Columbia University has ended its investment program with privately run prisons.
Why? Too many reports of abuse by prison officials.
The report of Columbia ending this particular relationship brings to mind an issue that’s stuck in my craw for years. I’ve never liked the principle of turning over corrections to private businesses.
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2015/06/23/3672903/columbia-divest-private-prisons/
My belief is that corrections completes a public obligation circle that ought to remain part of the public’s responsibility.
I’m likely to take heat for thinking this, but that’s what I believe.
I look at this in a straightforward way, in my view.
The public pays law enforcement to catch criminals, to arrest them, book them into jail and file detailed reports on what the suspect allegedly did.
Then the public pays the salaries of prosecutors to make the case for the state or the county that the individual is guilty of the crime for which he or she has been accused of committing.
The public also conceivably might pay the salary of the defendant’s lawyer if he or she cannot afford private counsel. It’s part of the Miranda rights text that all criminal suspects are supposed to hear while they’re being arrested.
The judge who presides over a criminal trial is paid from the public trough. The public also pays the jurors — admittedly not much — to determine the suspect’s guilt or innocence.
If jurors convict the defendant, then in my mind it falls on the public to pay for the incarceration of that individual for as long as the publicly paid jury determines he or she should spend in prison.
I’ve long been suspicious of private firms running correctional institutions because the public needs to have ironclad guarantees of its oversight responsibility. The public needs full, complete and unfettered access to everything that goes on behind those walls.
We’ve marched a long way down the road already toward turning over much of our corrections operations over to private firms. I wish we could reverse course.
I didn’t have a particular problem when Texas went on a prison-building boom in the early 1990s to make more room for prisoners. A federal judge had ruled the state had violated inmates’ constitutional rights against “cruel and unusual punishment” by cramming them into prison cells. So, it fell on the state to make it right.
Would a private prison firm be compelled to respond in such a manner?
The public pays for suspects’ arrest, prosecution and sentencing.
The public has a responsibility, therefore, to complete its duty by housing these individuals.