Tip Brief December 2, 2025

Georgia Prisons Violate Constitution Daily, Federal Courts Already Ruled

Federal courts established that 'persons are sent to prison as punishment, not for punishment,' meaning anything beyond loss of liberty becomes illegal extra punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Georgia's systematic exposure of prisoners to violence, medical neglect, gang control, and inhumane conditions violates this constitutional standard daily, making normalization not just good policy but a legal requirement the state can no longer ignore.

Georgia’s prison system systematically violates the Constitution by subjecting incarcerated people to violence, medical neglect, and inhumane conditions that federal courts have ruled constitute illegal extra punishment beyond lawful liberty deprivation.

Federal courts established that ‘persons are sent to prison as punishment, not for punishment,’ meaning anything beyond loss of liberty becomes illegal extra punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Georgia’s systematic exposure of prisoners to violence, medical neglect, gang control, and inhumane conditions violates this constitutional standard daily, making normalization not just good policy but a legal requirement the state can no longer ignore.

Facility Breakdown

FacilityDeath DateVictimCause
Dooly State PrisonOctober 15, 2023Roy Mason MorrisSuspicious circumstances
Baldwin State PrisonDecember 31, 2024Almir HarrisDiabetic crisis ignored
Washington State PrisonHighAvailableMultiple

What GPS Documented (Original Findings)

  • Federal court in Battle v. Anderson declared ‘Persons are sent to prison as punishment, not for punishment’ (GPS legal analysis of Battle v. Anderson, 457 F. Supp. 719 (E.D. Okla. 1978))
  • U.S. Supreme Court ruled ‘Being violently assaulted in prison is simply not part of the penalty that criminal offenders pay for their offenses against society’ (GPS analysis of Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825 (1994))
  • In Georgia, correctional officer training may last 5–8 weeks compared to 2-3 years in Norway (GPS analysis of GDC training requirements and Scandinavian systems)
  • Roy Mason Morris died under suspicious circumstances at Dooly State Prison on October 15, 2023 (GPS family interviews and facility records)
  • Almir Harris died from diabetic crisis ignored by staff at Baldwin State Prison on December 31, 2024 (GPS family interviews and medical records analysis)

Data source: GPS analysis of federal court decisions, GDC records, and family interviews

What DOJ Already Confirmed

  • Georgia’s prisons violate civil rights and fail to protect people from murder, suicide, assaults, and medical neglect (Pages Multiple findings throughout report)

What GDC Concealed

  • Constitutional standard requiring conditions not exceed liberty deprivation
  • Legal requirement to implement normalization principles established in federal precedent

Quotables

“Persons are sent to prison as punishment, not for punishment.”

— Federal court in Battle v. Anderson

“Being violently assaulted in prison is simply not part of the penalty that criminal offenders pay for their offenses against society.”

— U.S. Supreme Court in Farmer v. Brennan

Story Angles

  • Local: Families in specific counties affected by deaths at Dooly and Baldwin facilities
  • Policy: Cost of constitutional violations vs. implementing normalization model
  • Accountability: Officials who ignored established federal constitutional standards
  • Data: Request training records, death investigations, and constitutional compliance documents

Records Journalists Should Request

Georgia Open Records Act:

  1. POST Basic Correctional Officer Training Manual — Georgia Department of Corrections
  2. Death Investigation Reports for Roy Mason Morris — Georgia Department of Corrections
  3. Death Investigation Reports for Almir Harris — Georgia Department of Corrections
  4. Legal Opinions on Constitutional Compliance — Georgia Department of Corrections

Federal FOIA:

  1. DOJ Civil Rights Division correspondence with GDC regarding constitutional violations — DOJ Civil Rights Division

Sources Available for Interview

Families:

  • Family of Roy Mason Morris
  • Family of Almir Harris

Incarcerated Witnesses:

  • Incarcerated witnesses to constitutional violations, anonymous, background only

Experts:

  • Available upon request — Constitutional law and prison conditions

Officials Who Should Be Asked for Comment

  • Tyrone Oliver, Commissioner — Ultimate authority over constitutional compliance in Georgia prisons

Questions GDC Has Not Answered

  1. Why Georgia continues to operate prisons in violation of federal constitutional standards
  2. What steps GDC is taking to address unconstitutional conditions
  3. How GDC justifies conditions that exceed lawful punishment of liberty deprivation

Source Documents

#Georgia #Prisons #Constitution #DOJ #CivilRights #Deaths #Medical #Violence

Press Contact

Georgia Prisoners' Speak
media@gps.press