Private prison company sells two of California’s immigrant detention centers to the feds - The Business Journal 15%

By Ben Hensley40%

7/6/2026, 2:29:18 PM

BS Summary: This article contains 1 faulty reasoning type, including Attempt to Sell a Product or Service, with Attempt to Sell a Product or Service as the most egregious example at 9.4% saturation with 64 hits. Analysis detected 64 faulty-reasoning hits from 678 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 31.8% and a BS Rank of 15% (11,952 of 13,932 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 85.80% of the article peer group.

This story was originally published by CalMatters . 
The private prison company CoreCivic has sold two of the largest immigration detention facilities in California to the U.S. 
Department of Homeland Security in a deal worth $1.5 billion, the company announced Monday. 
CoreCivic said it anticipates that the sale of the Otay Mesa Detention Center in San Diego County and the California City Detention Facility in Kern County will bring the company an estimated net proceeds of approximately $1.1 billion. 
The sale closed on July 2, according to a recent filing with the U.S. 
Securities and Exchange Commission , with the federal government paying $739.2 million for the 1994-bed Otay Mesa facility and $732.6 million for the newly-opened 2,560-bed California City facility. 
The two properties were sold under separate purchase agreements, signed and completed on the same day. 
CoreCivic said in a news release that it expects to continue running the day-to-day operations of both facilities under existing management contracts with the U.S. 
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. 
The company acknowledged in its filing that the terms of those contracts could be renegotiated now that the federal government owns both properties outright. 
There’s no guarantee CoreCivic will keep its operating contracts, the company said in the SEC filing. 
The California City contract runs through August 2027, and the Otay Mesa contract runs through December 2029, with an option to extend for five more years. 
California law allows state and local officials to inspect immigrant detention centers , and Democratic leaders have drawn attention to conditions at both sites since President Donald Trump began his second term. 
Eight ICE detention centers are operating within the state, up from six since former President Joe Biden left office. 
The Otay Mesa facility has been at the center of an ongoing legal fight over local health inspections. 
San Diego County officials sued the federal government and CoreCivic in March after claiming health inspectors were blocked from a full inspection under a 2024 state law. 
A federal judge later granted county health officials access to the detention center . 
California City opened last year in eastern Kern County about 100 miles north of Los Angeles in a site the company previously operated as a state prison. 
The company also disclosed that it is having ongoing talks with ICE about selling the federal government additional detention facilities, though it said those discussions are in the early stages of a deal and may not close. 
Maryland-based CoreCivic said the proceeds from the sale, which would be about $1.1 billion after taxes and transaction costs, could go toward paying down its bank credit and retiring $238.5 billion in senior notes coming due in 2027. 
Any remaining funds are earmarked for further debt reduction or possibly stock buybacks. 
Patrick Swindle, the president of CoreCivic, said in the news release, “We are pleased with the sales of these two mission-critical facilities for the Company’s government partner, while reflecting our role as a long-term, flexible solutions provider to government.” 
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Confirmation Bias
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Anchoring Bias
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Availability Heuristic
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Representativeness Heuristic
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Hindsight Bias
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Overconfidence Bias
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Framing Effect
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Loss Aversion
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Status Quo Bias
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Sunk Cost Effect
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Optimism Bias
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Pessimism Bias
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Negativity Bias
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Self-Serving Bias
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Fundamental Attribution Error
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Actor-Observer Bias
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In-Group Bias
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Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
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Halo Effect
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Horn Effect
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Dunning-Kruger Effect
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Recency Bias
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Primacy Effect
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Blind-Spot Bias
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Ad Hominem
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Straw Man
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Appeal to Authority
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False Dilemma
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Slippery Slope
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Circular Reasoning
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Hasty Generalization
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Red Herring
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Bandwagon
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Appeal to Emotion
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Begging the Question
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Post Hoc (False Cause)
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Tu Quoque
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Burden of Proof
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Appeal to Nature
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Composition/Division
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Anecdotal
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No True Scotsman
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Ambiguity (Equivocation)
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Gambler’s Fallacy
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Middle Ground
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Personal Incredulity
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Special Pleading
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Genetic Fallacy
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Unattributed Quote
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Quote-first Misdirection
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Biased Writer Voice
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Indoctrination
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Politically Left Leaning Bias
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Politically Right Leaning Bias
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Attempt to Sell a Product or Service
9.4%

678 words analyzed.

Analysis

Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.