Untested Warden Leads Georgia's Most Troubled Women's Prison After 22 Deaths
Georgia promoted Wendy Jackson, whose only experience was running a 235-bed minimum-security facility, to lead Pulaski State Prison — a 1,200-inmate women's prison with a history of 22 deaths under one doctor, gang violence, and constitutional violations.
Wendy Jackson jumped from running a 235-bed minimum-security transitional center to leading Georgia's most troubled women's prison, where at least 22 women died under a single doctor's care and gang members sexually assaulted inmates at knifepoint. Her promotion exemplifies Georgia's pattern of promoting unqualified leaders to manage facilities in crisis, while families report new patterns of intimidation and retaliation under her leadership.
Facility Breakdown
Pulaski State Prison
Metric
Value
Current Population
1,185
Capacity Utilization
96.9%
Officer Vacancy Rate
Highest in GDC system
Metro Transitional Center
Metric
Value
Capacity
235
Security Level
Minimum
Jackson's Previous Role
Warden
What GPS Documented (Original Findings)
At least 22 women died under Dr. Yvon Nazaire's care between 2005-2015 at Pulaski State Prison (GPS analysis of AJC investigations and settlement records)
Georgia paid more than $3 million in settlements to families, including $1.5 million to Mollianne Fischer's family (GPS analysis of settlement records and AJC reporting)
Wendy Jackson promoted from 235-bed minimum-security facility to 1,223-capacity women's prison on April 16, 2025 (GPS analysis of GDC press releases and personnel records)
Jackson's educational background is associate degree in early childhood education from Perimeter College (GPS analysis of personnel records)
Pulaski has more correctional officer vacancies than any other prison in GDC (GPS analysis of GDC staffing reports)
Reports of intimidation and retaliation under Jackson's leadership, including extended lockdowns and warnings against filing grievances (GPS correspondence with inmates and families)
Data source: GPS analysis of GDC reports, settlement records, personnel files, and family interviews
What DOJ Already Confirmed
Constitutional violations during 2022-2023 investigation at Georgia women's facilities (Pages DOJ Findings Report)
Grievance systems plagued by delays, dismissals, and lack of transparency (Pages DOJ Findings Report)
Incarcerated people who cooperated with DOJ faced ongoing violence and retaliation (Pages DOJ Findings Report)
GDC fails to provide constitutionally required minimum of reasonable physical safety (Pages DOJ Findings Report)
What GDC Concealed
Dr. Nazaire was hired despite documented patient deaths and malpractice accusations from New York
Health administrator praised Dr. Nazaire for 'saving the DOC so much money' while women died under his care
Outcomes of 20 gang assault and extortion investigations opened at Pulaski
Specific qualifications and selection criteria used to choose Jackson for warden position
Quotables
"I told them if they didn't correct this stuff, they'd have a lot of girls who had cancer. I told them that, but they didn't want to hear it, because they didn't want to spend the money."
— Dr. Cheryl Young, former women's health specialist
"saving the DOC so much money and goes above and beyond any other physician in the system"
— Betty Rogers, health services administrator, about Dr. Nazaire
"The system is surviving by walling itself off from the public. They are sealed off from scrutiny."
— State Representative Erick Allen
"In Georgia, a grievance is not confidential and retaliation is assured. For years now, that retaliation has come from officers working with gangs to have the person 'touched up.' Some of the deaths in here? They're hits ordered for filing a grievance."
— An incarcerated person speaking to GPS
"tragic and wholly unacceptable"
— U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff
Story Angles
Local: Focus on families from specific counties who lost loved ones under Dr. Nazaire's care or current conditions - contact families through GPS for local impact
Policy: Examine GDC's $1.7 billion budget vs. outcomes - 333 deaths in 2024, highest officer vacancy rates, $3+ million in settlements from one doctor
Accountability: Track officials who ignored warnings about Dr. Nazaire, promoted unqualified leaders, and failed to address DOJ findings
Data: Analyze GDC death records, settlement patterns, staffing data, and promotion criteria through Open Records Act requests
Records Journalists Should Request
Georgia Open Records Act:
Wendy Jackson Personnel File — Georgia Department of Corrections