Exploiting incarcerated people is lucrative business. For The Lever, Katya Schwenk pulls back the curtain on Smart Communications, a prison technology company that has made millions charging incarcerated people and their families for basic communication—squeezing money from an already vulnerable population and further severing their connection to loved ones and the outside world. At the center of this story is Jon Logan, the company’s flashy CEO, who is now fighting to keep control of the business after his father’s death. (Think Succession, but without an annoyingly charming Kieran Culkin-type sibling to root for.) Schwenk’s reporting unpacks a bitter family feud and, zooming out, the larger corruption within the for-profit prison industry in the US.

Perks for prison bosses have always been a central feature of this business, although they have not always taken the form of strip clubs and Caribbean cruises. As phone companies jockeyed for prison contracts in the ’80s, they began to court corrections officials by offering agencies a share of the revenue. For every $1 a prisoner spent on a phone call, say, the phone company would take 60 cents, and the prison would take the rest. Perversely, then, phone companies competed in the prison market not by decreasing rates but by raising them.

More picks about incarceration

Locked In, Priced Out

Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg and Ethan Corey | The Appeal | April 17, 2024 | 2,697 words

“The Appeal’s 9-month investigation uncovered prison commissaries’ exploitative, inconsistent systems with inside prices up to five times higher than in the community and markups as high as 600 percent.”

In Harm’s Way

Susie Cagle | The Marshall Project and Grist | October 24, 2023

“How decades-old decisions to build two California prisons in a dry lakebed and a chaotic climate left 8,000 incarcerated people at risk.”

Contraband Marginalia

Kasey Butcher Santana | Split Lip Magazine | September 14, 2024 | 2,004 words

“When I checked in the books, I was supposed to look for notes or objects hidden inside.”

Chrishona Hodges’s Life Sentence

Elly Fishman | Chicago Magazine | January 7, 2025 | 7,034 words

“At a crossroads when Chicago profiled him nine years ago, Jerryon Stevens is now in jail, awaiting trial on a murder charge. At home, his mother reckons with her son’s path — and tries to hold her fractured family together.”

Cheri has been an editor at Longreads since 2014.