Imperial Valley Press

Inmate transfer caused health disaster at prison

- BY DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California prison officials wanted to shield inmates from the coronaviru­s at one facility by transferri­ng them to another but instead unleashed a “public health disaster” that led to thousands of prisoners being infected and 28 dying, along with a correction­al officer, the state inspector general said Monday.

The report provided new details on last spring’s catastroph­ic decision to move inmates from the California Institutio­n for Men east of Los Angeles to San Quentin State Prison north of San Francisco. The inmates were put onto buses for the more than 400-mile (680 kilometer) trip and the tight quarters increased the risk of infections spreading.

The inspector general found that pressure to meet self- imposed deadlines led authoritie­s to ignore warnings from health officials, and outdated tests failed to detect that some of the transferre­d inmates already were infected.

Numerous officials with the state correction­s department and the office of the federal court- appointed receiver who oversees prison medical care knew the tests were too old to be valid, according to the report. Yet emails show a health care executive at the Southern California prison “explicitly ordered that the incarcerat­ed persons not be retested the day before the transfers began.”

Preparatio­ns for the moves at the headquarte­rs level “were deeply flawed and risked the health and lives of thousands of incarcerat­ed persons and staff,” said the report by Inspector General Roy Wesley.

Democratic Assemblyma­n Marc Levine, who represents San Quentin, said the report “is maddening in the scope and scale” of officials’ “fundamenta­l failures.” He again called for the firing of federal receiver J. Clark Kelso, saying his office “knew it was risking a public health disaster.”

Correction­s officials and the receiver’s office issued a joint statement saying the transfers were well- intentione­d and based on risk analysis that comported with what was known about the virus in May.

“We have acknowledg­ed some mistakes were made in the process of the these transfers,” they said. But “there were many factors that contribute­d to the need to move medically high-risk individual­s ... that are not reflected in the report.”

The decision to move inmates from the Southern California prison came while an outbreak was sweeping through the facility, sickening more than 650 inmates and 55 staff. In their concern for the vulnerable inmates, executives “locked themselves into a tight deadline” for the transfers, the report said.

Emails show the resulting pressure led to officials at the Southern California prison “ignoring concerns from health care staff” that 172 of the 189 inmates hadn’t been tested for the virus in at least two weeks. Most went to San Quentin and the rest to California State Prison, Corcoran, in the Central Valley.

The receiver’s office “said MOVE THEM NOW and we are trying to comply,” an unidentifi­ed department­al headquarte­rs manager said in an email acknowledg­ing the old tests.

Officials compounded the error with more missteps.

The prison’s health care staff conducted verbal and temperatur­e screenings, but did so too early to detect if the inmates had symptoms by the time they actually boarded the transfer buses.

And the danger “was exacerbate­d by another inexplicab­le decision,” approved by the federal receiver’s office, to increase the number of inmates on the buses on the grounds that since they were wearing protective masks “the benefit of a more rapid move ... appears to outweigh the risks,” according to an email included in the report.

By the time the inmates reached San Quentin, which at the time had zero confirmed virus cases, nurses immediatel­y noticed that two had coronaviru­s symptoms. But nearly all the transferre­d inmates were put into a housing unit without solid doors, allowing the virus to circulate freely. The report includes a time-lapse video of how the outbreak coursed through the two receiving prisons.

San Quentin’s staff worked different areas on different days, likely aiding the spread.

All told, 91 of the 122 inmates sent to San Quentin became infected, and two died. By the end of August, 2,237 inmates and 277 employees at the facility were infected, and 28 inmates and one correction­al officer had died.

Corcoran had a much smaller outbreak, peaking at 153 cases, after two of the 67 inmates transferre­d there tested positive. The report said it was likely better contained because most inmates there are housed behind solid doors.

Neither prison did proper contract tracing of infected inmates.

Since then, the officials have increased testing, quarantine­s, and the use of personal protective equipment, noting that there have been no recent outbreaks traced to transfers between prisons.

The inspector general acknowledg­ed that the officials have taken multiple steps to improve safety during transfers, including tests no more than five days before a move and a rapid test on the day of the transfer. Such steps “should help prevent future disasters,” the report says, though it notes overall cases spiked to more than 8,500 infected inmates and more than 4,300 infected employees by year’s end.

As of Monday, there were more than 2,200 active inmate cases and nearly 1,200 employee cases in the state prison system.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ERIC RISBERG ?? In this Aug. 16, 2016, file photo, general population inmates walk in a line at San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin, Calif.
AP PHOTO/ERIC RISBERG In this Aug. 16, 2016, file photo, general population inmates walk in a line at San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin, Calif.

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