Georgia is constructing OWL, a first-in-nation centralized surveillance command center monitoring all 36 state prisons, despite no evidence that $150+ million in technology investments will reduce violence that killed 100+ people in 2024.
Georgia Department of Corrections is building OWL (Overwatch & Logistic Unit Command Center), an unprecedented real-time surveillance system integrating cameras, cell phone interdiction, radar, and health records across all state prisons—the first of its kind in American corrections. The $150+ million investment, approved through legislative budget insertions absent from the Governor's original recommendation, represents a massive commitment to surveillance technology while allocating just $805,000 to vocational education and operating facilities at 52.5% staffing capacity.
Facility Breakdown
| Facility | O.W.L. Radar Grant | Grant Year | First OWL Site |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baldwin State Prison | $420,216 | 2020 | Yes |
| Washington State Prison | 5 | 69 | Jan 11, 2026 |
| Valdosta State Prison | 80% | Highest % | Highest % |
What GPS Documented (Original Findings)
- Georgia is building OWL, the nation's first centralized prison surveillance command center, at a cost exceeding $150 million (GPS analysis of Governor's Budget Reports and Board of Corrections meeting minutes)
- OWL integrates 10 technology streams including Axon Fusus platform, managed access systems from 3 vendors, O.W.L. radar, and a secret $1.95M 'Data Intelligence' system (GPS analysis of Board meeting presentations and budget documents)
- Key OWL funding was inserted by Georgia House legislators and was absent from Governor Kemp's original budget recommendation (GPS comparison of Governor's original budget vs. House-passed budget)
- No operational equivalent to OWL exists in any other state corrections system or Federal Bureau of Prisons (GPS OWL Unit Research Brief 2026 – exhaustive 50-state review)
- Prison homicides exploded from 8-9 annually in 2017-2018 to 66 confirmed in 2024, with over 100 total homicide deaths (GPS analysis of GDC mortality data and DOJ findings)
- GDC reported 301 deaths in 2025 but refuses to identify 6 individuals, listing them only as 'John Doe #1-6' (GPS mortality database analysis comparing GDC statistics to official name lists)
Data source: GPS analysis of GDC Monthly Reports, Board of Corrections meeting minutes, Governor's Budget Reports, and federal grant databases
What DOJ Already Confirmed
- Georgia violates the Eighth Amendment through deliberate indifference to prisoner safety (Pages Throughout report – core finding)
- 142 homicides occurred in Georgia prisons from 2018-2023, with 94 in the latter three years (95.8% increase) (Pages Violence statistics section)
- Less than 10% of fights and less than 23% of assaults were forwarded for investigation (Pages Incident investigation failures section)
- GDC recovered 27,425 weapons and 12,483 cellphones between November 2021 and August 2023 (Pages Contraband section)
- At one medium-security prison, 67% of inmates were in wrong cells, showing classification system failure (Pages Classification failures section)
- Correctional officer vacancy rates averaged 49.3% in 2021, 56.3% in 2022, and 52.5% in 2023 (Pages Staffing crisis section)
What GDC Concealed
- The vendor, capabilities, and purpose of the $1.95 million 'Data Intelligence Advanced Integration' system
- The vendor and specifications for the GDC-OWL statewide prison WiFi network serving as communications backbone
- Privacy impact assessments, data retention policies, and access controls for OWL surveillance data
- The nature of the 'CGL partnership' mentioned by Commissioner Oliver at September 2025 Board meeting
- Federal Judge Marc Treadwell's April 2024 contempt order finding GDC 'repeatedly falsified documents'
Quotables
“Prisons are for punishment and rehabilitation — not TikTok.”
— Senate Appropriations Chairman Blake Tillery
“The Court has long passed the point where it can assume that even sworn statements from the defendants are truthful.”
— Federal Judge Marc Treadwell on GDC's credibility
“a gateway drug into other surveillance technologies”
— ACLU of Michigan on Fusus platform
“The owl may see everything. But it cannot fix what Georgia refuses to change.”
