When last we visited the ACCREDITATION RACKET on Jan. 14, the emphasis was on college accreditations and the fact that college presidents like Southeastern Louisiana University’s William Wainwright may serve on the board of trustees for the accrediting entity, in this case the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCC).
Added to that built-in conflict is the fact the colleges and universities pay memberships to SASCC—and pay for the privilege of being accredited.
But it’s not just colleges and universities that have cozy relationships with their accrediting agencies, but hospitals do so also.
And so do prisons, though one might never know it from reading headlines about substandard care, filthy conditions, inadequate or even spoiled food fed prisoners, unqualified staff, poor medical care, seemingly nonexistent oversight for contraband and frequent DEATHS.
From 2019 to 2024, Louisiana Department of Safety and Corrections FIGURES SHOW there have been 911 deaths inside state prisons. The leading cause, department statistics show, is heart attacks (205), followed closely by cancer (197) and overdoses (115). Homicide accounted for 22 deaths of incarcerated individuals.
Prison Legal News, an online publication dedicated to Louisiana prison news, reported in January 2024 that deaths while incarcerated in Louisiana INCREASED BY 18 PERCENT from 2020 to 2021.
A web page called simply INCARCERATION TRANSPARENCY, however, takes the research a step further by counting the number of deaths in the seven-year period of 2014-2020. The number is an astounding 1,718. The report lists five reasons for death: violence, medical, suicide, drugs and “other.”
No data are available for the numerous private prisons operating in the state, though most of those have spotty records at best.
Yet, the Louisiana Department of Corrections invariably churns out glowing press releases each time one of the state prisons under its jurisdiction achieves accreditation from the American Correctional Association (ACA).
What those press releases do not reveal, however, is that Richard Stalder, who served as 16 years as DOC secretary, was the ACA president from 1998 to 2000.
Other factors not often mentioned about the ACA:
It is the lobbying arm of America’s prisons, often going to bat for support legislation favorable to the prison industry.
States—and presumably private and local prisons pay a fee to obtain accreditation.
Louisiana, for example, in addition to paying customary membership dues to be a member of the association, paid out more than $134,000 last years to have 10 of its prisons and its headquarters accredited. Those fees ranged from $7,350 for the state’s Prison Enterprises, a DOC department that operates a diverse group of industry, agriculture and service programs in eight correctional facilities throughout the state, to $21,750 for Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola.
So, basically, what we have is a state agency that pays to be a member of the association that accredits its correctional facilities, pays them to conduct accreditation and political lobbying and occasionally has its director chosen to preside a two-year term as president of the association.
How likely is a facility to emerge with a negative rating, given such an incestuous relationship?
To see the costs for each facility, go to these links:








