# CALHOUN STATE PRISON

> Calhoun State Prison, a medium-security facility in Morgan, Georgia, has become a focal point of institutional dysfunction within the Georgia Department of Corrections, marked by a documented systematic purge of long-sentence inmates under Warden Kendric Jackson, chronic classification drift housing nearly 30% of its population at close-security levels, and a long-running pattern of contraband corruption in which drug smuggling prosecutions collapsed due to evidence failures by GDC investigators. GPS tracking documents 1,778 total deaths across the GDC system since 2020, with Calhoun implicated in specific incidents including a contested inmate death following a balcony fall whose circumstances remain unanswered. The facility has also served as a base for federal wire fraud and drug trafficking operations run by inmates using contraband cell phones, and was locked down as a precautionary measure during the statewide April 1, 2026 gang violence outbreak.

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

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## The Lifer Purge: Warden Jackson's Systematic Population Conversion

Between February and April 2026, Warden Kendric Jackson transferred 87 prisoners serving life sentences out of Calhoun State Prison — 79.3% of them sent to close-security (Level 5) facilities, the most restrictive general-population prisons in Georgia's system. The transfers targeted men with clean disciplinary records and medium-security classifications, including 82-year-old John Morgan Coleman, who was relocated to Hancock State Prison, a Level 5 facility in Sparta. During the final week of March 2026 alone, at least 36 lifers were shipped out in rapid succession to Hancock, Hays, Ware, Valdosta, Telfair, and Macon State Prisons — with GPS analysis suggesting transfers occurred on nearly every available Tuesday and Thursday shipping night.

Calhoun accounted for 67% of all medium-to-close-security lifer transfers across the entire GDC system during this period, according to GPS analysis of 302,343 offender records and 88,180 change records tracked February through April 2026. The next-highest facility, Dooly State Prison, transferred 32 lifers — a fraction of Calhoun's pace, and with far fewer going to close security. The surge was preceded by a sixfold increase in March 2026, when 62 lifers were transferred compared to 10 in February — with lifers rising from 16.7% to 43.1% of all outgoing transfers. Multiple sources indicate Warden Jackson explicitly stated an intent to remove all lifers from the facility.

Simultaneously, Calhoun has been receiving incoming transfers that invert the outgoing population: GPS data shows a 2:1 ratio favoring short-timers among new arrivals, with 84% of incoming inmates having release dates within three years. Many arrivals are coming from the same close-security facilities receiving Calhoun's lifers. No GDC official has publicly announced, explained, or justified this population conversion. Family members of transferred inmates report that medium-security classified individuals are now housed in maximum-security conditions without cause or formal reclassification, raising due process concerns. The pattern — which disproportionately affects Black prisoners with murder convictions — has no documented parallel elsewhere in Georgia's prison system.

## Classification Drift and the Violence It Produces

As of October 2025, Calhoun State Prison officially housed 1,657 inmates while carrying a designation of medium-security — yet 487 of those individuals, or 29.4% of the facility population, were classified as close-security inmates. By the GDC's own classification standards, close-security inmates are considered escape risks with assault histories who require supervision at all times. GPS analysis of security-level data found that Calhoun was one of only four medium-security facilities in Georgia with this level of classification drift; the others were Wilcox (29.7%), Dooly (28.6%), and Washington (27.7%). By comparison, the majority of medium-security prisons in Georgia maintain close-security populations between 0% and 3%.

This mismatch is not bureaucratic abstraction — it is a documented driver of lethal violence. GPS reporting identified a pattern of 8–10 homicides across these four medium-security facilities in 2025, a concentration linked directly to the placement of close-security inmates in facilities without the staffing, infrastructure, or oversight those classification levels demand. The current purge of long-sentence inmates and their replacement with short-term arrivals from close-security facilities is likely to intensify this dynamic, introducing individuals reclassified out of disciplinary situations into a facility structurally unprepared to manage them.

On April 1, 2026, coordinated gang violence erupted across Georgia's prison system, triggering a statewide lockdown in which life-flight helicopters were dispatched to multiple facilities and stabbings were confirmed at five. Calhoun was placed on lockdown as a precautionary measure. The violence was described by incarcerated sources as a war between rival Blood sets — ROLACC and G-Shine factions — and was system-wide in scope, reflecting the interconnected gang dynamics that Calhoun's ongoing population transfers are actively reshaping.

