and possibly even investors, it can be ruinous for those justice-involved individuals who suffer the downstream consequences of money being extracted from these private correctional companies. In addition, many investment and pension funds are invested in Big Capital corrections companies, placing millions of dollars in holdings in these vehicles. Vanguard and Fidelity, the two leading investment companies in the United States, own significant stock in CoreCivic and 446 See Larry Swedloe, Does Private Equity Belong in Defined Contribution Plans, WEALTH MANAGEMENT (December 15, 2022), https://www.wealthmanagement.com/alternative-investments/does-private-equity-belongdefined-contribution-plans 447 See Lewis Braham, Private Equity Is Coming to 401Ks. Be Aware of the Risk, BARRONS (October 25, 2022), https://www.barrons.com/advisor/articles/private-equity-401k-investing-risk-51666648855 448 See HIG Europe, Private Equity Fund Performance Review CalPers, (June 30, 2022), https://www.calpers.ca.gov/page/investments/about-investment-office/investment-organization/pep-fundperformance 449 See New York State Teachers Retirement System allocates $200M to HIG Capital and $100M to Comvest Credit, PELTZ INT’L INC. (April 27, 2021), https://peltzinternational.com/new-york-state-teachers-retirement-systemallocates-200m-to-hig-capital-and-100m-to-comvest-credit/ 450 See Requarth, Private Equity, supra note __, at id. 451 Braham, supra note __, at id. 452 See Paul Mulholland, New Bill Seeks to Encourage 401(k) Investment in Alternative Assets, PlanAdviser (October 5, 2022), https://www.planadviser.com/new-bill-seeks-encourage-401k-investment-alternative-assets/ 453 Mulholland, supra note __, at id. 454 See Austin Ramsey, Private Equity Firms Are Winning the Fight for Your 401(k), BLOOMBERG LAW (January 31, 2022), https://news.bloomberglaw.com/daily-labor-report/private-equity-firms-are-winning-the-fight-for-your-401k 455 See Ganeva, supra note __, at id. 456 See Ganeva, supra note __, at id. 48 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 GEO Group.457 Passively managed index funds, often incorporated into mutual funds or 401Ks, own stock in Big Capital corrections companies as well.458 In addition to private investment, twenty-four states own approximately $75 million in stock in Geo Group and CoreCivic as of February 2019.459 The investors include state pension funds, teacher retirement funds, and public employee funds in states such as Florida460 and Oregon.461 Many universities hold stock in Big Capital corrections as well.462 It is becoming increasingly challenging to oversee, regulate, control, and divest from Big Capital corrections. And yet continuing to let these private entities dominate the carceral world leads to increased suffering, violence, and sometimes even death. In a world of ever-increasing criminal punishment, allowing Big Capital corrections to impose public punishment, in the name of the people, is antithetical to our basic understanding of justice. PART IV: UNCONTROLLED PROFITEERING IN A WORLD OF PUBLIC PUNISHMENT There is an essential disconnect when we allow Big Capital, whose focus is on creating high returns from investments, to run essential public functions such as juvenile justice centers, psychiatric hospitals, juvenile detention centers, prison healthcare, and so on. What does it mean when we abandon a traditionally governmental role to not just private actors, but to companies whose existence focuses on extracting profits for shareholders? Big Capital’s move into administering fundamentally public amenities raises major issues about the role that governments must play in providing public services, particularly “public safety services.”463 With few regulatory barriers or constraints, private equity firms, large, publicly held corporations, and global insurance conglomerates are gobbling up core functions of the criminal 457 See Morgan Simon, What Do Big Banks Have to Do with Family Detention? #FamiliesBelongTogether Explains, FORBES (Sept. 18, 2018), https://www.forbes.com/sites/morgansimon/2018/09/25/what-do-big-banks-have-to-dowith-family-detention-families-belongtogether-explains/#538e5bec2b6a 458 The top ten mutual funds holding CoreCivic stock, for example, include iShares Core S&P Small Cap ETF , Fidelity Low Priced Stock Fund, Vanguard Small Cap Index Fund, Vanguard Total Stock Market Index, Vanguard Small Cap Value Index Fund, iShares Russell 2000 ETF, Vanguard Extended Market Index Fund, and AMG River Road Small Cap Value Fund. https://money.cnn.com/quote/shareholders/shareholders.html?symb=CXW&subView=institutional 459 See Liz Farmer, These Pension Funds Invest Millions in Private Prisons, GOVERNING (Feb. 8, 2019), https://www.governing.com/archive/gov-pension-funds-investing-millions-private-prisons.html 460 https://www.cnn.com/2022/08/17/politics/desantis-pension-rules-esg-investing/index.html 461 https://www.wweek.com/news/state/2019/07/17/oregons-public-pension-fund-invests-in-the-immigrationdetention-centers-that-residents-and-politicians-say-they-hate/ 462 See Sarah Brodsky, Investors Question Private Prison Holdings, IMPACT INVESTIGATING EXCHANGE (Apr. 11, 2019), https://www.impactinvestingexchange.com/investors-question-private-prison-holdings/ 463 See Danielle Ivory, et. al., When You Dial 911 and Wall Street Answers, DEALBOOK: NEW YORK TIMES (June 25, 