Politics & Government
Bacon Slams Stimulus Payments To Prisoners, Citing Numbers From IRS
Prisoner advocates nationally have argued that the additional funds sent to inmates help stabilize their families.

By Aaron Sanderford
September 2, 2022
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OMAHA β About $1.3 billion in COVID-19-related stimulus payments that Congress sent to Americans under two presidents reached people in prison.
The Internal Revenue Service confirmed the tally to prisoners from stimulus payments in 2020 and 2021 in a July response to a letter from U.S. Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb.
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The IRS response did not say how many inmates had received payments. It said 1.1 million stimulus payments had been made to state and federal inmates since October 2020, after a judge ruled that the payments were allowed because Congress hadnβt restricted inmates from receiving them.
Bacon, who voted against the stimulus payments in February under President Joe Biden, described the payments to prisoners as βan example of the fiscal recklessness of Democrats.β
In December 2020, Bacon had voted in favor of stimulus payments, during President Donald Trumpβs administration. Asked about that vote, Bacon said, βWe didnβt realize the first stimulus went to prisoners. When we did, we tried to do something about it.β
House Republicans, including Bacon, supported an amendment to the American Rescue Plan Act under Biden to exclude prisoners. Democrats rejected it, however, and passed the bill, Bacon said.
State Sen. Terrell McKinney of Omaha, who advocates respect for the rights of incarcerated people, said those stimulus dollars were worth spending on people in prison.
βA majority of them are not economically well-off,β he said. βThat helps them be able to talk with family, to be able to buy food and life essentials inside, to not burden their families.β
Families with loved ones in prison often struggle to support them behind bars, he said. Many of those family members are single parents or grandparents living on fixed incomes.
And inmates, including those serving life sentences, are still Americans and human beings with rights, McKinney said. Over 90% of inmates will one day re-enter society, he pointed out.
βWeβre either going to treat them as people, or theyβre going to continue to cycle in and out,β McKinney said.
Bacon said he wrote to the IRS after seeing a news story in February about the issue. He said he wanted more details, including how many death row inmates received the payments.
The IRS told him 163,000 stimulus payments had been sent to inmates serving life sentences without parole. IRS data doesnβt separate out inmates serving death sentences.
βPeople on death row shouldnβt be getting a stimulus check,β Bacon said. βIf youβre going to do anything with that, give it to their victims. β¦ They (the inmates) are living off the taxpayer.β
Prisoner advocates nationally have argued that the additional funds sent to inmates help stabilize their families, already at risk because of having a loved one behind bars.
Tena Hahn Rodriguez, interim executive director of Omaha-based Black and Pink National, which argues that the prison system should be abolished, said prisoners and families need help.
βThey have families that love them,β she said. βThey work for pennies on the dollar. Thereβs no reason for them to be excluded or their children or their families to be excluded.β
State Sen. Tony Vargas of Omaha, Baconβs opponent in the 2nd Congressional District race, declined to weigh in on Baconβs letter or whether state and federal prisoners should have received stimulus checks.
Vargas has criticized Bacon in recent months for voting against ARPA, which included stimulus funds. In a previous interview, Vargas said he would have supported the bill.
Said Bacon: βIf you voted for that, you voted for this.β
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