Georgia Prisons’ ACA Compliance vs. Inhumane Reality
Georgia prisons claim to meet ACA standards for humane treatment, yet investigations reveal a shocking reality: overcrowded cells, dangerously inadequate meals, and filthy conditions that defy basic human rights. Behind the official accreditation lies a disturbing pattern of neglect and abuse, exposing a system that’s ACA-compliant in name only.
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Georgia inmates get 1,200 calories/day on weekends - half what adults need. Three men crammed in cells designed for one. 330 died in 2024. This is ACA 'compliance.' https://gps.press/georgia-prisons-aca-compliance-vs-inhumane-reality/
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Georgia claims ACA compliance while starving prisoners with 1,200-calorie weekend diets and cramming three men into cells designed for one person. The Department of Justice found 'horrific and inhumane' conditions that violate constitutional rights. Meanwhile, 330 people died in Georgia prisons in 2024 alone, nearly 100 by homicide.
How can officials claim humane standards while operating what amounts to state-sanctioned torture facilities? https://gps.press/georgia-prisons-aca-compliance-vs-inhumane-reality/
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Georgia's Department of Corrections boasts ACA accreditation while systematically starving prisoners with 1,200-calorie weekend diets and triple-bunking inmates in 8x12 foot cells. The DOJ found conditions so horrific they violate the Eighth Amendment. In 2024, 330 people died in custody - nearly 100 by homicide. This isn't compliance. It's cruelty disguised as certification.
#GeorgiaPrisons #PrisonReform #CriminalJustice #GPS #MassIncarceration #Georgia
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A comprehensive analysis reveals the stark disconnect between Georgia's claimed ACA prison compliance and documented constitutional violations. While the Department of Corrections promotes accreditation achievements, federal investigators found systematic failures: inmates receiving 1,200 calories daily on weekends, three prisoners housed in single-occupancy cells, and medical neglect contributing to 330 deaths in 2024.
This case study demonstrates how bureaucratic certifications can mask institutional failures, raising critical questions about oversight mechanisms and accountability in correctional policy implementation. https://gps.press/georgia-prisons-aca-compliance-vs-inhumane-reality/