TIP BRIEF
December 11, 2025
media@gps.press

Georgia's Prison Crisis Stems from Deliberate Federal War on Drugs Policies

Georgia's current prison crisis—with record deaths and collapsed parole—directly results from deliberate federal War on Drugs policies that criminalized communities while tolerating CIA-linked drug trafficking.

Mass incarceration emerged from documented federal policy decisions during the War on Drugs era, including tolerance of CIA-linked drug trafficking abroad while criminalizing affected communities at home. Georgia's adoption of Truth in Sentencing laws in 1994-1995, incentivized by federal prison construction funding, created the framework that still drives record prison deaths and collapsed parole today.

Facility Breakdown

Georgia Department of Corrections System-wide

MetricValue
Current Prison PopulationSee GPS database
Incarceration Rate RankingAmong highest nationally
Deaths Since 2020See GPS mortality database

What GPS Documented (Original Findings)

Data source: GPS analysis of federal records, Georgia legislation, and historical documents

What DOJ Already Confirmed

What GDC Concealed

Quotables

"We hated the Vietnam War. We couldn't make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities."

— John Ehrlichman, Nixon's domestic policy chief

"Here's the bottom line: We are going to end parole for violent criminals and make them serve the full sentences they receive. No parole. No loopholes. No exceptions."

— Former Governor Zell Miller

"Mass incarceration was not a response to crime—it was a political project."

— GPS analysis

Story Angles

Records Journalists Should Request

Georgia Open Records Act:

  1. Legislative records for Sentence Reform Act of 1994 — Georgia General Assembly
  2. Records of federal VOI/TIS grant applications and awards — Georgia Department of Corrections

Federal FOIA:

  1. VOI/TIS Incentive Grant Program records for Georgia — DOJ Bureau of Justice Assistance
  2. CIA Inspector General reports on Contra-drug connections — Central Intelligence Agency

Sources Available for Interview

Experts:

Officials Who Should Be Asked for Comment

Questions GDC Has Not Answered

  1. How does Georgia justify maintaining Truth in Sentencing laws despite evidence of failure?
  2. Why have parole grant rates collapsed to historic lows?
  3. How does Georgia address spending billions on incarceration while crime declined?

Source Documents

CONTACT GPS

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Online: https://gps.press/tip-briefs/georgias-prison-crisis-stems-from-deliberate-federal-war-on-drugs-policies/