GEO Group, which currently operates the prison under a $259 million contract that it signed in 2018, has not acted as he would have hoped, Madden said.
The prison has been accused of mistreating incarcerated people and even its own staff, which has drawn the attention of the current County Council, with members making it clear that their goal is to deprivatize the facility.
GEO Group and the county have had a more tenuous relationship as of late. The company criticized the findings of the March feasibility study, saying that deprivatizing the prison “won’t save money, won’t make the facility safer, and won’t improve the lives of inmates.”
WHYY News reached out to GEO Group for comment Thursday. On Friday, the company’s spokesperson responded only by including a copy of a letter GEO had sent to Madden on Sept. 14 that “communicates the facts.”
In the letter, GEO Group rejects any assertion that its financial health as a company is in any risk, citing $500 million cash on hand, outstanding bonds at the lowest levels in over one year, and a rising yield on 10-year Treasurys.
Madden said of the prison contractor, “I wouldn’t say that they really behave in the way we would have liked, but they’re entitled to do what they’re entitled to do.”
He added that the county is also entitled to make its own decisions, such as the right to terminate its contract with the company with six months’ advance notice — which is what the oversight board is considering.
GEO Group does not dispute that, but it notes in the Sept. 14 letter that it has its own complaints regarding what it says is an “unsound and politically motivated” contract termination.
“As we have previously stated on several occasions, we do not dispute the county’s authority to terminate the contract with a six-month notice, but we do dispute the JOB and county’s misleading and factually incorrect claims about GEO’s financial health and stability, management of operations, and costs associated with our contract,” the letter says.