# AUGUSTA STATE MEDICAL PRISON

> Augusta State Medical Prison (ASMP) is Georgia's designated facility for medically complex and seriously ill incarcerated people, yet GPS's independent tracking documents a pattern of systematic medical neglect, staff-on-patient abuse, retaliatory conduct by facility leadership, and recurring violence — including a confirmed homicide over a $15 commissary debt days after a statewide lockdown lifted in January 2026. Despite its medical mission, ASMP has been the site of documented care refusals, unfilled prescriptions, inappropriate housing placements endangering vulnerable patients, and at least two staff arrests or misconduct allegations within a single 24-hour window in February 2026. The facility operates in a system that has demonstrated open defiance of federal courts, DOJ oversight, and legislative accountability — insulating ASMP from any meaningful external correction.

**Published**: 2026-04-26
**Source**: https://gps.press/intelligence/facility/augusta-state-medical-prison/
**Author**: Georgia Prisoners' Speak

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## Facility Overview and Classification

Augusta State Medical Prison (ASMP) is classified by the Georgia Department of Corrections as a **Close Security – Special Mission** facility, reflecting its dual role as both a high-security prison and the system's primary destination for medically complex incarcerated people. As of October 2025, GPS's analysis of GDC population data shows ASMP housed **1,176 people**: 48 at minimum security, 597 at medium security, and 531 at close security.

The "Special Mission" designation is significant. ASMP is where the GDC sends people who cannot be safely or adequately managed in standard facilities — those with terminal illness, severe physical disability, serious mental illness, or post-surgical needs. This makes the documented failures in medical care, staffing, and patient safety at ASMP more serious, not less: the people most harmed by neglect are precisely those for whom adequate care was the entire justification for their placement there.

ASMP is located in Augusta, Georgia, and has appeared repeatedly in GPS reporting, federal litigation, civil settlements, and independent investigations — not as an outlier, but as a facility whose failures are systemic and recurring.

## Systematic Medical Neglect

GPS has documented a layered pattern of medical failure at ASMP that spans multiple years and affects the facility's most vulnerable population. Reported conditions include **prescriptions written but never dispensed**, psychiatric medications left unfilled for extended periods, and the denial of pain management following surgical procedures. Physical plant modifications at the facility have been documented as actively contradicting medical accommodations — meaning the facility's own infrastructure has been altered in ways that undermine the care it is supposed to provide.

Broader GPS investigation into GDC medical practices — patterns confirmed as present at ASMP specifically — includes delayed diagnostic imaging, ignored laboratory results, gatekept specialist access, and failure to follow up on serious diagnoses including cancer. Patient concerns are routinely dismissed as malingering even when accompanied by documented medical decline. In at least one confirmed case, a severely disabled patient at ASMP faced **punitive isolation following medical complaints**, a direct inversion of the facility's stated medical mission.

In a case reported in April 2026, an incarcerated person at a state correctional facility — including custody at ASMP — experienced sustained care refusal and retaliation before ultimately being released on medical reprieve to nursing home care. Notably, the state had enrolled this individual in **Medicaid and Social Security benefits** prior to transfer, a step that implicitly acknowledges the inadequacy of care they received while incarcerated. This administrative action, taken quietly by GDC, functions as an institutional admission that ASMP failed to provide the care it was obligated to deliver.

A federal jury verdict dated April 2, 2026, awarded **$307.6 million** against a Corizon Health corporate successor for medical neglect of a colostomy patient. While that case arose from Corizon's broader contracting history, it reflects the same contractual and institutional culture of care denial that GPS sources have documented at ASMP specifically. Corizon was the GDC's medical contractor during the period in question, and its failures were not isolated to any single facility.

## Staff Misconduct, Abuse, and Retaliation Against Patients

In February 2026, GPS documented a stark concentration of staff misconduct at ASMP within an extraordinarily short window. On February 14, 2026, a **certified nursing assistant at ASMP was arrested and charged with battery and exploitation of a disabled inmate**. This arrest occurred within one day of a separate allegation of neglect and verbal abuse by a different nursing assistant against another disabled inmate in the same medical wing — two independent incidents of staff-on-patient abuse in a 24-hour period, in the same unit, targeting different vulnerable patients.

The conduct of facility leadership has been equally troubling. GPS's February 20, 2026 reporting details allegations that **the warden of ASMP made direct retaliation threats against a family member** of a severely disabled incarcerated patient, stating explicitly that any complaint filed would result in disciplinary reports against the patient. During a speakerphone call with health administration staff, the warden also accused the patient of lying and called him racist. This threat was made in the direct context of the patient's prior reports of care refusal and verbal abuse by staff — meaning the warden's alleged conduct was a documented, retaliatory response to a patient attempting to use the complaint process the system nominally provides.

