Blood on Blood: Georgia Statewide Prison Lockdown

Blood on Blood - Statewide Georgia prison lockdown from coordinated gang violence April 2026

On April 1, 2026, coordinated Blood-on-Blood gang violence erupted across Georgia’s prison system. At least 12 prisons locked down, life flights dispatched to two facilities, stabbings at five. GPS has demanded gang separation for months. Arizona cut violence 50%. Georgia still refuses.

Who Is Responsible for Georgia Prison Violence?

Empty correctional officer guard station with abandoned clipboard and radio in a brightly lit Georgia prison hallway, symbolizing the staffing crisis

Georgia corrections officials blame younger, more violent inmates for the prison violence crisis. The evidence — from the DOJ, academic research, and Georgia’s own data — tells a very different story. Five systemic failures explain the violence. The inmates didn’t create any of them.

Separate the Gangs or Keep Burying the Dead

Empty corridor during extended lockdown

The DOJ told Georgia to separate gang members. Georgia refused. Now 100+ die annually. Arizona cut violence 50% with gang segregation. After the January 2026 Washington SP massacre killed 4, Georgia’s prisons remain on lockdown—but lockdowns don’t stop gang wars. They postpone them. Separate the gangs or keep burying the dead.

Separate Gangs, Save Lives: Gang Control in Georgia Prisons

Gang violence killed 100+ in Georgia prisons in 2024. The DOJ found gangs control entire housing units. Arizona cut violence 50% with gang separation. Texas achieved major reductions in homicide. The solution exists—Georgia refuses to implement it. This reference guide explains the crisis, the evidence, and what you can do.

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