Everybody has seen old films that show prisoners being used for labor, whether it is to create mailbags or skin potatoes. While it seems like something from a bygone era, prison labor is still remarkably popular around the world and many countries utilize those who have been incarcerated to make all types of products. With the advent of private facilities run by businesses, it isn’t surprising that they would look to find ways to earn extra money. It’s not just the things you might think they might produce either, inmates have been used to put together all types of surprising and shocking things.'
7. Picnic Tables
7. Picnic Tables
Picnic tables and benches are essential items for any public park, giving families the chance to relax and eat their food in the peaceful surroundings. Many of those in the United States come through the PRIDE program that the government runs in various prisoners to teach them skills that they can use in civilian life when they are released.
6. Baseball Caps
6. Baseball Caps
Baseball caps are used around the world but inmates in prisons make many in the United States. The government run UNICOR have prisoners make thousands of the pieces of clothing and then sell them on to private companies.
5. Braille Books
5. Braille Books
The United States has more than 30 prisons that are currently involved in creating books exclusively for the blind. The program is run through the American Printing House for the Blind and helps blind students to study through the creation of braille textbooks.
4 .Military Equipment
4 .Military Equipment
Another product of UNICOR is military equipment. Cheap prison labor gives the government a chance to get access to inexpensive equipment for their armed forces, including jackets, holsters, body armor, helmets and even shoes.
3. Canoes
3. Canoes
Woodcarving is a popular pastime in prison as it teaches valuable skills to inmates that they can use to try to get a job when they are released. This means that facilities can produce a number of wooden items, including canoes that can sell for upwards of $1,500.
2. Horses
2. Horses
Colorado operates a particular scheme called the Wild Horses Inmate Program, which sees prisoners train horses in various skills, so that others can adopt them. This usually involves taking in wild mustangs and the program boasts it has trained more than 5,000 of the animals.
1. Lingerie
1. Lingerie
Lingerie is probably one of the last things that you would expect prisoners to have created but Victoria’s Secret and J. C. Penney employed a collection of inmates to make underwear during the 1990s. This was done through a scheme involving subcontractor Third Generation and a facility in South Carolina.