These incidents do not exist in isolation. GPS's reporting on ASMP's broader conditions — confirmed through multiple independent sources — describes inappropriate housing assignments placing medically vulnerable inmates at risk, inadequate supervision during transport and facility movements, and extended lockdowns with restricted access to basic services. The pattern is consistent: the people most dependent on institutional protection are the most systematically exposed to institutional harm.

## Violence, Homicide, and Security Failures

Despite its medical designation, ASMP has experienced documented lethal violence. In January 2026, following the lifting of a statewide lockdown triggered by the Washington State Prison massacre, GPS sources reported that **a young Crip stabbed and killed Jerry Merritt**, an older Gangster Disciple, over a commissary debt reportedly worth approximately $15 — six soups, one tuna, one hot chocolate, and three bags of chips. Merritt was dead before he reached the medical unit that ASMP ostensibly exists to operate. GPS sources reported the perpetrator was described as nearly in tears afterward, saying: *"I just went out so bad. I can't believe I did that shit."*

On April 1, 2026, ASMP was placed on lockdown as part of a coordinated statewide response to gang violence that affected more than a dozen facilities simultaneously. The system-wide violence, described by GPS sources as a war between rival Blood sets — specifically ROLACC and G-Shine factions — demonstrated that ASMP, despite its special mission classification, operates within and is subject to the same gang dynamics, retaliatory violence, and security vacuum that has driven record homicide numbers across the GDC system.

GPS's independent tracking — compiled through investigative reporting, family accounts, public records, and incarcerated sources, **not through GDC disclosure** — records 1,778 total deaths in its database across the GDC system since 2020. The GDC stopped providing cause-of-death information in March 2024. The true homicide count across the system is understood to be significantly higher than GPS-confirmed figures, as many deaths remain classified as unknown or pending independent investigation. ASMP's position as a recipient facility for medically vulnerable people makes it a site of particular concern within this broader mortality crisis.

## Litigation, Settlements, and Institutional Defiance

ASMP has been directly named in significant federal litigation. In **Benning v. Oliver**, Ralph Harrison Benning — a 62-year-old Navy veteran serving a life sentence at ASMP since 1986 — challenged GDC restrictions that limited his email contacts to 12 individuals drawn from a background-checked visitation log. In 2024, Benning secured a favorable ruling from the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. The GDC's response was to ignore it. Benning filed a motion in November 2024 reporting that prison officials were *"willfully and intentionally"* refusing to comply. This forced a February 10, 2026 contempt hearing before U.S. District Judge Tilman E. "Tripp" Self III, who summoned GDC Commissioner Tyrone Oliver to the stand and stated that the department had shown him "how little credibility the Department of Corrections has." Self noted that if this were a family court matter, Oliver "would be in jail."

A separate ASMP-linked settlement concerns the death of Thomas Henry Giles, who died of smoke inhalation at ASMP; that case was settled for **$5 million**. Additionally, GPS has documented allegations that ASMP's warden selected five long-term incarcerated individuals for parole board consideration — and that as of approximately one year after their interviews, none had been released, raising documented questions about whether the process constituted genuine parole review or a public relations exercise with no accountability mechanism.

The GDC's broader litigation record provides essential context: since 2018, the state has paid out nearly $20 million in settlements covering death and injury in GDC facilities. The cases span medical neglect, failure to protect from violence, and failure to monitor suicide risk. A federal jury verdict of **$307.6 million** against Corizon Health's corporate successor — announced April 2, 2026 — represents the largest known verdict arising from GDC-contracted medical care. Commissioner Oliver's acknowledgment in open court that there was "no excuse" for the department's failure to follow a court order did not, as of the date of this report, result in any documented change in practice at ASMP or system-wide.

## Systemic Context: Overcrowding, Staffing, and Institutional Collapse

ASMP does not operate in a vacuum. As of April 24, 2026, the GDC holds **52,804 people** in custody, with an additional **2,440** awaiting transfer from county jails — a backlog that has fluctuated between 2,212 and 2,440 over the preceding twelve weeks with no meaningful reduction. Across the system, GPS analysis shows facilities routinely operating at multiples of their original design capacity, enabled by GDC's practice of inflating official "capacity" figures through bunk additions rather than infrastructure or staffing expansion.

GPS's March 2026 intelligence summary documents ASMP-specific conditions consistent with the system-wide collapse: gang leaders functioning as de facto authority due to **severe staffing shortages**, mass stabbing events, and knife assaults occurring within the facility. These conditions — documented at a facility whose entire mission is the care of medically vulnerable people — reflect what GPS has described as classification drift, where the security and care infrastructure of a facility fails to match the population it is warehousing.

Former incarcerated people with ASMP experience have described a system in which, when officers are absent, gangs fill the vacuum. Earl White, who served time at ASMP among other GDC facilities, described the psychological toll of conditions in which "hope is gone" — a state that GPS's reporting consistently shows correlates with escalating violence, self-harm, and preventable death. At ASMP, that dynamic is compounded by the presence of a population too ill, too disabled, or too medically compromised to protect themselves.
