Advocates ask private equity firms to exit investments in prisons and detention
February 10, 2019
On February 5, the Private Equity Stakeholder Project, along with the Corrections Accountability Project, Color of Change, the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), and the Action Center on Race and the Economy (ACRE) sent letters to private equity firms invested in companies profiting from incarceration and detention, asking them to meet and asking the firms to exit their investments in prison, jail and detention service providers.
Media coverage:
Financial Times, Feb 10, 2019: “PE firms pushed to offload prison company investments”
Bloomberg, Feb 9, 2019: “NYC Pensions Invest in Buyout Funds Union Says Profit From Jails”
Bloomberg, Feb 5, 2019: “Teachers’ Union Targets Private Equity’s Role in Prison Industry”
The letters are here:
- Letter to Platinum Equity re Securus
- Letter to American Securities re Global Tel Link (GTL)
- Letter to H.I.G. Capital re Wellpath, TKC Holdings
- Letter to BlueMountain Capital re Corizon
- Letter to Apax Partners re Attenti
- Letter to Bison Capital re Sentinel Offender Services
- Letter to Endeavour Capital re Aladdin Bail Bonds, Seaview Insurance
Text of the letter to Platinum Equity is here:
February 5, 2019
Tom Gores
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Platinum Equity
360 North Crescent Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90210
Dear Mr. Gores,
We write to request a meeting with Platinum Equity regarding the firm’s investments in companies profiting from the incarceration and detention of people, most notably Securus.
We are deeply concerned about Platinum Equity’s investment in and expansion of Securus, about Securus’ practices, and about financial firms like Platinum Equity profiting from the incarceration and detention of people.
The United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world, both in terms of the number of individuals incarcerated and by percentage of population. In 2016, there were roughly 2.2 million people in the country’s prisons and jails,[ and about 1 in 116 adults in the U.S. were incarcerated; if the number of imprisoned individuals in the U.S. were a city, it would be the fifth-largest in the country.
Mass incarceration is overwhelmingly and discriminatorily aimed at communities of color. More than 60 percent of the U.S. incarcerated population is people of color, and according to the NAACP, “If African Americans and Hispanics were incarcerated at the same rates as whites, prison and jail populations would decline by almost 40%.”[
The scaling up of immigration detention under the Trump administration has led to additional business for firms such as Securus that provide services to those detainees.
Investments by financial firms like Platinum Equity in companies profiting from the incarceration and detention of people only exacerbate these problems, fueling the expansion and concentration of companies that provide often subpar services at high costs[, draining money from low-income and minority communities.
In addition to these ethical concerns, the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) today released a report (enclosed) that highlights the investment risks to public pension funds and other institutional investors posed by privately-owned corrections companies, including Platinum Equity’s Securus.
As such, we believe Platinum Equity should exit its investment in Securus and all investments in incarceration and detention service providers.
Please let us know when yourself or the most appropriate person at Platinum Equity would be available to meet.
Sincerely,
Bianca Tylek, Director, Corrections Accountability Project
Scott Roberts, Senior Campaign Director – Criminal Justice, Color of Change
Randi Weingarten, President, American Federation of Teachers
Saqib Bhatti, Co-Executive Director, Action Center on Race and the Economy
Jim Baker, Director, Private Equity Stakeholder Project
CC: Platinum Equity investors