Monday, January 28, 2013

One Tiny State’s Movement to Ban Private Prisons

Vermont spent over $14 million last year to lock up Vermonters in for profit prisons. "The inmates literally had control of this place, the inner compound," said Adam Corliss, an inmate from Springfield.
http://www.towardfreedom.com/home/special-reports/3119-vermont-one-tiny-states-movement-to-ban-private-prisons

7 comments :

  1. You'd be hard pressed to find any EMPLOYED, TAX PAYING Vermonter had gives a rat's ass about sub human scum like Adam Corliss. Least anyone forget, he was found guilty of murder by a jury of his peers for the brutal slaughter of a beautiful, innocent, young woman here in Springfield.

    I'd gladly pay even greater taxes to keep more of his ilk behind bars, regardless of conditions and location. The cheaper it can be done, the more them we can keep off the streets. A major benefit to society of long prison terms is preventing such truly worthless vermin from rampantly reproducing.

    Just look around town. A legion of guttersnipe, speds, unemployed drop-outs, and addicts, as the spawn of local prison population.

    Make the best of it Corliss, you got what you bargained for and it's far worse on the other side.

    ReplyDelete
  2. anti-sociakiss1/28/13, 11:48 AM

    How do you clean vomit off your keeboard ?

    ReplyDelete
  3. chuck gregory1/28/13, 2:04 PM

    The problem with private prisons is that they are like a guy who owns only a hammer: Everything starts to look like a nail.

    Since they are for-profit, they make more money if they have more prisoners. Therefore, they use their profits to lobby throughout America for harsher sentences! Ah, capitalism!

    While people like Adam Corliss deserve what they get, it doesn't make sense to have a shoplifter put in the slammer for "three strikes and you're out." Right now, 3.2% of state and federal prisoners are in for marijuana violations, and they alone cost us $1 billion a year! That billion would go a lot farther if we paid cops, courts and therapists to deal with marijuana the way they do alcohol addiction.

    http://drugsense.org/blog/drug-policy/marijuana-prisoners

    Do we want to have CCA or the Wackenhut Corporation promoting a "three strikes and you're out" for drunk drivers? Remember, each prisoner costs us, the taxpayers, $25,000 a year and up...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. legalize it

      Delete
    2. I agree private prisons are bad public policy, Corliss is irrelevant on this subject. It has already been shown that private prison owners tend to lobby for bad laws like the continuation of marijuana prohibition and suspected immigration violation detention laws, etc. They also are at the heart of the poorly designed probation laws which wind up putting people back in jail for minor violations.

      Delete
  4. re: "I agree private prisons are bad public policy"

    Bad policy for who? Certainly not law abiding, working families. Lower cost for taxpayers with a reduction of State payroll, benefits & pensions. Fewer prison families on the dole here in Vermont is just a bonus. Sounds like a good deal to me.

    I don't know of anyone in prison for simple possession of marijuana. Nor is probation effective without reincarceration for violations, minor or otherwise.

    ReplyDelete
  5. You are very good author of legal articles, I wish you to write something to the section of prison legal news on Attorney Online. You and your friends who provide legal services also can submit contacts to Attorney directory and post to Attorney Blog. By the way I also can write something to your legal blog. Contact me please.

    ReplyDelete


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