Mass deportations are being planned by the U.S. government — and that could mean a big boom in business for private prisons.
Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times Supported by By Alexandra Berzon Allison McCann and Hamed Aleaziz Damon Hininger, the chief executive of CoreCivic, which operates private prisons and ...
Anthony Curry, 48, was hit with a murder rap last week after his spouse, 47-year-old Tania Thomas, was strangled to death at ...
Tennessee houses nearly 29% of its inmates in private prisons, ranking it among the top four states nationally. Since 2000, the number of Tennessee prisoners in private facilities has surged by 95 ...
The for-profit prison industry has come knocking again in southwestern Wyoming, this time in Kemmerer. Unlike during ...
Arizona wants to lease the closed Marana prison site to the feds or a private contractor for $1 a year so it can be used as ...
A private prison boom is expected as Trump plans mass deportations — and your retirement savings may be invested in these controversial companies. Here’s how to check your exposure Mass deportations ...
The City of Newark is suing a private-prison company, alleging the firm is illegally renovating a Newark facility that the ...
A private prison company plans to reopen an idled Northern Michigan prison as a federal immigration processing center. GEO Group announced Thursday, March 20 that it entered into a contract with U ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and private prison operator GEO Group have brokered an agreement to open a federal immigration processing center immediately in central ...
(WOOD) — When the private prison in Lake County was open ... associated with the company contributed $1 million to Make America Great Again in 2024 and $78,000 to Trump’s campaign.
Mass deportations are being planned by the U.S. government — and that could mean a big boom in business for private prisons.