Security Officers Walk Off the Job at Georgia Prison – ‘Significant’ Crisis Underway
Several security officers at an Atlanta jail, currently under federal investigation, walked off their jobs due to the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office failing to pay a significant amount owed to their employer, Strategic Security Corp. The sheriff’s office admitted to facing a budget crisis and owed over $1 million, which resulted in the termination of the contractor’s services. This created an immediate staffing issue at the jail, prompting the sheriff’s office to reallocate employees from other divisions to maintain operations.
Joe Sordi, CEO of Strategic Security Corp., expressed frustration over the sheriff’s office’s continuous payment delays since the contract began in July 2023. Despite the company’s efforts to keep its employees paid out of a moral obligation, the sheriff’s office has not demonstrated effective budget management, leading to a delinquency on payments since February. Following the security contract termination, approximately 50 contract officers were offered conditional employment by the sheriff’s office.
This incident is part of broader concerns regarding jail conditions in Fulton County, which have prompted investigations by the U.S. Department of Justice and state legislative bodies. The sheriff has acknowledged ongoing problems but recently proposed a costly plan to build a new facility amidst the budget turmoil. County commissioners are set to discuss these issues further in an upcoming meeting.
Some security officers at a jail in Atlanta that is under federal investigation walked off the job after the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office failed to pay money owed to the third-party contractor that employs them.
The Fulton County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release that it is facing “a significant budget crisis” and owed an outstanding balance of more than $1 million to Strategic Security Corp. The company notified its employees Thursday afternoon that the contract had ended, that they would be clocked out at 2:15 p.m. and that they should not report to work at the jail going forward.
The sheriff’s office said that “created an immediate safety issue” at the county’s main jail, and employees from all divisions were sent to staff the jail.
There were 17 contract officers working at the time, 13 at the main jail in Atlanta and four at the south annex in Union City, sheriff’s office spokesperson Natalie Ammons said. There are three shifts in a 24-hour period, and there were a total of 74 contractors working on rotation to cover all of the shifts, she said.
Joe Sordi, CEO of Strategic Security Corp., told reporters Friday that his employees were hired to do jobs that did not involve direct contact with people housed in the jail. From the start of the contract in July 2023, the sheriff’s office immediately fell behind on payment and never fully paid what it owed in any single billing cycle.
Under the terms of the contract, the company could have suspended services once the sheriff’s office defaulted on two billing cycles, Sordi said. But they didn’t do that because of a “moral obligation” to the officers and to the sheriff’s deputies working in the jail. Instead, he said, they continued to pay their employees and tried to engage the sheriff’s office, which kept making small payments to “keep us at bay” but never paid the entire principal due.
The sheriff’s office has been “severely delinquent” since February, and Sheriff Pat Labat kept making excuses for why the money hadn’t been paid, Sordi said. The CEO said he kept extending deadlines but gave the sheriff a final date of this past Wednesday to provide an answer about whether he could come up with the money.
Sordi said that Thursday was the “first time in several months” that the sheriff returned his calls.
“We spoke, and his answer was that, ‘We simply just don’t have the money,’” Sordi said.
Sordi said his company is “actively pursuing formal measures to reengage Fulton County” if the sheriff’s office wants to continue services. But he also said he is “exploring any method possible” to secure payment of the money owed.
Board of Commissioners Chairman Robb Pitts released a statement Friday saying that the sheriff’s office signed the contract to provide staffing for watchtowers within the jail without the involvement of the county purchasing department. He said the commissioners approved funding as part of the fiscal year 2024 budget, allocating $1.3 million based on the contract usage at the time and with input from the sheriff’s office.
It wasn’t until this month that the sheriff’s office notified county management that it had already spent more than a $1 million over the budgeted amount, Pitts said. Funding for the sheriff’s office and the jail has increased by 66 percent since 2019, but the sheriff “has consistently failed to demonstrate basic budget management practices,” Pitts said.
“The public has every right to be concerned about these issues,” Pitts said. The Board of Commissioners plans to discuss the matter at its meeting next week.
Labat said that nearly 50 of the contract security officers came to the jail Thursday evening and were given conditional offers of employment, and some were able to work immediately after completing paperwork.
Sordi said Labat’s efforts to hire his employees and the failure to pay from the start showed that the “agreement was entered in bad faith.” The Associated Press has asked Labat’s office for comment on Sordi’s remarks.
The U.S. Department of Justice last year opened a civil rights investigation into jail conditions in the county, citing violence and filthy conditions. Federal authorities specifically mentioned the September 2022 death of Lashawn Thompson, one of more than a dozen people who have died in county custody over the last two years. Thompson, 35, died in a bedbug-infested cell in the jail’s psychiatric wing.
A state legislative committee formed last year to examine conditions at the jail concluded last week that more cooperation was needed between top county officials.
Labat has long acknowledged the problems and has called for a new $1.7 billion jail to replace the crumbling main jail on Rice Street. But county commissioners in July voted 4-3 instead for a $300 million project to renovate the existing jail and to build a new building to house inmates with special needs.
The Western Journal has not reviewed this Associated Press story prior to publication. Therefore, it may contain editorial bias or may in some other way not meet our normal editorial standards. It is provided to our readers as a service from The Western Journal.
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