..........Nearly 1 in 4 ICE detainees are in facilities operated by private prison company CoreCivic.
Kentucky Lantern @kentuckylantern.com
· 1h
Nearly 1 in 4 ICE detainees are in facilities operated by private prison company CoreCivic. tennesseelookout.com/2026/02/23/t...
Nearly 1 in 4 ICE detainees are in facilities operated by private prison company CoreCivic. tennesseelookout.com/2026/02/23/t...
— Kentucky Lantern (@kentuckylantern.com) 2026-02-23T15:34:42.710Z
The Tennessee companies profiting from the Trump administrations immigration agenda
ICE and Border Patrol have awarded Tennessee companies nearly $1.6 billion in contracts to provide parkas to Minneapolis ICE agents, underwear and mylar blankets to detained immigrants, steel for a border wall, tactical gear for agents and detention center operations
By: Anita Wadhwani - February 23, 2026 8:01 am
Nearly one in four ICE detainees are now in facilities operated by CoreCivic, company executives said during the earnings call. Patrick Swindle, CEO, told investors that revenue from ICE has increased more than 100% year over year. ICE is currently in the process of investing more than $38 billion in acquiring properties to use as detention centers, providing more opportunities for CoreCivic growth. The agency did not respond to questions about its contracts with Tennessee companies.
The expansion of ICE and CBP contracting in Tennessee is part of a nationwide trend, as Congress has provided tens of billions of dollars for the administrations crackdown, said David Janovsky, acting director of the Constitution Project at the Project on Government Oversight, or POGO, a government watchdog.
POGOs analysis found ICE contract spending increased 70% between 2024 and 2025. The funding went to 679 companies but nearly 70% of the funding went to the agencys ten largest contractors, including CoreCivic.
The deals also include contracts with scores of smaller-scale Tennessee companies that have agreed to supply ICE and CBP with products and services to keep the mechanisms of the ramped-up mass detention and deportation plans running.
Instead of being used to invest in the public good, things like schools, public infrastructure, public services, health care, these tax dollars are being diverted to inflict cruelty and, apparently, to enhance corporate profit.
Spring Miller, Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition
justaprogressive
(6,775 posts)SSJVegeta
(2,606 posts)Their ticker is cxw
...posted for no reason whatsoever
slightlv
(7,619 posts)has never jibed with what's actually done. If it impacts the public... for example, utilities, etc., or if it impacts an individual directly such as policing, incarceration, etc., I don't think ANY of that should be owned or paid for by private corporations. Now, in this day and age, we've added a new one... private corporate space "exploration"... except the private sector is not out there for exploration, they're out there for more profits - no matter how they could cause harm in 2nd or 3rd degree effects to the world. I'm 70 years old, and I thought I've seen all the corners that private corps cut to save money in all kinds of ways. It was bad enough when they monkey around with our utilities prices to increase shareholder profit, as well as the CEO stratospheric payouts. But when they start impacting humans directly - such as CoreCivic or other for-profit prisons, you end up with bad guards who harm inmates, poor food priced sky high to the government paying the private corp's costs, and people dead with no accountability. And now we're "trusting" them to spend what's necessary and right to send people into space? I don't trust them to cut corners. I don't trust them to put astronauts' lives at top priority, no more than I trust the guards to put inmates lives at priority. I know the space thing will be promoted by some, and if it were a corp we could trust, that would be one thing. But when has there been a corp that exists for the public good and not for profits first? That's what scares me -- in prison or in space, or in what we're paying for utility and medical costs. We're just asking for problems and more death, all the way around, IMO. Which, I assure you, is mine... and probably not a popular opinion.