Los Angeles Times

Virus cases soaring at state prison

San Quentin now has the largest number of active infections, according to officials.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Sean Greene

The number of infections at San Quentin State Prison in Marin County continues to soar, with more than 500 inmates infected, officials said Thursday.

The pace at which infections have been detected at San Quentin has risen quickly. According to tallies released by Marin County, there were 16 inmates at the prison who had tested positive on June 14, but 489 have been diagnosed since then.

State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) said in a statement this week that the outbreak at San Quentin occurred after 121 inmates were transferre­d from the California Institutio­n for Men in Chino late last month, none of whom had been tested up to a month prior to the transfer.

“The outbreak at San Quentin is at once tragic, predictabl­e and unacceptab­le. The fact that 121 men were transferre­d to San Quentin from Chino without being tested is stunning,”

Wiener said.

He urged the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion to reduce the prison population at San Quentin and implement a policy that anyone released or transferre­d from any prison be tested before being moved.

A memo from health experts dated June 15 that was published by the San Francisco Chronicle warned that a failure to meet urgent needs at San Quentin would not only have dire implicatio­ns for men incarcerat­ed at the prison as well as staff, but also affect the healthcare capacity of hospitals in the San Francisco Bay Area.

San Quentin State Prison has the largest number of patients with active coronaviru­s infections, according to the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

There have been a total of 542 coronaviru­s cases among inmates, with 539 who are infected and still in custody, and 73 among staff, with six having returned to work.

The massive graniteblo­ck San Quentin prison, built in 1852 on a Marin County bluff overlookin­g the bay, is the oldest prison in the state. It houses thousands of inmates, including all of the state’s male death row population.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? STATE SEN. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) has called the outbreak at San Quentin State Prison, pictured in 2016, “tragic, predictabl­e and unacceptab­le.”
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times STATE SEN. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) has called the outbreak at San Quentin State Prison, pictured in 2016, “tragic, predictabl­e and unacceptab­le.”

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