2016), https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/26/business/dealbook/when-you-dial-911-and-wall-street-answers.html 49 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 justice system, alienating this primary responsibility away from public government, whether state, local, or federal.464 Big Capital corrections companies should not be allowed to provide private services to the criminal justice system, because allowing them to do so violates fundamental U.S. philosophies about punishment and rehabilitation, creates conflicts of interest, and ultimately corrupts the administration of justice. The role of the carceral state should be focused on holding individuals accountable for their actions and providing them with opportunities for rehabilitation, not on generating profits for private equity firm investors or mutual fund holders. Additionally, allowing Big Capital to provide our core public correctional services violates our fundamental philosophies about punishment. American theories of punishment are intended to impose retribution, help reform, and rehabilitate justice-involved individuals, not used as a vehicle for generating profit. There are numerous financial and philosophical reasons why private equity firms should not be involved in providing essential public services, most of which go to the critical values of local democracy and community adjudication. A. Diminishes the Provision of Core Public Services Big Capital corrections companies who have taken over essential public functions such as carceral services are profiting from the public weal. The private correctional services industries make their money off the backs of incarcerated individuals and those under correctional control. Much of this profit is literally extracted from those who are incarcerated. Some profit is made from prisoner labor, which enriches the two largest private prison companies.465 Some of the profit is extracted from cutting staff, training, and salaries for behavioral and health services, as discussed in Part I. And some of the profit is generated by providing overpriced and/or substandard food, telephony, banking, monitoring, and electronic communications, both in and outside of carceral institutions.466 Big Capital corrections profits from state and local taxpayers, who fund the carceral state. States spend enormous amounts of money on corrections, between $60 million to $8 billion a year.468 The budget for incarceration and correctional control comes largely from state 467 464 See Bill Schubart, Keep Private Investors Away from Nonprofits in Health Care, Journalism, Corrections, VT DIGGER (December 4, 2022), https://vtdigger.org/2022/12/04/bill-schubart-keep-private-investors-away-fromnonprofits-in-health-care-journalism-corrections/ 465 See Appleman, Bloody Lucre, supra note __, at 675. 466 See Requarth, supra note __, at id. See also Rupert Neate, Welcome to Jail Inc: How Private Companies Make Money Off US Prisons, GUARDIAN (June 16, 2016), https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jun/16/us-prisonsjail-private-healthcare-companies-profit 467 See Mayra R. Valladares, Private Equity Executives Should Not Profit from The Misery of Prisoners and Their Families, FORBES (October 1, 2019), https://www.forbes.com/sites/mayrarodriguezvalladares/2019/10/01/privateequity-executives-should-not-profit-from-the-misery-of-prisoners-and-their-families/?sh=6f9959803edd 468 See Ronnie Stephens, Annual Prison Costs a Huge Part of State Federal Budgets, INTERROGATING JUSTICE (February 16, 2021), https://interrogatingjustice.org/prisons/annual-prison-costs-budgets/ 50 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 taxpayers.469 The taxes collected by the state usually come from personal income taxes and sales taxes, both primarily provided by in-state residents.470 Because of this, every state’s citizens have a stake in how and on what the state budget is spent.471 The same system applies to the federal budget as well, with the monies coming from federal government tax collection.472 Thus the bulk of the profit flowing into Big Capital coffers comes directly from the wallet of the average taxpayer. When Big Capital corrections provides the bulk of public correctional services, this creates a serious conflict of interest, potentially corrupting the fair administration of justice. Private corrections entities are often influenced by their financial interests when making decisions about the release of inmates, rather than considering what is in the best interests of the individuals or society in general. This can result in a biased and unfair system that disproportionately harms marginalized communities and perpetuates systemic racism. Big Capital corrections also has an obligation to their investors to be profitable. This obligation, however, does not square with the government’s obligation to its those it imprisons, as well as to wider society.473 Accordingly, a core public service – incarceration and punishment – is now often controlled by profit-focused private entities, who provide substandard services with seemingly no remorse. Because mass incarceration is both so poorly regulated and so incredibly remunerative, these private correctional companies have little to no incentive to improve their services, notwithstanding the tremendous toll it takes on justice-involved individuals and their