TIP BRIEF
March 21, 2026
media@gps.press

Georgia Spent $700 Million More on Prisons. Homicides Increased 1,150%.

Despite adding $700 million to corrections spending, Georgia's prison homicides exploded from 8 annually to over 100 in 2024, while evidence from multiple states shows strategic decarceration actually reduces crime.

The U.S. Department of Justice found Georgia's prisons violate the Eighth Amendment through gang control, inadequate medical care, and failure to protect from violence—conditions that have worsened despite $700 million in additional spending since FY 2022. Evidence from New York, New Jersey, and California demonstrates that reducing prison populations by 20-30% through deliberate policy actually decreases crime while saving billions, offering Georgia a choice between implementing evidence-based decarceration or facing federal court intervention.

Facility Breakdown

Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison

Operating at 182.5% of design capacity, exemplifies the overcrowding crisis driving violence

MetricValue
Current Population4,540
Design Capacity2,487
Overcrowding Rate182.5%

Dooly State Prison

Runs at over 200% capacity with improper security classification mix

MetricValue
Overcrowding Rate200%+
Close-Security Population28-30%

Washington State Prison

Site of January 2026 riot that left 4 dead, exemplifies staffing and classification failures

MetricValue
Riot Deaths (Jan 2026)4
Hospitalized12+
Close-Security Population28-30%

Valdosta State Prison

Houses highest percentages of gang members and people with mental health issues

MetricValue
CO Vacancy Rate80%

What GPS Documented (Original Findings)

Data source: GPS analysis of GDC Monthly Reports, budget documents, and mortality tracking

What DOJ Already Confirmed

What GDC Concealed

Quotables

"Georgia added $700 million to its corrections budget between FY 2022 and FY 2026—the fastest spending growth in agency history. Prison homicides rose from 8 annually to 100 in 2024. Staffing remains 50-76% vacant. The DOJ found healthcare unconstitutional. The money bought nothing."

— GPS analysis

"The choice is not between 'tough' and 'soft' approaches to crime. It's between evidence-based policy that improves public safety and ideological commitment to a system that demonstrably fails."

— GPS analysis

"Georgia can either implement decarceration through deliberate policy reform or face court-ordered releases under federal supervision."

— GPS analysis

Story Angles

Records Journalists Should Request

Georgia Open Records Act:

  1. Guidehouse Consultant Report on GDC Staffing — Georgia Department of Corrections / Governor's Office
  2. GDC Length of Stay Reports — Georgia Department of Corrections
  3. Washington State Prison Incident Reports — Georgia Department of Corrections
  4. Facility-specific capacity and population data — Georgia Department of Corrections
  5. Medical expenditure data by age cohort — Georgia Department of Corrections

Federal FOIA:

  1. DOJ communications with Georgia officials regarding prison conditions — DOJ Civil Rights Division
  2. DOJ monitoring reports on Georgia compliance with findings — 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 has increased spending ($700 million) failed to reduce homicides and deaths?
  2. What specific measures has GDC taken to address DOJ's constitutional violations?
  3. Why do medium-security facilities house 28-30% close-security populations?
  4. How many prisoners are eligible for geriatric release but remain incarcerated?

Source Documents

CONTACT GPS

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Online: https://gps.press/tip-briefs/georgia-spent-700-million-more-on-prisons-homicides-increased-1150/