# GEORGIA DIAGNOSTIC AND CLASSIFICATION STATE PRISON

> Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison (GDCP) in Jackson is the state's central intake facility, death row, and execution site — and one of its deadliest. GPS independently tracks 1,778 deaths across the GDC system since 2020, with GDCP at the center of a documented pattern of medical neglect, staff misconduct, falsified records, dangerous overcrowding, and the systematic suppression of evidence of violence and preventable death.

**Published**: 2026-04-26
**Source**: https://gps.press/intelligence/facility/georgia-diagnostic-and-classification-prison/
**Author**: Georgia Prisoners' Speak

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## Facility Overview and Overcrowding

Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison (GDCP), located in Jackson, Butts County, serves multiple functions within the Georgia Department of Corrections (GDC): it is the system's central intake and classification facility, houses death row, and is the site of all state executions. As of October 2025, GDCP held 2,396 inmates across minimum (683), medium (1,260), and close security (449) classifications, along with a separately counted Special Management Unit (SMU) of 149 people — Georgia's supermax unit.

GDCP operates under a formal designation of 'Close Security — Special Mission,' reflecting its unique role processing every man who enters the GDC system. That classification, however, masks a severe overcrowding crisis. GPS analysis places GDCP's original design capacity at approximately 800 people. The GDC lists its official capacity at 2,487. As of early 2026, the facility held approximately 4,540 men — representing roughly 568% of original design capacity. This is not expanded capacity in any meaningful sense: the medical clinic, kitchen, laundry, and staffing model were never rebuilt to match the inflated headcount.

The Special Management Unit housed Arthur Lee Cofield Jr., who orchestrated an $11 million theft from Charles Schwab billionaire Sidney Kimmel's brokerage account using a contraband cellphone seized from the SMU in 2020. Cofield was sentenced in January 2024 to 135 months in federal prison and ordered to pay more than $12.5 million in restitution. The case illustrates how contraband access persists even in the state's highest-security unit — and how GDCP's dysfunction extends beyond its general population.

## Deaths and Mortality: What GPS Tracks

GPS independently tracks deaths across the GDC system through investigative reporting, family accounts, news reports, and public records. The GDC does not publicly release cause-of-death information. The following figures reflect GPS's database for the system as a whole: 293 deaths in 2020, 257 in 2021, 254 in 2022, 262 in 2023, 333 in 2024, 301 in 2025, and 78 in the first months of 2026 (through April 26), for a total of 1,778 recorded deaths. Confirmed homicides across those years number 29 (2020), 30 (2021), 31 (2022), 35 (2023), 45 (2024), 51 (2025), and 27 in 2026 to date. The true homicide count is significantly higher than GPS-confirmed figures; many deaths remain classified as unknown or pending due to GDC opacity, not absence of violence.

GDCP-specific deaths documented by GPS sources include the death of Mark Smith in early June 2025 — a man with advanced Parkinson's disease and mental health complications who used a wheelchair and required multiple daily medications. Other prisoners and at least one nurse had repeatedly flagged Smith's need for transfer to Augusta State Medical Prison. Those requests were ignored. When Smith died, phones in the housing area were turned off, delaying notification until breakfast was delivered hours later. When medical staff arrived, they attached defibrillator pads and a mechanical CPR device to a man already in rigor mortis — witnesses believe to create the appearance that he died under active monitoring.

In January 2026, an incarcerated person at GDCP was found dead in a stripped cell during a weekend period. Multiple staff reports indicate the death resulted from cold or exposure; the individual had been placed in the stripped cell, possibly for suicide watch. A separate death at GDCP was recorded on or around January 12, 2026, when a person was found in a housing unit sometime after 9:30 AM under unknown circumstances. In the same period, a sergeant was reported to have counted a deceased person as present during night count — mirroring the conduct of a former deputy warden who had been terminated for the same behavior weeks earlier. In January 2026, four people died at GDCP within a single week, including deaths during a riot. No incident reports, death notification reports, or investigation records were completed for these deaths. GPS reporting confirmed that state law requires a public inquest when inmates die unexpectedly or from violence — the state coroner did not conduct one.

## Medical Neglect: Documented Cases and Federal Litigation

Medical neglect at GDCP has generated federal civil rights litigation and expert findings of systematic failure. The most fully documented case involves Ronald Allen, a 55-year-old man assigned to GDCP's kitchen. Between April 1 and April 9, 2024, during a minor riot, Allen was ordered to separate hundreds of frozen beef patties by hand using only two pairs of thin, transparent, disposable food-service gloves — the kind designed for sandwich preparation, not sustained contact with commercial-grade frozen food. Allen protested; a supervising staff member told him to continue. For nearly two hours, Allen worked in direct contact with frozen product. When his fingers turned red and the pain became unbearable, a guard sent him to the medical unit. No diagnostic tests were run. No physician was contacted. No records were created of the visit.

Over the following eight weeks, Allen's complaints escalated and were repeatedly minimized. Medical staff delayed evaluations and provided inadequate treatment. The deterioration was progressive: Allen developed infections, suffered amputations, and ultimately lost his left hand and sustained permanent damage to his right hand — his dominant hand. On March 5, 2026, Allen filed a 54-page federal civil rights lawsuit in the Middle District of Georgia (*Allen v. Georgia Dept. of Corrections*, 5:2026cv00085), naming twelve defendants including the GDC Commissioner and the physician who managed Allen's care without physically examining him. A sworn affidavit from a board-certified emergency physician concluded that Allen's amputations were preventable and that GDCP's medical providers deviated from the standard of correctional healthcare through minimized symptom assessment and inadequate treatment protocols.

