TIP BRIEF
December 2, 2025
media@gps.press

Georgia Spends $1.6 Billion on Prison Construction While Ignoring DOJ Violence Reforms

Despite federal findings that Georgia prisons violate the Constitution through 'deliberate indifference' to lethal violence, the state continues spending $1.6 billion on new construction while refusing to implement nine proven reforms that could prevent predictable homicides.

Georgia's prison homicides are outpacing last year's totals, with June 2025 being the deadliest month so far—a predictable outcome of policies the Georgia Department of Corrections refuses to change despite federal findings of constitutional violations. The state is spending over $1.6 billion on new construction while ignoring nine proven reforms that could end the killing, including the most urgent fix: single-cell segregation to stop murders in 'the hole.'

Facility Breakdown

Hays State Prison

MetricValue
New Construction Investment million
Project TypeHardened Unit
Reform ImplementationNone

Rogers State Prison

MetricValue
Notable Deaths 2024Taylor Hunt (disputed)
Records StatusSealed 14+ months
Investigation AgenciesGDC, GBI, Multiple Coroners

Washington County (New Mega-Prison)

MetricValue
Construction Cost1 million
Capacity3,000 beds
Reform FeaturesUnknown

What GPS Documented (Original Findings)

Data source: GPS analysis of GDC Monthly Reports, state budget documents, and family interviews

What DOJ Already Confirmed

What GDC Concealed

Quotables

"Those letters, purportedly written by Taylor to his family, contained misspellings of his own children's names—something Heather said her son would never have done. To her, and to anyone who knew Taylor, they were obvious forgeries meant to prop up an official narrative."

— Heather Hunt (Taylor Hunt's mother)

"We'll say it plainly: Georgia doesn't need another commission. It needs to implement nine fixes we've already laid out—plus one urgent change for the hole—to stop the killing now."

— Georgia Prisoners' Speak analysis

Story Angles

Records Journalists Should Request

Georgia Open Records Act:

  1. Taylor Hunt Death Investigation File — Georgia Department of Corrections
  2. Taylor Hunt Autopsy Report and Medical Examiner Records — Tattnall County Coroner, GBI Medical Examiner's Office, Gwinnett County Medical Examiner
  3. Prison Construction Contracts and Budget Documents — Georgia Department of Corrections
  4. GDC Homicide and Death Statistics — Georgia Department of Corrections

Federal FOIA:

  1. DOJ Investigation Communications with Georgia Officials — DOJ Civil Rights Division

Sources Available for Interview

Families:

Incarcerated Witnesses:

Experts:

Officials Who Should Be Asked for Comment

Questions GDC Has Not Answered

  1. Why do autopsy and investigation reports remain sealed 14 months after Taylor Hunt's death?
  2. How will the state respond to DOJ findings of constitutional violations?
  3. Will Georgia implement any of the nine proposed violence reduction reforms?
  4. What specific features will the new $1.6 billion in prison construction include to address violence?

Source Documents

CONTACT GPS

Email: media@gps.press
Response: 1 hour for urgent inquiries
Include DEADLINE in subject line for time-sensitive requests.

Online: https://gps.press/tip-briefs/georgia-spends-1-6-billion-on-prison-construction-while-ignoring-doj-violence-reforms/