6 troubling questions about the Corizon bankruptcy deal
A Corizon sign in front of a large brick-and-glass building
Corizon Health's headquarters in Brentwood, Tennessee, in February 2017. Last year the company moved its registration to Dallas and pulled a Texas Two-Step.Kristoffer Tripplaar / Alamy Stock Photo
  • The bankruptcy of prison health provider Corizon has faced pressure from senators and a federal regulator in recent weeks.

  • A proposed deal is now in doubt after a judge's secret romantic relationship with an attorney was revealed.

  • Other troubling questions surrounding the bankruptcy involve payments to insiders, "dishonest" testimony, and a secret data breach.

It's been a tumultuous few weeks for the bankrupt prison healthcare contractor Tehum, formerly known as Corizon Health. In the latest twist, a group of powerful US senators sent a lengthy inquiry to the company Tuesday pressing for answers about what they describe as "abusive" bankruptcy tactics.

The letter comes on the heels of a hearing last week, where Christopher Lopez, a federal bankruptcy judge in Houston, hit the brakes on Tehum's proposed settlement — a deal that, the senators note, would offer current and former prisoners "pennies on the dollar" to resolve medical-malpractice suits against the company.

Days earlier, David Jones, the judge serving as mediator in the bankruptcy settlement talks, resigned after Insider broke the news of allegations that he was in an undisclosed romantic relationship with Elizabeth Freeman, a Houston bankruptcy attorney. She represented another Corizon successor company, YesCare, in the negotiations.

YesCare got all of Corizon's corrections contracts after the company engaged in a controversial legal maneuver last year called the Texas Two-Step that involved splitting Corizon in two. The other company, Tehum, was saddled with most of Corizon's liabilities and, in February, filed for bankruptcy.

A letter from the US Senate
Nine US senators have written to Corizon successor companies Tehum Care Services and YesCare demanding answers about Corizon's efforts to "manipulate bankruptcy law."US Senate

Insider has been following the story of Corizon since August, revealing in an investigation — based on leaked documents, business filings, public-records requests, voluminous court filings, and dozens of interviews — that a group of investors with dubious business histories quietly bought out the company in 2021 and engaged in financial maneuvers so opaque and controversial that a former Corizon CEO described them in a lawsuit as "an old-fashioned bankruptcy fraud scheme."

The US Trustee Program, an arm of the Justice Department, filed a 16-page objection in the case earlier this month. Among other concerns, the objection cited the conflicts involving Jones as mediator.

With the next hearing expected in early November, Insider compiled a list of six major issues that now hang over the deal. Tehum did not respond to a request for comment.

1. Judge Jones' conflict of interest.

Jones' relationship with Freeman, YesCare's attorney, has sparked fresh questions among creditors about the fairness of the proposed deal.