Georgia's 2012 Justice Reinvestment Initiative under Governor Nathan Deal became a national model: the state reduced its prison population by 6%, avoided $264 million in projected costs, and reinvested $57 million in programs that cut recidivism to 13% for program participants—all without increasing crime. Since Governor Brian Kemp took office in 2019, Georgia has systematically dismantled this approach, adding $700 million to its corrections budget while prison homicides exploded to 66 in 2024, correctional officer vacancies reached 50-76%, and the U.S. Department of Justice documented constitutional violations across the system.
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The Reform That Worked — and the Governor Who Killed ItPress Contact
Georgia Prisoners' Speak
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