# HAYS STATE PRISON

> Hays State Prison, a close-security facility in Trion, Georgia, is among the most violent and chronically mismanaged prisons in the GDC system, with GPS independently tracking deaths and confirmed incidents of gang warfare, stabbings during official inspections, and systemic neglect spanning more than a decade. In early April 2026, Hays was a flashpoint in a coordinated, statewide Blood-on-Blood gang war that triggered a system-wide lockdown — with a high-ranking gang leader stabbed in the neck in front of the warden and correctional staff. The state's response has been to announce a $24 million 'hardened' housing unit at the facility, a move GPS and federal investigators describe as fortress-building in lieu of actual reform.

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

---

## Facility Profile and Population

Hays State Prison is a close-security (Level 5) facility located in Trion, Georgia, in the state's northwest corner. As of October 2025, GPS population data recorded 1,099 total inmates at Hays: 5 classified at minimum security, 85 at medium security, and 1,009 at close security — meaning roughly 92% of the population is housed at the most restrictive general-population classification in the state system.

Hays has an official GDC-listed capacity of 1,101, which GPS analysis notes is near its original design capacity of approximately 1,100 — making it one of the few GDC facilities not dramatically overcrowded by design-capacity standards. However, that relative figure obscures the reality: Hays is a Level 5 close-security prison receiving lifer transfers from medium-security facilities across the state, including a documented wave of transfers from Calhoun State Prison in early 2026. Between February and April 2026, GPS tracked at least 87 lifers transferred out of Calhoun — a significant fraction of whom were sent to close-security prisons including Hays. The facility's composition is thus shifting toward longer-term, higher-classification inmates, compounding existing gang dynamics.

The facility's cell phone blocking Managed Access System (MAS) has been activated by GDC, part of a statewide rollout that GPS has documented cuts off incarcerated people from their primary means of communicating conditions to families and outside reporters. GPS has noted that communications blackouts of this kind historically precede or coincide with elevated violence and reduced accountability inside facilities.

## Gang Violence and Documented Incidents

Hays State Prison has been a documented site of gang violence across multiple years, with incidents escalating sharply in 2025 and 2026. On January 25, 2026, Melvin Johnson, 35, was killed at Hays after being beaten so severely he could not survive his injuries — one of the first confirmed homicides at the facility following the statewide lockdown that followed the January 11 Washington State Prison massacre. Separately, during the same post-lockdown period, an incarcerated source reported to GPS that a Blood gang member exited his dorm and stabbed a Muslim man in a neighboring unit who was simply delivering food trays — an act of gang-motivated violence that illustrates the degree to which rival factions operate with impunity even during ostensible security crackdowns.

The most dramatic documented incident at Hays occurred on April 1, 2026, during what GPS described as a coordinated, statewide eruption of Blood-on-Blood gang violence. According to GPS sources with real-time access inside the facility, a high-ranking leader of a ROLACC Blood set was attacked during an official inspection — stabbed multiple times in the neck while the warden and correctional staff were physically present on the sidewalk. A second individual was also stabbed during the same incident. The victim required CPR. GPS sources described the attack as a deliberate strike on a 'big homie,' carried out in the open and in view of prison officials — a signal of how thoroughly gang actors operate without fear of staff intervention. The retaliation was immediate and spread across the state system.

Hays was among the facilities named by GDC in the April 2–3, 2026 statewide lockdown, which followed fights at Smith, Wilcox, Hays, and Valdosta State Prisons that sent five inmates to the hospital with injuries the GDC characterized as 'non-life-threatening.' All incidents were described by GDC as 'gang-related.' The statewide lockdown that followed affected every GDC facility and had no defined end date at the time of reporting. Hays's role as a recurring flashpoint — across both the January and April 2026 violence waves — reflects a pattern GPS has documented over years: the facility is not an outlier in Georgia's crisis, but one of its most consistent pressure points.

Historically, Hays was one of four prisons at the center of the largest prison work strike in U.S. history in December 2010, when thousands of inmates refused to leave their cells across ten Georgia facilities to demand living wages and improved conditions. The strike at Hays was complete — every inmate participated. GDC's response at the time included placing the facility on indefinite lockdown and, according to inmate accounts, shutting off hot water. The conditions that drove that 2010 strike — understaffing, medical neglect, forced unpaid labor, and dehumanizing treatment — remain substantively unaddressed sixteen years later.

## Deaths at Hays: What GPS Tracks

GPS independently tracks deaths occurring across the Georgia prison system through its own reporting network, family accounts, public records, and investigative journalism. The GDC does not publicly release cause-of-death information — it stopped providing manner-of-death data in its monthly mortality reports in March 2024. The figures below reflect GPS's independent tracking across the full GDC system and are provided here as essential context for understanding the environment in which Hays operates; GPS's facility-level mortality data is maintained separately in its offender database.