families. Big Capital corrections has little motivation to act in the public interest, despite extracting their profits from the community they are supposed to serve. B. Democratic concerns Our normative theories of democracy and democratic deliberation have always included public involvement in all aspects of criminal justice.474 It is the community’s shared principles of justice that make the rule of law both workable and legitimate.475 In a liberal democracy, legitimacy originates both from the rule of law and from the will of the people.476 Criminal law in 469 Policy Basics: Where Do Our State Tax Dollars Go, CENT. BUDGET & POLICY PRIORITIES (July 25, 2018), https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/where-do-our-state-tax-dollars-go 470 State Budget Basics, CENT. BUDGET & POLICY PRIORITIES (MAY 24, 2022), HTTPS://WWW.CBPP.ORG/RESEARCH/STATE-BUDGET-AND-TAX/STATE-BUDGETS-BASICS 471 State Budget Basics, supra note __, at id. 472 See How Much Has the U.S. Government Spent This Year, FISCAL DATA, https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/americasfinance-guide/federal-spending/ 473 See Hana Kiros, ‘A Slow Motion Version of the Death Penalty’: Why Harvard Shouldn’t Invest In Prisons, HARVARD CRIMSON (March 22, 2022), https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2022/3/22/kiros-private-prisons/ 474 See Laura I Appleman, Cashing in On Convicts: Privatization, Punishment, and the People, 2018 Utah L. Rev. 579, 621. 475 See LAURA I APPLEMAN, DEFENDING THE JURY: CRIME, COMMUNITY & THE CONSTITUTION 187-90 (2015) 476 Sigler, supra note __, at 156. 51 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 particular helps uphold the moral agreement needed to maintain social norms in our diverse society.477 This delicate balance is completely upended when Big Capital corrections is imposing punishment upon justice-involved individuals. Instead of decision-making deriving from the will of the people, or even the hand of the government, we get “ad hoc judgments of private actors,” who are largely uninterested with public concerns.478 Competitive profit seeking, eliminating competition, and meeting expectations of heightened returns over a short time period rarely tend to foster democratic legitimacy in the correctional context. Allowing Big Capital to mint money from their monopoly of correctional services essentially changes the relationship between state and society in the criminal context.479 This is because outsourcing this work to private, profit-seeking companies removes the essence of being under correctional control from the local and state government, a task specifically delegated from the local community.480 Instead, it places these critical services in the hands of an industry that is solely focused on extracting profit, and has little interest in inculcating the public norms that underlie our basic assumptions of criminal justice.481 By entrusting the decision-making and implementation of punishment to entirely private entities, we cede the authority over a critical societal function: the act of punishment. When carceral institutions and alternative corrections centers contract out essential services to Big Capital corrections, those private companies have virtually no accountability to democratic concerns.482 Given the distance and disconnect between the boardroom and the carceral site the public aspect to such services and the real needs of incarcerated people, families, and communities—have been virtually eliminated.483 The regulation and administration of carceral institutions has long been a public task, because the political system currently assigns sole control over the legitimate use of force to the government.484 Using private, for-profit actors to administer correctional services can undermine the legitimacy of government action, since the public may suspect that the focus of such entities is private revenue-making, rather than the traditional purposes of criminal justice.485 Moreover, for a government to retain legitimate accountability for its correctional system, it must be able to “reclaim any privatized portion of its own prison system.”486 To do this, of 477 See Laura I Appleman, Local Democracy, Community Adjudication, and Criminal Justice, 111 NORTHWESTERN L. REV. 1413, 1425 (2017). 478 Sigler, supra note __, at 156. 479 See Ahmed A. White, Rule of Law and the Limits of Sovereignty: The Private Prison in Jurisprudential Perspective, 38 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 111, 112 (2001). 480 See White, id. at 119. 481 See White, id. at 119. 482 See Fenne, supra note __, at 22. 483 See Fenne, supra note __, at 22. 484 See Martha Minow, Public and Private Partnerships: Accounting for the New Religion, 116 HARV. L. REV. 1229, 1234 (2003). 485 Minow, supra note __, at 1234. 486 Richard Harding, Private Prisons, 28 Crime & Justice 282, 284 (2002). 