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Legislators look to upcoming audit as frustrations with Alabama prisons mount

A group of people marching

Families, friends and advocates walk to protest prison conditions at the front of the Alabama Department of Corrections on Wednesday, April 22, 2026. The Alabama Department of Examiners of Public Accounts will audit a prison facility in the state amid mounting frustration from lawmakers over the Alabama Department of Corrections' management of its facilities. (Beth Shelburne for the Alabama Reflector)

Several Alabama legislators hope an upcoming audit of the Alabama Department of Corrections will pull back the curtain on an agency engulfed in violence and consuming an ever-larger share of the state budget.

The audit from the Alabama Department of Examiners of Public Accounts, an arm of the Legislature, is part of a pilot initiative to investigate the conditions in one facility that has yet to be named.

The Examiners department regularly audits the books of state agencies, but this specific audit stems from legislation filed by Sen. Larry Stutts, R-Tuscumbia, because of sustained troubles he has observed from the department.

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“There is just a tremendous need,” Stutts said in an interview on Wednesday. “We have the highest inmate mortality rate in the nation. I guess the timing of it, we are getting ready to move into a new prison facility, and we don’t need to take the current culture with us to the new facility.”

The audit could take place this summer, with results released in October.  A message was sent to ADOC on Friday seeking comment.

Violence and litigation

The audit reflects mounting frustration among lawmakers in both parties with Corrections. Alabama faces multiple federal lawsuits over violence, inadequate staffing and inadequate health care delivery in the state’s correctional facilities.

The problems endemic to ADOC are known nationwide.

“Alabama is absolutely an outlier,” said Michele Deitch, director of the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the University of Texas at Austin. “It is, by far, the worst system in the country to the extent that we are aware of that sort of thing. The violence levels are completely out of control. Every system is going to have some level of violence for sure, but this is on a scale that is not like anywhere else in the country.”

Incarcerated people continue to die in Alabama’s prisons at rates far higher than other state prison systems, according to criminal justice reform groups, despite a recent decline in deaths.

“We still had a death rate in 2025 that was three times the national average,” Elaine Burdeshaw, policy director for Alabama Appleseed, a criminal justice reform organization based in Birmingham, told the Legislature’s Joint Prison Oversight Committee on Wednesday. “We still have this prevalence of drugs and contraband inside DOC, we still have family members, parents, getting extorted for significant amounts of money. And we still have a state agency, despite the very little return we are getting, we have spent more money on it than almost every other budget priority in the state.”

According to a report by Eddie Burkhalter, a researcher with Alabama Appleseed, drawn from Corrections records, at least 202 people died in the state’s prisons last year. That is fewer than the 277 who perished in 2024 while incarcerated and that was less than the record high number of deaths in 2023.

An Alabama Appleseed report estimated that 25% of the deaths that took place in Alabama prisons between 2019 and 2024 were drug-related while another 6% were homicides.

All are multiple times higher than the deaths that happen in state prisons across the nation. The rate of drug-related deaths, for example, is seven times the national average while the rate of homicides is six times that of the rest of the country.

Abuse perpetrated by several corrections officers remains rampant. The state has paid millions of dollars to law firms to defend corrections officers against civil rights complaints filed by people who are incarcerated and their families. In December 2024, the Contract Review Committee approved such three contracts to one law firm, totaling almost $7.7 million.

Families continue to attend Joint Prison Oversight Committee meetings and speak about the harm that their loved ones face while incarcerated in the state prisons. According to ADOC statistics, about 355 incidents of assault were reported in 2025.

Last week, ADOC told lawmakers at the Joint Prison Oversight Committee it would cancel a $1 billion health care contract with Tennessee-based YesCare, citing financial issues with the company.

A group of protestos sitting on the ground
Protestors stage a rally after the Joint Prison Oversight Committee meeting on Wednesday, April 22, 2026 to highlight the dangerous conditions in the state’s prisons. (Beth Shelburne for the Alabama Reflector)

Audits

Before this year, Stutts, first elected to the Senate in 2014, had not filed many criminal justice reform bills.  But in the recently-concluded legislative session this year, he filed two. filed two focused on improving the living conditions of people in the custody of ADOC.

The first would have authorized the Alabama Department of Public Health to oversee the kitchen and meal service areas within ADOC. SB 316 would have allowed the Alabama Department of Examiners of Public Accounts to investigate the activities and treatment of people housed in the state’s prisons.