— Georgia Prisoners' Speak analysis
“continuously monitor security cameras across the state, enabling a rapid response to disturbances”
— Rep. Dale Washburn describing OWL's function
Story Angles
- Local: Interview families of the 100+ people killed in 2024 about whether $150M in surveillance could have saved their loved ones; profile specific facilities like Washington State Prison operating with 5 officers for 69 posts
- Policy: Compare Georgia's $150M surveillance investment to $805K vocational education budget; examine how House legislators inserted funding absent from Governor's recommendation without public hearings
- Accountability: Investigate Commissioner Oliver ignoring federal court orders while building unprecedented surveillance; probe secret $1.95M 'Data Intelligence' system and undisclosed WiFi vendor contracts
- Data: Request and analyze: OWL vendor contracts, privacy assessments, staffing plans; compare homicide rates at facilities with/without advanced surveillance; map legislative budget insertions vs. Governor recommendations
Records Journalists Should Request
Georgia Open Records Act:
- Board of Corrections Meeting Minutes – September 4, 2025 — Georgia Department of Corrections
- Board of Corrections Meeting Minutes and Presentation Slides – April 3, 2025 — Georgia Department of Corrections
- Data Intelligence Advanced Integration System – All contracts, RFPs, vendor agreements — Georgia Department of Corrections
- OWL Command Center contracts with Axon/Fusus — Georgia Department of Corrections
- GDC-OWL Statewide Prison WiFi Network specifications and vendor contracts — Georgia Department of Corrections
- Operation Skyhawk Final Report or Summary — Georgia Department of Corrections
- GDC 2025 Mortality Report and Official Mortality Name List — Georgia Department of Corrections
Federal FOIA:
- BJA Grant 2020-BX-0002 full application and progress reports — Bureau of Justice Assistance
- All communications between DOJ Civil Rights Division and GDC regarding surveillance technology — DOJ Civil Rights Division
Sources Available for Interview
Families:
- Families of individuals killed in 2024-2025 homicides
Incarcerated Witnesses:
- Incarcerated witnesses to January 2026 Washington State Prison riot
- Current GDC correctional officers, anonymous, background only
Experts:
- Electronic Frontier Foundation — Digital rights organization
- ACLU of Michigan — Civil liberties organization
Officials Who Should Be Asked for Comment
- Tyrone Oliver, Commissioner — Oversees OWL implementation; confirmed construction at Board meeting; rebuked by federal judge for ignoring court orders
- Blake Tillery, Senate Appropriations Chairman — Champions corrections technology spending; made 'not TikTok' statement
- Dale Washburn, State Representative — Provided clearest public description of OWL's function in legislative recap
- Brian Kemp, Governor — Approved $600M corrections package; original budget did not include key OWL items added by House
Questions GDC Has Not Answered
- What vendor provides the $1.95M 'Data Intelligence Advanced Integration' system and what does it do?
- Who is the vendor for the GDC-OWL statewide prison WiFi network?
- Has a privacy impact assessment been conducted for OWL?
- How many operators will staff OWL and what training will they receive?
- What is the nature of the CGL partnership mentioned by Commissioner Oliver?
- How long does OWL retain surveillance data and who can access it?
Source Documents
- DOJ Findings Report – Investigation of Georgia Prisons — 93-page report documenting constitutional violations, 142 homicides, and 82 recommendations
- GPS OWL Unit Research Brief 2026 — GPS's exhaustive 50-state review finding no operational equivalent to OWL
- Representative Dale Washburn's Week 8 Legislative Session Recap 2025 — Contains clearest public description of OWL's function and funding
- O.W.L. GroundAware Radar Specifications — Technical specifications for S-band radar system deployed at Baldwin State Prison
- Observation Without Limits LLC Corporate Information — Joint venture details between Dynetics/Leidos and Alabama Power/Southern Company
- ShawnTech Cellular Denial of Service Program — Details of C-DOS program permanently disabling contraband phones
- EFF Report: Neighborhood Watch Out – Cops Are Using Fusus — Major investigative report on Fusus platform privacy concerns
- Axon Fusus Corrections Case Study — References 'large Southern State' with 40 facilities – likely Georgia
- FCC Contraband Wireless Devices Database — Lists all CIS licenses for managed access systems in Georgia prisons
- Hawks Ear Communications LLC Corporate Profile — Corporate registration details for opaque managed access vendor
Source Article
The OWL Sees All: Georgia's $150M Prison SurveillancePress Contact
Georgia Prisoners' Speak
media@gps.press