Last
month, Corrections Corporation of America promoted Kim White, an African-American woman, as their Vice President, Correctional
Programs Division. She formerly served as Managing Director, Inmate Programs
and served more than 25 years with the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP).
After
seeing posts
about the manner in which CCA decided to celebrate Black History Month in
February, I’m hoping her presence will slow down CCA’s efforts on doing such a
thing again.
![]() |
| Image featured on ACLU's Feb. 8 blog. |
If
you weren’t made privy to the campaign I'm speaking of, let me update you. CCA celebrated Black History
Month with blog posts remembering Rosa Parks and posted Facebook trivia
contests about the contributions of African-American musicians. Evidently, CCA
must have forgotten that they are the largest private corrections company in
the United States and manage more than 60 facilities with a designed capacity
of 90,000 beds.
How
ironic is it that this company, celebrating Black History Month, is making $1.7
billion annually off of the incarceration of people of color?
The
concept of privately-owned companies making profit from incarcerating human
beings is absurd to begin with. It incarcerates more African Americans than any
other private prison company. It spends millions of dollars on lobbying and
campaign contributions to ensure their facilities stay full.
Overall
according to NAACP
Criminal Justice Fact Sheet, African
Americans now constitute nearly 1 million of the total 2.3 million incarcerated
populations nationwide- federal, state, and private. African
Americans represent 26% of juvenile arrests, 44% of youth who are detained, 46%
of the youth who are judicially waived to criminal court, and 58% of the youth
admitted to state prisons. Also one
in six black men has been incarcerated as of 2001. If current trends continue,
one in three black males born today can expect to spend time in prison during
his lifetime. In some states, like Illinois, African Americans are eight times more likely to be incarcerated for a petty drug offense
than white people, even though African Americans and white people consume and
distribute drugs at similar rates, according to the Illinois Disproportionate
Justice Impact Study Commission.






