http://www.ajc.com/news/content/metro/stories/2006/09/18/0919metprison.htmlAll Ora Lee Hurley has to do to get out of prison is pay a $705 fine, according to her attorney.
But every month, she pays the Georgia Department of Corrections $600 for room and board and spends $76 a month for a MARTA card, laundry and some meals. As a result, Hurley has stayed locked up more than eight months past her original 120-day sentence, according to a lawsuit filed Monday by the Southern Center for Human Rights seeking her release.
"This is another debtor's prison case," said Sarah Geraghty, a Southern Center lawyer. "This is a situation where if this woman was able to write a check for the amount of the fine, she would be out of there. And because she can't, she's still in custody. It's as simple as that."
Hurley is an inmate held at the Gateway Diversion Center in Atlanta. She leaves the center for work five days a week at the K&K Soul Food restaurant on Donald L. Hollowell Parkway, earning $6.50 an hour. After taxes, she nets about $700 a month. Room and board at the diversion center is $600 a month. She also pays $52 for a MARTA card, $4 for laundry and $20 for meals every month. She has earned more than $7,000 while at the diversion center, according to the lawsuit.
"Despite diligently working at a restaurant for nearly a year, turning her check over to the (Georgia Department of Corrections) and fulfilling all of the other requirements imposed by the diversion center, Ms. Hurley is still in custody," the lawsuit, filed in Fulton County Superior Court, reads.