Across the GDC system as a whole, GPS has recorded 1,778 total deaths in its database since 2020. The annual totals are: 293 in 2020, 257 in 2021, 254 in 2022, 262 in 2023, 333 in 2024, 301 in 2025, and 78 in 2026 through April 26. Confirmed homicide counts across those years are 29, 30, 31, 35, 45, 51, and 27 respectively — but GPS has documented that the true homicide count is significantly higher than confirmed figures, as the majority of deaths remain classified as 'Unknown/Pending' due to GDC opacity and the limits of independent investigation. The sharp rise in 2024 (333 deaths, 45 confirmed homicides) and the continued pace in 2025 (301 deaths, 51 confirmed homicides) occurred in the same period that Hays was receiving lifer transfers and experiencing documented gang violence.

At least two specific deaths at Hays are documented in GPS source material for the period covered: Melvin Johnson, killed January 25, 2026, and Jeremy Price, killed March 2, 2024. Both deaths are consistent with the gang-violence patterns GPS has tracked at the facility. The opacity of GDC reporting means additional deaths at Hays during this period may not yet be independently confirmed or classified.

## The '$24 Million Fortress': Infrastructure Response to a Constitutional Crisis

In January 2025, Governor Brian Kemp announced a $24 million 'hardened' 126-bed modular unit under construction at Hays State Prison — one of four identical modules planned statewide as part of a broader $600 million prison spending surge. GDC described the Hays unit as 'pre-manufactured' and 'hardened,' with a 30-year design lifespan, and framed it as 'swing space' to allow movement of inmates while aging buildings are repaired. Officials explicitly claimed it was 'built without burdening current staff levels.'

GPS's analysis of this project describes the framing as 'dangerously misleading.' The unit is, functionally, permanent high-security housing — not temporary swing space — and its construction does nothing to address the staffing crisis, gang infiltration of facility operations, or medical neglect that the U.S. Department of Justice identified as the root causes of constitutional violations in Georgia's prisons. The DOJ's October 2024 findings report — 94 pages compiled following an investigation begun in 2021 — found that Georgia prisons operate with correctional officers at roughly 50% of full staffing statewide, that gangs 'effectively run facilities,' and that the state exhibits 'deliberate indifference' to unsafe conditions. U.S. Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke called the findings 'among the most severe violations that we have uncovered in an investigation of this kind.'

Adding beds to a facility where gangs stabbed a leader during an official inspection — in front of the warden — is not a solution to the conditions that made that attack possible. As GPS has reported, the fortress model deepens the crisis by expanding a system already ruled by fear, isolation, and neglect, without increasing the officer presence, programming access, or medical infrastructure that could meaningfully reduce violence. Inmates at Hays, like those across the GDC system, are reported to be experiencing severe nutritional deprivation, with family members describing drastic weight loss, gray skin, and physical deterioration consistent with systemic undercaloric feeding documented at facilities statewide.

## Institutional Failures and Accountability Gaps

Hays does not exist in isolation. It is embedded in a statewide system that GPS and federal investigators have both documented as one of the deadliest in the country, operating with chronic understaffing, pervasive gang control, and active suppression of transparency. The GDC's decision in March 2024 to stop publicly releasing cause-of-death information — forcing the Atlanta Journal-Constitution to seek death certificates and coroner records to confirm homicides — directly impedes accountability at facilities like Hays, where GPS relies on incarcerated sources, family accounts, and independent investigation to establish what is happening.

The $307.6 million federal jury verdict rendered on April 2, 2026 against Corizon Health's corporate successor for medical neglect of an incarcerated person — while not specific to Hays — illustrates the scale of liability exposure created by the GDC's systemic failure to provide constitutionally adequate care. Medical neglect, gang violence, and physical infrastructure failure are not separate problems at Georgia's close-security prisons; they are compounding factors in the same institutional collapse.

GPS's database of 302,343 offender records and 88,180 change records tracked between February and April 2026 shows Hays as a receiving facility in the documented lifer-transfer purge from Calhoun State Prison — a transfer pattern that GPS has described as a 'population swap' with no announced justification from GDC. As younger inmates cycle into medium-security facilities and longer-term, higher-classification individuals concentrate at close-security prisons like Hays, the conditions for escalating gang conflict intensify. The April 1, 2026 attack — a Blood-on-Blood strike carried out on the sidewalk during an official inspection — is not an anomaly. It is the predictable outcome of a system that warehouses the most volatile population in its most under-resourced environments and calls the result a security strategy.
