Mike
(Billionaire) Bloomberg Exploited Prison Labor to Make
2020 Presidential Campaign Phone Calls
By John Washington
December 25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Former New York
City mayor and multibillionaire Democratic presidential
candidate Mike Bloomberg used prison labor to make
campaign calls. Through a third-party vendor, the Mike
Bloomberg 2020 campaign contracted New Jersey-based call
center company ProCom, which runs calls centers in New
Jersey and Oklahoma. Two of the call centers in Oklahoma
are operated out of state prisons. In at least one of
the two prisons, incarcerated people were contracted to
make calls on behalf of the Bloomberg campaign.
According to a source, who asked for anonymity for
fear of retribution, people incarcerated at the Dr.
Eddie Warrior Correctional Center, a minimum-security
women’s prison with a capacity of more than 900, were
making calls to California on behalf of Bloomberg. The
people were required to end their calls by disclosing
that the calls were paid for by the Bloomberg campaign.
They did not disclose, however, that they were calling
from behind bars.
The Bloomberg campaign confirmed the arrangement in
an emailed statement to The Intercept. “We didn’t know
about this and we never would have allowed it if we
had,” said Bloomberg spokesperson Julie Wood. “We don’t
believe in this practice and we’ve now ended our
relationship with the subcontractor in question.”
The campaign said it did not know about the
arrangement between ProCom and an undisclosed campaign
vendor until The Intercept made its inquiry. The
campaign then ended the relationship on Monday and said
it has asked vendors to do a better job of vetting
subcontractors in the future.
“The use
of prison labor is the continued exploitation of people
who are locked up, who really have virtually no other
opportunities to have employment or make money other
than the opportunities given to them by prison
officials,” said Alex Friedmann, managing editor of
Prison
Legal News and an
advocate for incarcerated people’s rights.
John
Scallan, a ProCom co-founder, said his company pays the
Oklahoma minimum wage of $7.25 an hour to the Oklahoma
Department of Corrections, which then pays the
incarcerated people working in the call centers. The
Department of Corrections website
lists the maximum monthly wage for the incarcerated at
$20 dollars a month, but another policy document says
there is a maximum pay of $27.09 per month.