Chicago Sun-Times

Dart touts efforts, CDC study noting drop in COVID-19 at jail

- BY MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N, STAFF REPORTER mhendricks­on@suntimes.com | @MHendricks­onCST

Tom Dart on Wednesday praised his office’s efforts to contain the coronaviru­s at Cook County Jail, citing a new study spearheade­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that credited the sheriff with successful­ly reducing the number of positive cases at the Southwest Side facility.

The jail — once named a top U.S. hot spot with hundreds of detainees infected — now stands as a model for other institutio­ns on how to curb it, Dart declared.

“We not only bent our curve, we killed off the curve,” Dart said.

As of Wednesday, only 11 detainees had the coronaviru­s. Dart noted that eight of those detainees tested positive before being admitted into the jail, which currently has a population of under 5,000.

Since March, at least seven detainees, three correction­al officers and one sheriff’s deputy died from complicati­ons related to COVID-19, according to Dart’s office.

The CDC study, carried out in conjunctio­n with city and county health officials and researcher­s from the University of Illinois at Chicago, concluded that Dart’s “effective response to the COVID-19 outbreak at [the jail] demonstrat­es the need for dynamic and aggressive applicatio­n of interventi­on strategies, but also shows how timely response can reduce case counts and prevent morbidity and mortality in correction­al or detention facilities.”

But what Dart and the CDC study didn’t mention is the federal lawsuit filed by detainees and civil rights groups, which resulted in a court injunction mandating aggressive social distancing, widespread testing and access to personal protective equipment and hygiene products.

Alexa Van Brunt, an attorney for the MacArthur Justice Center who is representi­ng the detainees, called the CDC’s omission of the suit’s role in the decline of cases “irresponsi­ble.”

“The decrease in infections directly aligns with the timing of those court orders,” Van Brunt said.

The sheriff’s office, which is currently seeking to overturn the injunction on appeal, called the claim “laughable.”

“Virtually all of the measures the CDC found to be effective were already in place prior to the lawsuit, which even the court acknowledg­ed,” sheriff’s spokesman Matthew Walberg said in an emailed statement. “If anything, the plaintiffs’ attorneys only contributi­on was to hinder our ability to do more, forcing our staff to divert valuable time and energy to respond to their baseless complaints. These people will never cease to perpetuate their lies and alternativ­e world.”

Van Brunt said U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly’s decision not to suspend the injunction in June while the sheriff appeals is evidence the court still believes the orders are necessary.

“To say over and over again that they were doing everything necessary lies in the face of the facts and the court’s findings,” Van Brunt said. “There is still a preliminar­y injunction in place against the sheriff because of his failure to do enough on his own to protect lives.”

Dart Wednesday stressed that his office “has stuck with science from day one.”

“The CDC itself said our work was extraordin­ary [and] beyond effective,” Dart said, adding that there were still many challenges in maintainin­g control over the spread of the coronaviru­s.

There could still be a potential rise in detainee population because of summertime violence and there are more than 400 current inmates who should be in the custody of the Illinois Department of Correction­s, which halted transfers to state facilities in March, Dart said.

Dart said his office is currently in the process of figuring out how to reopen the jail where in-person visitation­s started again last month.

“It has had a remarkable impact on the mood of the entire jail,” Dart said. “Because of all that work, we were the first jail in the country to reinstate visitation.”

 ??  ?? Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart
Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart

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