Why is the Treasury still investing workers’ retirement in fossil fuels, ICE contractors, and surveillance technology?
A question from Divest Oregon, a coalition of a hundred organizations with strong PERS representation, remains unanswered: What screening process does the Oregon State Treasury (OST) use, if any, when investing PERS funds or choosing investment managers?
Is the Treasury screening investments in fossil fuel companies?
Andrew Bogrand, Divest Oregon’s Communications Director, spoke at the Oregon Investment Council (OIC) in January 2026. He noted that investment in fossil fuels contributes to global instability, using Venezuela as an example. (See
this
blog.) The current Iran war emphasizes this point. Andrew regularly comments on the ties between insecurity and fossil fuels as a policy lead for human rights and natural resource justice at Oxfam.
The argument that fossil fuel investments are a sensible diversification of a portfolio has long been outdated. But looking at the most recently published
June 2025 public equity and fixed income data, the Treasury is still investing in fossil fuels. Under fiduciary duty and the Climate Resilience Investment Act (CRIA), the Treasury must move to alternative investments that align with the reality of climate change and a rapidly destabilizing world.
Is the Treasury screening investments prone to legal liability, human rights abuses, or reputational risk?
In an April 2023 report, Divest Oregon called out the Treasury's investment in private prisons and surveillance technology as context for the question: Does the Treasury
have a screening process? If so, what
is
the screening process? One example given in that report was the NSO/spyware technology that OST heavily invested in.
The Guardian
reported extensively (2022) on the OST’s investment in NSO/Pegasus spyware: “However, it now appears that the Oregon pension fund, one of the most prominent in the US, gave its tacit approval over an investment in NSO several years ago – at a time when security researchers were already
publicly raising alarms about the company.”
In a more recent report, Oregon Treasury’s Investment Screening Failures (October 2025), Divest Oregon again questioned the Treasury’s investment screening process. Examples of questionable investments included GEO Group, CoreCivic, and Palantir.
Investments in GEO Group and CoreCivic fund private prison contractors and ICE detention centers. Investment in Palantir funds ICE surveillance software used against US residents. See additional information below for each of these companies.
The most recent public data (June 2025) shows that the Treasury continues to invest in these private prison and surveillance technology companies with a long history of human rights abuses and legal vulnerability. These companies are central to the current federal administration’s construction of a police state and its massive violation of due process. See
Trump’s Mass Deportation Campaign (The New Yorker
3/15/2026).
For example:
Recent private prison contractor GEO Group news:
- In February 2026, the Supreme Court found that GEO Group, a private prison operator running an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility, cannot claim governmental immunity from lawsuits for violating human trafficking laws, even if those violations were under government orders.
Recent surveillance technology company Palantir news:
- In Portland, now, Palantir’s Elite app is being used to identify potential deportation targets, generate dossiers on individuals and provide a “confidence score” on the person’s address. (The Guardian 3/13/2026)
Why should the Treasury screen its investments?
Screening is necessary to avoid investments that contravene Treasury standards, OIC policy, legal standards including fiduciary duty, or Oregon State law. For instance:
- The Oregon Department of Justice has recently opened an inquiry as to whether OST investment in companies with contractual ties to ICE violates the Oregon Sanctuary Promise Act of 2021.
- The CRIA Act of 2025 mandates that the Treasury:
-- “actively analyze and manage” climate risk to the portfolio
-- report on its progress toward investing in public equity holdings that incorporate
the tenets of a just transition in their overall priorities and portfolio
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Public employee unions react
to private prison investments
- AFT Private Prisons, Immigrant Detention and Investment Risks (2018); Private Prisons and Investment Risks (2020)
Since 2018, AFT (American Federation of Teachers) has highlighted the investment risks to pension funds whose portfolios contain exposure to the private prison industry or contractors who provide services to immigration detention centers. AFT has researched the top publicly traded companies profiting from the detainment of separated families or the incarceration of mass numbers of people in private prisons – and the public pension funds investing in them.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DUYQbFhmAUS/?igsh=eHc0a2tibmxobW0x (2/5/2026)
- AFSCME fights back as private prison corporation asks Supreme Court for a shield from accountability (AFSCME 9/23/2025)
National press coverage on private prison/immigrant detention contractors GEO Group and CoreCivic
- A Private Prison Loses its Immunity Shield (The Lever 3/7/2026)
The Supreme Court unanimously found that GEO Group, a private prison operator running an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility, cannot claim governmental immunity from lawsuits for violating human trafficking laws, even if those violations were under government orders. The lawsuit, filed in 2014, accused GEO Group of forcing immigrants in a Colorado detention center to work, sometimes without pay. The detainees alleged that if they refused, GEO threatened them with solitary confinement.
