After leaving the government, Allbaugh capitalized on his ties with the Bush administration by going into private business ventures connected with Bush's policy objectives. He and Republican strategist Ed Rogers founded New Bridge Strategies to help clients "evaluate and take advantage of business opportunities in the Middle East following the conclusion of the US-led war in Iraq". Allbaugh also co-chaired Diligence-Iraq, founded by former CIA and FBI chief William Webster and 40 percent owned by a wealthy Kuwaiti politician, which partnered with New Bridge to advise and provide security for companies doing business there. Allbaugh also started his own firm, which he merged in 2004 with that of his wife Diane, who had worked as a lobbyist at the Republican firm of Barbour Griffith & Rogers during his government service. The Allbaugh Company is commonly described as a lobbying and consulting firm, although Joe Allbaugh himself says he only consults with clients on presenting their services to government agencies, and does not lobby the government directly for contracts.
The Wall Street Journal compared his work to that of his predecessor at FEMA,
James Lee Witt, who also provided consulting and lobbying services after leaving government service. Major Allbaugh Company clients include
The Shaw Group and Halliburton subsidiary
KBR. Though no longer affiliated with FEMA, Allbaugh traveled to the Gulf Coast after
Hurricane Katrina to help coordinate private-sector support, according to his spokeswoman. His clients were among the first to win federal contracts to help with hurricane recovery: Shaw won a bid potentially worth $100 million to refurbish buildings and provide emergency housing, and KBR received $29.8 million from the Pentagon to rebuild Navy bases in Louisiana and Mississippi. On July 12, 2006, Emergent Biosolutions, maker of an anthrax vaccine under its former name
BioPort, announced that Allbaugh joined the board of directors. During the years before Allbaugh's appointment, BioPort had a troubled relationship with the US
Food and Drug Administration. In September 2006, Allbaugh was elected president of Ecosphere Systems, Inc. He also sits on the board of directors of the
National Rifle Association of America.
Senior Advisor to Rudy Giuliani The
Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee announced on October 30, 2007, that Joe Allbaugh would serve as Senior Advisor to the
Rudy Giuliani presidential campaign. Allbaugh was to advise the campaign on general strategy and homeland security. Allbaugh stated that "Rudy Giuliani is the only candidate who will keep America on offense in the Terrorists’ War on Us".
Director, Oklahoma Department of Corrections Oklahoma Department of Corrections (DOC) Director Joseph Allbaugh requested a $23 million supplemental appropriation to get through until June 30. 2016. The supplemental appropriation was needed to pay for-profit prison corporations
CoreCivic and
GEO Group to hold overflow inmates, salaries for uniformed staff, which are extremely low, and prisoner medical bills. The DOC must adhere to mandated standards regarding inmate services to remain in constitutional compliance. With the threat it would lock out 2,600 Oklahoma prison inmates, the owner of Oklahoma's largest private prison successfully lobbied the legislature for a raise this year, the Frontier reports. The GEO Group's sprawling Lawton Correctional Facility holds about 10 percent of Oklahoma's prison population. With Oklahoma's prisons operating at 114 percent capacity, the private corrections company has the bargaining power to ask the state for more money. In June, the Oklahoma Department of Corrections signed a five-year deal with The GEO Group to house inmates in Lawton that contained a rate increase worth an estimated $2.8 million. Florida's GEO Group hasn't consistently met the terms of its Oklahoma contract. The for-profit prison operator frequently failed its contractual contract violations at its
Lawton, Oklahoma prison, one that houses some of Oklahoma's most dangerous prisoners. The Oklahoma DOC notified GEO regarding multiple violations at the Lawton Correctional Facility in 2017 and 2018, including the delayed releases of several offenders, the improper use of restraints, missing or improperly recorded prisoner counts, and failure to adhere to medication and nursing protocols. In 2017, the DOC fined GEO Group $380,000 for delaying the release of a Lawton prisoner by 304 late subsequent to the modification of his sentence. The GEO Group has a history of problems with such improper releases at Lawton, said Allbaugh: "Private prisons do not run their facilities to our standards, but they are supposed to adhere to our operational protocols." "The only way you can get their attention is financial sanctions." On April 17, 2019, Allbaugh reported the DOC is "getting closer every day" to obtaining the equipment necessary to resume the death penalty, although no firm date has been set for executions to resume. The DOC said in 2018 it will replace lethal injection with "nitrogen hypoxia." a procedure which supposedly will painlessly smother an unconscious person. Without such a machine, the DOC has been unable to resume executions that had been horribly botched in recent years.
Richard Glossip, whose guilt has been widely questioned, has had his execution postponed numerous times due to faulty protocols. ==Personal life==