The legislation would also have prohibited retaliation or discrimination by corrections officers or others incarcerated for cooperating with investigations; authorized the use of a special prosecutor to prosecute for criminal activity in the prisons and created a board to oversee the investigation into the prison conditions.

Neither bill passed, but officials from ADOC and the Department of Examiners of Public Accounts reached an agreement to investigate the treatment and living conditions in one of ADOC’s sites.

“We will start out with one prison,” Rachel Riddle, chief examiner with the Alabama Department of Examiners of Public Accounts, told lawmakers at the Joint Prison Oversight Committee meeting on Wednesday. “I will not state what that prison is, for obvious reasons. And we will look at a plethora of issues. Those mainly were outlined in the bill.”

A man in a brown jacket and light green tie
Sen. Larry Stutts, R-Tuscumbia (left) speaks with Lt. Gov. Will Ainsworth on the floor of the Alabama Senate on Feb. 5, 2026 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector)

Stutts cited “The Alabama Solution,” an Academy Award-nominated documentary that used cell phone video taken by people in custody to document the violence within the prison system.

“We all know about the violence, but it just had come to the forefront,” Stutts said. “The documentary about it brought it to everyone’s attention. But we have known the statistics.”

He also said, “When you hear from the families, you know the violence is there. I have talked to the commissioner about it, and the deal is, it is the culture. A lot of problems are with the corrections officers. You saw that in the documentary.”

‘We have not gotten the numbers’

Lawmakers have also become frustrated with what they call a lack of responsiveness from ADOC to questions about prison conditions.

“I know about substance abuse program problems, everybody knows about substance abuse program problems,” said Rep. Matt Simpson, R-Daphne, in an interview following the meeting on Wednesday. “We know about substance abuse program problems because of our profession. They say, ‘We’ll get back with you.’ It is three months later, and they have not gotten back with us. We have not gotten the numbers.”

A man in a dark suit wearing glasses
Rep. Matt Simpson, R-Daphne, speaks to a colleague on the floor of the Alabama House of Representatives on March 31, 2026 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector)

The frustration is compounded by ADOC’s demands on the state’s General Fund budget. The money given to ADOC increased by about 275% between 2002 and 2025, going from $197 million to almost $750 million. ADOC, along with Medicaid, consumed about half of the General Fund budget for 2025.

Alabama Appleseed began pushing for a prison audit several years ago, Burdeshaw said, after years of documenting the conditions in state prisons.

“We tried to think through what is something that will actually help, what is a solution that we could bring to the table that could help improve the conditions at the department,” she said.

The organization solicited input from national groups and experts in other states about prison oversight and whether independent oversight would help improve prison conditions.

Deitch said there are best practices to conduct audits to monitor prisons systems, saying every prison system needs an independent group, “some set of outside eyes looking at what is going on inside.”

“You need that check and balance, you need the external scrutiny to shine a light on what is happening inside, to provide more transparency, and to give people inside a vehicle for reporting things that are concerning them or where they feel at risk, she said.”

Deitch also said the investigating agency needs “golden key access” to prisons to conduct interviews, review records and visit all places.

“The prison agency needs to have a requirement to respond in writing to the review with an action plan for how they are going to fix the problems,” Deitch said.

After that, Deitch said an oversight body should ensure that the corrections agency has implemented the reforms that it said it would perform.

“You want to make sure that is not a paper review that gets filed somewhere and goes into the trash can,” Deitch said. “It needs to be something that is meaningful.”

A framework

In 2024, the Legislature approved an Alabama Appleseed-backed bill  that established constituent services to communicate with family and friends about the status of loved ones who are incarcerated in Alabama’s prisons.

Alabama Appleseed brought the audit framework to Stutts because “he is very passionate about the issue,” Burdeshaw said.

The framework would have another body monitor how the prisons operated and would have “golden key access” to the ADOC to create more transparency, report it publicly and offer solutions to improve conditions for people in the custody of ADOC.

Findings from the audit will then be compiled into a report that the CPE will furnish for lawmakers, including members of the Joint Prison Oversight Committee, to review.

“It is very important to me that we do a pilot program of this because, as you all know, we do a lot of reports in government that sit on a shelf,” Riddle said. “I do not want to do that. I want this to be meaningful.”

Lawmakers will then review the process with Riddle to determine if it is meaningful, or if other information would be useful.

“I want this to be a good, informational, efficient process that helps you, as a policymaker, make decisions,” she said.



From Alabama Reflector Post Url: Visit
Author: Ralph Chapoco