- Sick Detainees Describe Poor Care at Facilities Run by ICE Contractor: Problems at detention centers operated by CoreCivic extend far beyond recent measles outbreaks. (New York Times 2/14/2026)
- As ICE Buys Up Warehouses, Even Some Trump Voters Say No (New York Times 2/18/2026)
- GEO Group Stock Tanks as Detention Horrors Surface: Shares sink below $19 after scathing reports of abuse and neglect at ICE’s Alexandria deportation hub shake investor confidence. (Migrant Insider 10/16/2025)
- Ninth Circuit affirms for-profit operator of Northwest ICE Processing Center violated labor law (Washington State Office of the Attorney General 1/16/2025)
“Today the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit sided with Attorney General Nick Brown, affirming decisions by a lower court and a jury that found the for-profit operator of the Northwest ICE Processing Center exploited detainee workers and unjustly enriched itself through unlawful labor practices.”
- Controversial ICE Contract Awarded to GEO Group Raises Questions and Sparks Outrage (CSI Market 3/12/2024)
"The immigration detention system in the United States has come under intense scrutiny in recent years due to allegations of mistreatment and substandard conditions in ICE facilities. Reports of overcrowding, lack of access to medical care, and the separation of families have only added fuel to the already contentious debate around immigration policy. This contract raises questions about the government’s commitment to addressing these concerns and ensuring proper oversight and accountability for private companies involved in immigration enforcement.”
- CoreCivic’s Decades of Abuse: Otay Mesa Detention Center(ACLU issue brief, April 2021)
National press coverage on use of Palantir in Oregon by ICE
- ICE agents reveal daily arrest quotas and surveillance app in rare court testimony (The Guardian 3/13/2026)
Many details about Elite’s functions and use by ICE remain unclear, but 404 Media, a tech news site, reported in January that the app was built by Palantir, the data analytics firm that has contracts with the DHS and the Department of Defense. Internal ICE materials reviewed by 404 Media suggested Elite populated a map with potential deportation targets, generated dossiers on individuals and provided a “confidence score” on the person’s address, the site reported. Citing a user guide, 404 Media said Elite was an acronym for “Enhanced Leads Identification & Targeting for Enforcement” and the tool identified “high-value targets” and had a “geospatial lead sourcing tab” to map targets.
National press coverage on Palantir overall
- DHS Opens a Billion-Dollar Tab With Palantir (Wired 2/19/2026)
“The Department of Homeland Security struck a $1 billion purchasing agreement with Palantir last week, further reinforcing the software company’s role in the federal agency that oversees the nation’s immigration enforcement….The agreement simplifies how DHS buys software from Palantir, allowing DHS agencies like Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to essentially skip the competitive bidding process for new purchases of up to $1 billion in products and services from the company.”
- ICE using data and probability to decide where to detain and arrest people: Backed by $160 million in contracts, ICE’s dystopian tech enforcement architecture is straining long-standing legal boundaries (BIOMETRIC UPDATE 1/16/2026)
“U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Enhanced Leads Identification & Targeting for Enforcement (ELITE) tool is being used to identify ‘targets’ and to direct enforcement activity as part of a larger, heavily funded analytics ecosystem built by Palantir Technologies. The problem is that relying on probabilistic ‘confidence scores’ raises fundamental legal questions about warrants, probable cause, and the limits of lawful arrest authority.

Oregon State Treasury should engage or divest from companies fueling a new era of resource conflicts









