Baltimore Sun

Visits to prisoners to resume today

Temporary ban at Maryland correction­al facilities was over staff safety issues

- By Jessica Anderson Baltimore Sun reporter Christina Tkacik contribute­d to this article. jkanderson@baltsun.com twitter.com/janders5

Visits and mail service will return to Maryland correction­al facilities in time for the Labor Day weekend after a ban was implemente­d in response to safety concerns in other states, Maryland prison officials said Thursday.

Imposed Wednesday, the ban will be lifted effective today after state correction­al officials searched the state’s 24 prisons for any potentiall­y harmful contraband, a statement from Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correction­al Services said.

“Our mission is to protect the public, our staff and those in our custody so we thought the precaution­s necessary,” Department Secretary Stephen T. Moyer said in a statement. “Our staff worked quickly to ensure that our inmates will have their visits and mail for the holiday weekend.”

Visits and mail service were halted after staff and inmates at facilities in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia became sick from possible drug exposure.

At an Ohio prison, 28 people became sick with signs of opioid exposure Wednesday, according to the Ohio State Highway Patrol. Pennsylvan­ia’s state prisons were on lockdown while investigat­ors looked into similar incidents there.

Maryland officials said Thursday that they found no threats. Prisons were locked down for a day while officials conducted extensive searches and K-9 dogs scanned all prison mail throughout the state.

The ban ends just before the three-day weekend begins. Many families travel to facilities in Hagerstown or on the Eastern Shore to visit inmates, and often stay the night to lengthen time spent with relatives.

Prisoners also will be allowed to receive mail again. During the ban, mail was not to be opened or distribute­d until staff received protective equipment.

ACLU of Maryland staff attorney Sonia Kumar said Thursday, before the department announced it was lifting the ban, that staff had heard from families of inmates, expressing concern about how long it would last.

“You can imagine the enormous fear that people have when they have an announceme­nt like that,” she said. “There’s a lot of concern.”

For many inmates and their families, the visits are crucial, she said.

Kumarquest­ioned the need for the ban, as the department did not publicly explain how the incidents reported in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia might be tied to Maryland.

“There’s no doubt that everyone is in favor of safety and security, but there’s nothing that has been articulate­d, no specific concerns,” to justify the ban here, she said.

A correction­al services spokesman declined to comment on Kumar’s concerns.

The visitation and mail ban occurred as more prisoners nationally are dying from opioid overdoses.

In June, officials said Deniro Bellamy of Randallsto­wn was found collapsed at the Baltimore Central Booking and Intake Center, and he later died. The medical examiner said the cause was morphine and fentanyl intoxicati­on.

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