Skip navigation

HRDC letter to D.C. Council concerning Corizon contract April 2015

Download original document:
Brief thumbnail
This text is machine-read, and may contain errors. Check the original document to verify accuracy.
Human Rights Defense Center
DEDICATED TO PROTECTING HUMAN RIGHTS

April 1, 2015

SENT VIA EMAIL AND
POSTAL MAIL

Phil Mendelson, Chairman
D.C. Council
1350 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Suite 504
Washington, DC 20004
RE: Corizon Health and D.C. Jail Medical Contract
Dear Chairman Mendelson:
On behalf of the Human Rights Defense Center (HRDC), I previously contacted you and other
members of the Council concerning a contract with Corizon Health, Inc. to provide medical care
for the D.C. jail system. As you are aware, this $66.1 million three-year contract, recommended
by the Office of Contracting and Procurement, would replace Unity Health Care as the jail
system’s current medical and mental health provider.
In my prior correspondence I noted some of the many problems that Corizon has faced in other
jurisdictions, including contract terminations and extensive litigation, as described in the March
2014 cover story in Prison Legal News, HRDC’s monthly publication.
As this issue is again before the Council after Mayor Bowser reintroduced the Corizon contract,
I am again contacting you and the other Councilmembers to express our opposition to allowing
Corizon, a for-profit company, to provide medical care to D.C. jail prisoners.
Specifically, I would like to draw your attention to the following non-exhaustive list of news
reports from a number of jurisdictions and sources – all involving Corizon – that have been
published since my last letter submitted to the Council:
March 28 – Former Allegheny County Jail psychiatrist banned for bringing cigarettes to work
March 26 – A Fresno County jail inmate is claiming abuse at the hands of a jail doctor

Please reply to Tennessee office:
5331 Mt. View Road #130, Antioch, TN 37013
Phone: 615.495.6568 • Fax: 866.735.7136
afriedmann@prisonlegalnews.org
www.humanrightsdefensecenter.org

Phil Mendelson, Chairman
April 1, 2015
Page 2

March 25 – Minn. DOC settles lawsuit with family of prisoner who died after being denied
treatment
March 8 – Lawsuit: Corizon Doctor Tells New York City Inmate to Throw Severed Finger in
Garbage
March 3 – Construction Worker Bled to Death from Untreated Ulcer at Rikers: Lawsuit
March 3 – Rikers Healthcare Provider Corizon Under Fire at City Council Hearing
March 2 – City Council to Demand More Oversight of Rikers Health Care Provider
March 2 – Inmate care in Allegheny County Jail generates worries
March 1 – Opinion/Column: Company once served Fluvanna women’s prison
March 1 – Outsourcing neglect: Corizon’s for-profit healthcare endangers prison inmates and
workers
February 20 – Florida prisons chief to seek revamp of health care contracts
February 19 – Former Corizon Doctor Accused of Molesting Scores of Prisoners Served With
Two New Lawsuits
February 10 – Corizon, Alameda County pay $8.3 million to settle jail death lawsuit

Further, I noticed that Corizon (which is headquartered in Tennessee) has partnered with MBI
Health Services, LLC, which it described as a “local small disadvantaged business enterprise”
in a March 12 press release. MBI Health Services, LLC is apparently a subsidiary or affiliate
of MacArthur & Baker International, Inc., a Maryland-based firm. The corporate address for
MacArthur & Baker, 7200 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 702 in Bethesda, Maryland, is the same
as the address for the registered agent of MBI Health Services in Maryland.
Both companies share the same registered agent, both in Maryland and D.C. That registered
agent, John Kamya, has two different addresses – one in Maryland and one in D.C. Mr. Kamya
is listed as an employee of MacArthur & Baker and, in a recent letter to Councilmember David
Grosso, identified himself as the President/CEO of MBI Health Services. Thus, it appears that
while MBI Health Services is incorporated in D.C., it is less of a “local” business and more a
subsidiary or affiliate of MacArthur & Baker, a Maryland-based firm, and that Mr. Kamya is
affiliated with both. I contacted the companies for clarification but received no response.

Phil Mendelson, Chairman
April 1, 2015
Page 3

In closing, I understand that both Corizon and its critics have their own agendas. Corizon, as a
for-profit company, wants the $66.1 million contract; it is not seeking to provide medical care
to D.C. prisoners for altruistic or humanitarian reasons. Its critics, including HRDC, believe that
private companies should not provide correctional services, including medical care for prisoners,
because incarceration-related services are a responsibility of our government and should not be
contracted out to the private sector for the purpose of generating corporate profit.
Due to these competing agendas, I suggest that the Council hear testimony from former prisoners
and their surviving family members who have firsthand experience with medical care provided by
Corizon – not those selected by the company, but rather those who have suffered serious injuries
and the family members of prisoners who have died due to grossly inadequate care provided (or
not provided) by Corizon. Such firsthand testimony would provide a relevant side to the contract
debate that the Councilmembers have not yet heard.
Additionally, either I or another member of HRDC’s staff would be glad to provide testimony to
the Council concerning our coverage of Corizon and its predecessor companies, Prison Health
Services and Correctional Medical Services. HRDC has reported on privatized medical care in
prisons and jails for over two decades, through Prison Legal News.
Thank you for your continued attention with respect to the Council’s consideration of whether
to contract with Corizon for the provision of medical care in the District’s jail system.
Sincerely,

Alex Friedmann
Associate Director, HRDC
cc: D.C. Councilmembers
D.C. Corrections Information Council