Other documented medical neglect at GDCP includes a February 2026 incident in which an elderly incarcerated person lost consciousness after striking his head. Medical staff evaluated him twice and returned him to general population both times without imaging or neurological consultation. GPS sources also documented that the facility's medical records contain demonstrably false health flags on prisoners' records — entries that may impede appropriate care and housing assignments. A separate case from March 2026 involves a person with MH-3 mental health classification held in administrative segregation since mid-March with interrupted mental health treatment and restricted family telephone access; an advocacy organization filed a formal grievance with the GDC on his behalf.

## Staff Misconduct, Fabricated Records, and Institutional Cover-Up

GPS reporting documents a pattern at GDCP in which staff misconduct is actively concealed rather than addressed — including the fabrication of official records before regulatory oversight. In March 2026, GDCP conducted an annual audit. In preparation, staff implemented temporary compliance measures: proper security protocols, enhanced searches, and equipment installation that were not standard practice. Once the audit concluded, those measures were discontinued. Strip search logs and shakedown records were fabricated with false entries created days before the audit to simulate compliance that did not exist.

The pattern of falsification extends to life-and-death situations. Following deaths in January 2026 — four within a single week — duty rosters showed only five officers working, with reports indicating those officers worked 48 continuous hours without breaks. No incident reports, death notification reports, or investigation records were completed despite the deaths. The same pattern of documentation failure was documented in connection with a 2024 incident. GPS reporting also identifies a pattern involving the same correctional officers appearing in multiple death cases at GDCP within one month of each other, both involving staff assigned to mental health and housing units — a flag for systemic failure rather than isolated negligence.

Additional documented misconduct includes: a correctional officer who allegedly ordered unit staff to physically assault an incarcerated person following an altercation, with CERT and other personnel described as inflicting severe beatings (January 2026); an officer fired for beating a prisoner with a broom; officers described as spraying chemical agents on prisoners locked in cells as punishment, described by sources as occurring 'for fun'; and a former counselor arrested on failure to appear, then charged with crossing guard line, conspiracy, and violation of oath of office (April 2025). Incarcerated people at GDCP also report nighttime welfare checks involving loud door banging and verbal commands occurring one to three times nightly, causing documented sleep deprivation — described by sources as non-standard protocol used as a control mechanism rather than genuine welfare monitoring.

## Conditions: Lockdowns, Isolation, and Deprivation

Conditions inside GDCP in late 2025 and early 2026 reflect a facility in compounding crisis. In March 2026, GDCP implemented extended cell lockdowns of approximately 12 hours daily (4 AM to 4 PM) using padlocks on cells — a practice that raises fire safety and emergency egress concerns. GPS sources reported this practice was expanding to multiple housing units. Earlier reporting described plans for lockdowns of 16 or more hours daily using non-functional cell doors secured with padlocks and welded metal, with minimal supervisory coverage.

In late March 2026, facility leadership confiscated jackets, sweatshirts, blankets, and sheets from incarcerated people, leaving each person with only one blanket and one sheet. The stated justification was the arrival of summer — despite nighttime temperatures in the 40s Fahrenheit at the time. GPS sources characterized the confiscation as a control mechanism rather than a logistical measure. The same period saw an incarcerated person in a mental health unit experience an 18-day communication blackout with family, including interrupted phone calls and denial of calling privileges while in observation status — a pattern that advocacy groups have flagged as a form of isolation compounding mental health deterioration.

For those in segregation, conditions carry documented psychological risk. An April 2026 incident at GDCP prompted advocacy documentation regarding psychological deterioration associated with isolation. GPS sources note that prior concerns about the conditions leading to that incident had been raised and not acted upon. A separate April 2025 report documented a long-term incarcerated person — sentenced as a juvenile — who has been denied parole 13 consecutive times since 2009, with annual denials since 2017, despite completing programming and educational goals that the sentencing judge reportedly specified as conditions for parole consideration. The parole board has provided no documented reasons for its consistent denials.

## Death Row and Executions

GDCP is Georgia's sole execution facility. On December 17, 2025, Stacey Humphreys, 52, was executed by lethal injection at GDCP — the 77th man and 78th person executed in Georgia since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976, and the 55th by lethal injection. Humphreys had been convicted in 2007 of the 2003 murders of Cyndi Williams, 33, and Lori Brown, 21, at a real estate office in an Atlanta suburb. A federal judge declined to halt the execution after hearing arguments in Atlanta, ruling that Humphreys failed to demonstrate a due process or equal protection violation. As of December 2025, 32 men and one woman remained under death sentence in Georgia.

GPS sources inside GDCP have reported that staff are informed of execution schedules in advance and that there is discussion among staff of potential consolidation of death row housing units based on execution numbers. Sources also describe chemical agent use on death row and in other units as disciplinary and at times punitive — conditions that advocacy groups have raised as implicating Eighth Amendment protections, particularly given the October 2024 Department of Justice finding that Georgia's prison conditions violate the constitutional prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment.
