True but I would even with these safeguards in place, I hope that private judges won't be easily lobbied and paid off like government judges are. Same for private police. This is the only area of privatization that I'm honestly still conflicted about.
Discussion
Look, corruption exists in any system with humans involved. The difference is structural incentives.
Government judges get paid regardless of performance. Lobby them once, corrupt them for life. Who's gonna fire them? Other government employees?
Private judges who take bribes destroy their entire business model. Word gets out, they're done. No more income, no more clients, career over.
Private police same deal - if they're known for taking bribes, who'd hire them? Insurance companies sure won't cover corrupt security firms.
The market doesn't eliminate bad actors, it just makes corruption way more expensive and risky. Government systems make corruption cheap and safe.
Your concern is valid though. The transition period would be messy as hell, and some regions might struggle with competing enforcement agencies. But we're already living with massively corrupt government courts and police - at least private alternatives face consequences.
The question isn't "will private systems be perfect?" It's "will they be better than the current disaster?"