A couple of recent items in the mainstream and not-so-mainstream press illustrate that the prison industrial complex is thriving and in little danger of disappearing without a sustained public outcry against the for-profit management of the country’s prison system.
There are 1.5 million people incarcerated in the United States, and local police departments have ready allies in their poverty-stricken populations. As the New York Times has reported, people are so desperate for money that they are turning in their neighbors and even relatives – many wanted for nonviolent misdemeanor offenses – in order to get the money to pay the utility bill. Some tipsters have called the police so many times that their voices are easily recognizable. Also, they are quick to express frustration if the reward is not immediately available. This is a much better way to make ends meet than using the predatory payday loan establishments that are now proliferating like weeds as part of the urban landscape.
Since many of the people turned in by their friends, relatives and neighbors are likely to find themselves in a privately-run prison, what could be more appropriate than a company man on the federal bench. Enter Gus Puryear, the main attorney for the Corrections Corporation of America and Bush’s nominee to the US District Court in the Middle District of Tennessee. Mr. Puryear did well by the company’s shareholders, as the legal mind behind the $2 million settlement that derailed any civil or criminal action in the murder of an inmate at the hands of CCA prison guards. Whether this qualifies him for a lifetime appointment as a public servant will be up to the Senate Judiciary Committee, and some of the members of that committee are concerned enough to begin asking questions about the case.
Yet it is a stunning illustration of how far we have progressed down the road to a corporatist state that someone so intimately associated with private prison enterprise could be unashamedly selected for a federal judgeship.