Hundreds of documents show how companies profit off of phone calls, commissary, and more.

Prison Policy Initiative updates for July 6, 2022 Exposing how mass incarceration harms communities and our national welfare

New Correctional Contracts Library shows you what companies are profiting off of incarcerated people in your area

Database contains hundreds of contract documents to help advocates identify and combat the exploitation of incarcerated people and their families.

by Mike Wessler

Today, we launched the new Correctional Contracts Library, which contains documents that show how companies profit on the backs of incarcerated people and their families. Through our twenty years of work to expose and stop the abusive practices of private companies, we've amassed a collection of hundreds of documents, including contracts, bids, evaluations, and more. These documents provide a paper trail showing how for-profit companies work with jails and prisons to squeeze money out of people who can least afford it. Our collection is now publicly available through this new tool.

We're giving advocates and organizations access to the resources we've honed in our twenty years of working to end mass incarceration in America. The Library includes documents related to phone service, tablets, electronic messaging, commissary, and more. We've organized them so you can search for records from a specific facility or filter documents by state, vendor, service, or type. And we've provided some notes and remarks about the documents to help users understand what they contain and where they came from.

Using this new resource:

  • Organizers can monitor when their local jail is scheduled to renegotiate its contracts for services and pressure it to secure the best deal for people that are behind bars;
  • Journalists can assess whether prisons and jails in their area are helping companies exploit incarcerated people and their families;
  • Researchers can track how the cottage industry of companies that profit off of incarceration is developing new ways to sap profits from people in prison and jail; and
  • Policymakers can examine contract terms and identify problematic practices that need to stop.

This new tool does not have every prison or jail contract document that exists. We're sharing our records, but we know our collection isn't exhaustive. If you don't see the documents you're looking for, we've put together a guide to help you submit your own public records request to get them.

If you have documents that you think should be in this library, you can send them to us or, if you have a lot of files, use this form to send us a message telling us what you have.

This new database is the latest addition to our Advocacy Toolkit. Through the Toolkit, we're giving advocates and organizations access to the data, lessons, and resources we've honed in our twenty years of working to end mass incarceration in America.

One of our primary goals here at the Prison Policy Initiative is to help others to make change in their communities. The Correctional Contracts Library is the latest way that we're opening the doors on our research and advocacy to empower the movement to end mass incarceration.

The new Correctional Contracts Library is available here.

 

Help us fight exploitation

You can help us expose the corrupt companies that profit from incarceration. Our work is possible because of individual support — can you contribute today? Thank you!

Advocacy Toolkit

Earlier this year, we released our Advocacy Toolkit, which shares tips, resources, and lessons we’ve learned over two decades of using data, visuals, and narratives to expose the harms of mass criminalization.

The toolkit is designed to support the work of advocates, journalists, and researchers working to end mass incarceration.

Insufficient funds: How prison and jail “release cards” perpetuate the cycle of poverty

Every year, roughly 5 million people are released from jail and another half-million leave prison. But just because they are released from physical custody doesn't mean that they are free of the financial exploitation resulting from that experience.

In this recent briefing, we look at how the growing "release card" industry continues to sap money from people even after they're released from incarceration.

 

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Prison Policy Initiative
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Northampton, Mass. 01061

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