## Deaths and Accountability Failures

Willie Andrew Willis Jr. died following injuries sustained at Calhoun State Prison when, according to his family, he was thrown from a balcony and left unable to move. His family reports it took nearly an hour before he was airlifted for treatment. Medical records list sepsis as the cause of death, but the family disputes the official narrative, noting that Willis told them directly he had been thrown. The family says they received conflicting accounts from prison staff — one version claiming Willis came to get a Tylenol and later collapsed — accounts they describe as incompatible with a man who was paralyzed from the waist down and placed on a ventilator. As of February 2026, more than a year after Willis's death, his family had received no satisfactory answers about what happened or why response time was so slow.

A separate death occurred at Calhoun in January 2026, when an incarcerated person died following a physical altercation with another inmate during a lockdown. The deceased sustained cuts and blunt force trauma. A family member reported the body remained in the cell for an unknown duration before being discovered — a detail reflecting broader patterns of inadequate monitoring and delayed response documented across Georgia's system.

GPS independently tracks mortality across GDC facilities. These numbers are not reported by GDC, which does not publicly release cause-of-death information. GPS classifies deaths through independent investigation, news reports, family accounts, and public records. System-wide, GPS has documented 1,778 total deaths since 2020, with cause-of-death classification improving over time as GPS's investigative capacity has expanded — not because GDC has become more transparent. A federal DOJ investigation confirmed that GDC's homicide-reporting practices systematically shield the state from accountability: internal GDC incident reports documented at least 18 homicides during the first five months of 2024, while only 6 were reported publicly. Two homicides from 2021 were still listed as 'unknown' in official data as of the investigation's release.

## Contraband Infrastructure: Staff Corruption and the Collapse of Prosecutions

Between 2018 and 2021, law enforcement made 33 arrests across 23 cases involving attempted drug smuggling into Calhoun State Prison. Every one of those cases was ultimately dismissed. The reason, uncovered by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2025, was not innocence: it was that the GDC — and in some cases the Calhoun County Sheriff's Department — failed to submit the confiscated substances to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation's crime lab for testing, a foundational step in any drug prosecution. District Attorney Joe Mulholland dismissed all 23 cases after determining the drugs had never been tested. Of the 23 cases, 11 were investigated by the GDC and 12 by the sheriff's department.

Among the dismissed cases was the 'Hot Pockets' incident, in which a correctional officer arrived at Calhoun with packages containing what arrest warrants alleged was 112 grams of methamphetamine and tobacco — four times the quantity required to trigger a trafficking charge under Georgia law. A GDC investigator failed to submit the evidence. Five prison employees were among those arrested in the broader sweep. The cases had generated significant media coverage and were publicly cited by GDC as evidence of its 'zero tolerance' enforcement posture. The outcome revealed the opposite: a failure of basic evidence handling that immunized smugglers from prosecution regardless of the quantity of contraband involved.

The contraband problem at Calhoun has extended well beyond staff corruption. In January 2026, a federal trial concluded with the conviction of two Calhoun inmates — Joey Amour Jackson and Lance Riddle — for operating a nationwide wire fraud scheme that defrauded 119 identified victims across six states of $464,920. Operating entirely through contraband cell phones obtained via drones, staff corruption, and a prison black market, the two men spoofed law enforcement phone numbers, threatened victims with arrest warrants, and coerced women into performing recorded 'cavity searches' in retail store bathrooms before using those recordings to extort them. The GDC installed its Managed Access System at Calhoun around mid-2025 — after this operation had already run its course.

## Administrative History and Leadership

Calhoun State Prison is currently administered by Warden Kendric Jackson, whose tenure has been defined by the documented lifer transfer campaign described above. The facility falls within the Northwest Region of GDC's administrative structure. Prior to Jackson's tenure, Calhoun was led by Tarmarshe Smith, who served as warden from September 2018 until his reassignment to Macon State Prison in October 2020. Smith was later promoted to Assistant Director for the Southeast Region in July 2023 and elevated to Southeast Regional Director effective October 1, 2025, following the retirement of Annettia Toby. Smith's trajectory — from Calhoun warden to regional director — illustrates the administrative continuity within GDC leadership across facilities with documented dysfunction.

The documented pattern of evidence failures in contraband prosecutions at Calhoun — spanning at least three years and multiple investigators across two law enforcement agencies — suggests systemic indifference to accountability rather than isolated oversight. The GDC's public posture of 'zero tolerance' for drug smuggling stands in direct contradiction to an investigative record in which 33 arrests produced zero convictions due to the agency's own failure to process evidence. This gap between stated policy and operational practice is consistent with broader patterns GPS has documented across the GDC system.
