# MONTGOMERY STATE PRISON

> Montgomery State Prison is a medium-security facility in Georgia's Department of Corrections system, housing 415 inmates as of October 2025, with no Close Security inmates on record — making it one of the few medium-security prisons in the state that has not yet exhibited documented classification drift. However, the facility exists within a statewide system that GPS has tracked recording 1,778 prison deaths since 2020, and Montgomery operates under the same institutional failures — understaffing, inadequate oversight, and opaque mortality reporting — that define Georgia's correctional crisis broadly.

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

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## Facility Profile and Population

Montgomery State Prison is classified by the Georgia Department of Corrections (GDC) as a medium-security facility. As of October 27, 2025, the prison held a total population of 415 inmates, broken down as 163 minimum-security and 252 medium-security inmates, with zero inmates classified at the Close Security level. This population figure makes Montgomery one of the smaller facilities in Georgia's correctional system.

The facility's population breakdown stands in contrast to many of its peer medium-security prisons across the state. While facilities like Calhoun State Prison (1,657 total) and Dooly State Prison (1,590 total) have grown into large, complex operations — often housing hundreds of Close Security inmates — Montgomery's 415-person count and zero Close Security population place it in a comparatively contained operational category. Whether this reflects deliberate classification management or simply lower capacity is not documented in current GDC public reporting.

## Classification Drift and the Statewide Context

GPS's November 2025 investigation into Georgia's classification crisis documents a systemic pattern across medium-security prisons: facilities formally designated as medium-security are routinely housing large numbers of Close Security inmates without the staffing, infrastructure, or oversight that such a population requires. GPS has termed this phenomenon 'classification drift,' and it represents one of the most consequential structural failures in the GDC system.

As of the October 27, 2025 data snapshot, Montgomery State Prison did not exhibit this pattern — recording zero Close Security inmates within its 415-person population. This distinguishes it from facilities like Calhoun State Prison, which housed 487 Close Security inmates despite a medium-security designation, or Dooly State Prison, which housed 455 Close Security inmates. However, the absence of documented classification drift at Montgomery does not insulate it from the broader institutional failures that GPS has identified system-wide: inadequate staffing ratios, lack of transparency in incident reporting, and a GDC culture that routinely obscures conditions inside its facilities.

The classification crisis documented by GPS is not merely a logistical concern — it has direct implications for safety, violence, and mortality. When a facility operates at a de facto higher security level without the corresponding resources, incarcerated people and staff alike are placed at greater risk. Montgomery's current profile warrants continued monitoring to determine whether its classification alignment is maintained as GDC population pressures continue.

## Mortality Tracking and Institutional Transparency

GPS independently tracks deaths across Georgia's prison system because the GDC does not publicly release cause-of-death information for incarcerated people. Across the entire GDC system, GPS has recorded 1,778 deaths in its database from 2020 through April 2026. The system-wide death toll has remained persistently high: 293 deaths in 2020, 257 in 2021, 254 in 2022, 262 in 2023, 333 in 2024, 301 in 2025, and 78 deaths recorded in just the first months of 2026 (through April 26), including 27 confirmed homicides.

GPS does not have facility-specific mortality data confirmed for Montgomery State Prison in its current database. However, Montgomery operates within a system where the true homicide count is understood to be significantly higher than confirmed numbers — a direct consequence of the GDC's refusal to release cause-of-death data and GPS's ongoing effort to independently investigate each case. The large volume of 'Unknown/Pending' classifications in GPS's database — 39 in 2026 alone, 230 in 2025, and 288 in 2024 — reflects not an absence of deaths but an absence of accountability. Any improvements in cause-of-death classification over time reflect GPS's expanding investigative capacity, not any increase in GDC transparency.

## Systemic Pressures: Population and Backlog

Montgomery State Prison operates within a GDC system under sustained population pressure. Weekly GDC population reports tracked by GPS show the total state prison population holding near 52,700–52,940 throughout early 2026, with a jail backlog — incarcerated people waiting in county jails for GDC bed space — ranging from approximately 2,212 to 2,440 over the same period. As of April 24, 2026, the total GDC population stood at 52,804 with a backlog of 2,440.

System-wide, GDC demographics as of April 1, 2026 show 53,514 total inmates, with 60.31% identifying as Black, 34.11% as White, and 5.11% as Hispanic. Approximately 56.30% of the population — 30,058 people — are classified as violent offenders, and 1,261 inmates are flagged as having poorly controlled health conditions. Six inmates across the system are documented as terminally ill, and 47 are in active mental health crisis. These figures underscore the medical and security demands placed on every facility in the GDC network, including smaller institutions like Montgomery.

## Accountability Landscape: Litigation and Reform

No facility-specific litigation or settlements have been confirmed at Montgomery State Prison in GPS's current reporting. However, the broader GDC accountability landscape is defined by catastrophic legal failures that illuminate the institutional environment in which all Georgia prisons operate. On April 2, 2026, a federal jury returned a verdict of $307.6 million against the corporate successor to Corizon Health — a private medical contractor — for medical neglect of an incarcerated person who required colostomy care. This verdict is one of the largest in the history of American prison litigation and represents the direct legal consequence of the GDC's longstanding failure to ensure adequate medical care.

GPS continues to monitor conditions at Montgomery State Prison and across the GDC system. The facility's relatively small population and absence of documented classification drift make it less immediately visible than crisis-level facilities like Macon State Prison or Hancock State Prison, but smaller facilities are not immune to the violence, medical neglect, and opacity that characterize Georgia's correctional system. GPS urges incarcerated people, their families, and advocates to report conditions at Montgomery directly to GPS for independent documentation.
