"It's honestly one of the
most evil things we've ever seen from a presidential campaign, and hopefully
Bloomberg's campaign will end with him paying out unimaginable sums to the
people he exploited. In a just world it would."
Former New York City Mayor
Michael Bloomberg said in a statement late
Tuesday that The Intercept's explosive
report on his presidential campaign's use of prison labor to make
phone calls is "fundamentally accurate" but insisted he was not aware
of the practice, which prompted a torrent of outrage from rights advocates.
"Earlier today, a news
outlet reported that prison workers were being used by a subcontractor to make
telephone calls on behalf of my campaign," said Bloomberg, the wealthiest
individual in the Democratic presidential field. "I'm not attacking the
news: the story was fundamentally accurate."
"We only learned about
this when the reporter called us," Bloomberg added, "but as soon as
we discovered which vendor's subcontractor had done this, we immediately ended
our relationship with the company and the people who hired them."
The Intercept reported Tuesday
morning that Bloomberg's presidential campaign contracted the New Jersey-based
call center company ProCom through a third-party vendor. ProCom runs call
centers in New Jersey and Oklahoma.
"Two of the call centers
in Oklahoma are operated out of state prisons," The Intercept reported.
"In at least one of the two prisons, incarcerated people were contracted
to make calls on behalf of the Bloomberg campaign."
An anonymous source told The
Intercept that people incarcerated at the Dr. Eddie Warrior Correctional
Center, an Oklahoma women's prison, were making calls to California for
Bloomberg's campaign.
"The people were required
to end their calls by disclosing that the calls were paid for by the Bloomberg
campaign," according to The Intercept. "They did not disclose,
however, that they were calling from behind bars."
Bloomberg's campaign said it
ended the arrangement with ProCom Monday after The Intercept inquired
about the use of prison labor.
Alex Friedmann, managing
editor of Prison Legal News, told The Intercept that "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."
Friedmann said that while it
is "entirely possible" Bloomberg was not aware that incarcerated
people were making calls on behalf of his campaign, "that's like saying
department stores making clothes in southeast Asia don’t know that 5-year-olds
are stitching together their soccer balls."
David Klion, news editor
at Jewish Currents, said the billionaire presidential candidate's use of
prison labor "shouldn't be seen as just a fuckup or a moral failing."
"There should be legal
and civil consequences for it. Compelling political speech from incarcerated
people should be considered unconstitutional," Klion tweeted.
"It's honestly one of the most evil things we’ve ever seen from a
presidential campaign, and hopefully Bloomberg’s campaign will end with him
paying out unimaginable sums to the people he exploited. In a just world it
would."
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