52 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 course, it needs to have the ability to step in and take over if there is a problem.487 This can only be done if the government provides direct services to at least some of its correctional institutions.488 Completely outsourcing such services to Big Capital corrections thus cuts the link between a government’s democratic legitimacy and the workings of its penal system. C. Who Imposes Punishment ? We have a local, publicly funded system of criminal prosecution, and only local, public punishment should result from that. As Mary Sigler argued, “Punishment . . effects a form of community censure that takes its meaning from the community’s values and conventions.”489 As detailed above, Big Capital corrections’ refusal to open up their processes or practices bypasses local control of punishment, something that is indivisible from our democratic decision-making.490 The power to punish and incarcerate are normally reserved to the local government.491 While delegating punishment and imprisonment is technically legal, do we truly want to delegate the role of incarcerating, punishing, deterring, and rehabilitating justice-involved individuals to private companies primarily focused on reaping profits ? Given how long incarceration can last for many individuals—from pre-trial detention all the way to post-release correctional control— it is important that the bodies imposing the state-sanctioned punishment speak with the voice of the people. In a liberal democracy, punishment must be inherently public, since it is inflicted for public wrongs in the name of the people and the community. By outsourcing some of the critical roles of correctional facilities to Big Capital corrections, the state is allowing a core state responsibility to be placed in private hands.492 This is because all correctional personnel, from healthcare providers to psychiatric orderlies to alternative corrections staff, have considerable discretion and power in doing their jobs.493 This power can directly affect not just an inmate’s quality of life, but also whether they live or die. Such fundamental rights as safety, liberty, and life are ‘‘inherently governmental,’’ because those decisions reflect the power of the people.494 Such power should never be subcontracted outside to private, for-profit parties. By allowing Big Capital to provide key correctional services, state and federal governments are transforming criminal justice into yet another commodity.495 Using private correctional service companies instead of the state to impose public punishment means that the 487 See Harding, supra note __, at id. See Harding, supra note __, at id. 489 Mary Sigler, Private Prisons, Public Functions, and the Meaning of Punishment, 38 FL. ST. L. REV. 149, 173 (2010). 490 See Appleman, Cashing In On Convicts, supra note __, at 626. 491 See Appleman, Cashing In On Convicts, supra note __, at 630. 492 See Sigler, supra note __, at 493 See Sigler, supra note __, at 175. 494 See Alfred Aman, Private Prisons and the Democratic Deficit 7 (March 9, 2010), http://ssrn.com/abstract=1567129 495 See Sigler, , supra note __, at 176. 488 53 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200 public is unknowingly relinquishing a “momentous social task: depriving other human beings of their liberty on a daily basis.”496 We do so at our peril. CONCLUSION It is hard to find a more destructive force than Big Capital corrections.497 Private equity firms, large publicly traded corporations, and global insurance conglomerates all invest in and profit from the private corrections industry, which continues to fuel disturbing and degrading treatment within our system of mass incarceration. Big Capital’s overwhelming focus on profits has led to violence, abuse, and death within the carceral system, perpetuating systemic injustices on justice-involved individuals, their families, and their communities. Continued Big Capital participation in public punishment and criminal justice harms both those in the system and society as a whole. What can be done? As I have argued above, a major problem with the current system is the virtual lack of regulation of private correctional services. One way to maintain some control would be to require much stricter oversight of any for-profit entity working or contracting in the carceral system. Although this would be difficult to achieve, it is not impossible; under the proposed H.R.5853 - Private Prison Information Act of 2021, all state or local correctional facilities, private or public, would be required to provide information under the Freedom of Information Act if they held federal prisoners.498 This would grant us some small measure of transparency into workings of Big Capital’s privatized correctional services. Of course, given that most criminal punishment is state punishment, this would only affect a small slice of the carceral world. The ultimate solution may be to ban the private, for-profit world entirely from corrections. But as detailed above, this would be extremely difficult, given the level of investment the average American has made in Big Capital corrections, often unwittingly, through their mutual funds, pensions, and other investments. Only through a strategy of major divestment and financial separation from private corrections companies will this problem ever be solved. 496 See Jean Casella and James Ridgway, Outsourcing Punishment and the Privatization of Justice, SOLITARY WATCH (August 12, 2010), https://solitarywatch.org/2010/08/12/outsourcing-punishment-and-the-privatization-ofjustice/ 497 Dayen, Private Equity’s Money Spigot, supra note __, at id. 498 H.R. 5853, The Private Prison Information Act of 2021, https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/housebill/5853?s=1&r=92 54 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4404200