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The Motley Fool August 9, 2007 Billy Fisher |
Locked In to GEO Group Crime seems to pay at GEO Group. The stock price jumps again as the prison operator reports good earnings and continues to grow. |
The Motley Fool May 7, 2007 Billy Fisher |
Geo's Growth Unshackled The prison manager's growth can't be confined. Should investors keep their dollars locked up in Geo? If nothing else, it certainly beats being a customer. |
The Motley Fool December 18, 2006 Billy Fisher |
GEO Group Might Be a Lock This correctional company is profiting from the crackdown on the border with Mexico. For the time being, the outlook appears to be favorable for this stock. |
The Motley Fool March 23, 2007 Billy Fisher |
Geo Group: Big House, Big Money The prison operator sells shares to repay debt. Investors, take note. |
Salon.com August 29, 2000 Bruce Shapiro |
Prison politics Under Gov. George W. Bush, Texas has the largest -- and fastest growing -- incarcerated population in America. |
Salon.com March 29, 2001 Maria Russo |
Psycho factories Nonviolent criminals go in and sadistic thugs come out, but with military spending down, America's small towns are hooked on prisons... |
Mother Jones June 2000 Barry Yeoman |
Steel Town Lockdown Corrections Corporation of America is trying to turn Youngstown, Ohio, into the private-prison capital of the world. |
BusinessWeek March 17, 2011 Graeme Wood |
A Boom Behind Bars Private jail operators like the Corrections Corporation of America are making millions off the crackdown on illegal aliens. |
Salon.com March 29, 2001 Damien Cave |
The business of law and order The author of "Going up the River" says that the booming private-prison industry is due for a bust... |
BusinessWeek April 21, 2011 Tom McNichol |
Keeping Cell Phones Out of Jail Cells As prisons try to block unauthorized cell phone use, companies are developing systems that cost over $1 million to address the problem. |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 Gene G. Marcial |
Cornell May Be Poised For A Breakout There's unrest at Cornell, a provider of operational services, including medical treatment and education, to 70 federal and local prisons in 13 states. |
The Motley Fool May 18, 2005 Rich Smith |
Death Not So Bad The funeral services operator Service Corp. loses money, but not really. Between good cash flow results and shareholder-friendly actions on management's part, it remains a wonder why the company's share price doesn't show more signs of life. |
Salon.com July 13, 2000 Damien Cave |
Jailhouse Net Inmates with e-mail? It could happen at some state prisons experimenting with technology behind bars. |
Salon.com May 8, 2002 Nell Bernstein |
Punishment for the whole family California prison officials want to prohibit parents convicted of drug offenses from touching their children -- even infants and toddlers -- for one year... |
Real Estate Portfolio Nov/Dec 2002 Mike Fickes |
Something Special With few peers and unique property types, specialty REITs share similar challenges reaching investors. |
Salon.com August 27, 2001 Sara Kelly |
Detention convention At the 131st Congress of Correction, the incarceration industry puts on a bizarre show. From execution jokes to soap -- without a rope -- it's a great place for networking... |
AskMen.com Ben Dutka |
Top 10: Notorious Prisons The following is a list of the 10 most notorious jails on earth; they are the worst of the worst and the lowest of the low. |
BusinessWeek October 18, 2004 Matlack & Kahane |
Europe's Private Affair Get ready for the next chapter in European privatization: public services. From hospitals and schools to airports and toll roads, governments are turning to the private sector for public-works projects traditionally handled by the state. |
Reason May 2007 Cathy Young |
Assault Behind Bars How big a problem is prison rape in the U.S. -- and what can be done about it? |