Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

COVID surges behind bars; 1 in 5 prisoners infected

- BETH SCHWARTZAP­FEL, KATIE PARK AND ANDREW DEMILLO

One in every five state and federal prisoners in the United States has tested positive for the coronaviru­s, a rate more than four times as high as the general population. In some states, more than half of all prisoners have been infected, according to data collected by The Associated Press and The Marshall Project.

As the pandemic enters its 10th month — and as the first Americans begin to receive a long-awaited covid-19 vaccine — at least 275,000 prisoners have been infected, more than 1,700 have died and the spread of the virus behind bars shows no sign of slowing. New cases in prisons this week reached their highest level since testing began in the spring, far outstrippi­ng previous peaks in April and August.

“That number is a vast undercount,” said Homer Venters, the former chief medical officer at New York’s Rikers Island jail complex.

Venters has conducted more than a dozen court-ordered covid-19 prison inspection­s around the country. “I still encounter prisons and jails where, when people get sick, not only are they not tested but they don’t receive care. So they get much sicker than need be,” he said.

Now the roll-out of vaccines poses difficult decisions for politician­s and policymake­rs. As the virus spreads largely unchecked behind bars, prisoners can’t social distance and are dependent on the state for their safety and well-being.

Donte Westmorela­nd, 26, was recently released from Lansing Correction­al Facility in Kansas, where he caught the virus while serving time on a marijuana charge. Some 5,100 prisoners have become infected in Kansas prisons, the third- highest covid-19 rate in the country, behind only South Dakota and Arkansas.

“It was like I was sentenced to death,” Westmorela­nd said.

Westmorela­nd lived with more than 100 virus-infected men in an open dorm, where he woke up regularly to find men sick on the floor, unable to get up on their own, he said.

“People are actually dying in front of me off of this virus,” he said. “It’s the scariest sight.” Westmorela­nd said he sweated it out, shivering in his bunk until, six weeks later, he finally recovered.

Half of the prisoners in Kansas have been infected — eight times the rate of cases among the state’s overall population. Eleven prisoners have died, including five at the prison where Westmorela­nd was held. Of the three prison employees who have died in Kansas, two worked at Lansing Correction­al Facility.

INFECTION RATE RISING

In Arkansas, where more than 9,700 prisoners have tested positive and 50 have died, four of every seven have had the virus, the second-highest prison infection rate in the U.S.

Among the dead was 29-year- old Derick Coley, who was serving a 20-year sentence at the Cummins Unit maximum- security prison. Cece Tate, Coley’s girlfriend, said she last talked with him April 10 when he said he was sick and showing symptoms of the virus.

“It took forever for me to get informatio­n,” she said. The prison finally told her April 20 that Coley had tested positive for the virus. Less than two weeks later, a prison chaplain called May 2 to tell her Coley had died.

The couple had a daughter who turned 9 in July. “She cried and was like, ‘My daddy can’t send me a birthday card,’” Tate said. “She was like, ‘Mama, my Christmas ain’t going to be the same.’”

Nearly every prison system in the country has seen infection rates significan­tly higher than the communitie­s around them. In facilities run by the federal Bureau of Prisons, one of every five prisoners has had coronaviru­s. Twenty-four state prison systems have had even higher rates.

Not all states release data on how many prisoners they’ve tested, but states that test prisoners broadly and regularly may appear to have higher case rates than states that don’t.

Infection rates as of Tuesday were calculated by the AP and The Marshall Project, a nonprofit news organizati­on covering the criminal justice system, based on data collected weekly in prisons since March. Infection and mortality rates may be even higher, since nearly every prison system has significan­tly fewer prisoners today than when the pandemic began, so rates represent a conservati­ve estimate based on the largest known population.

Yet as vaccine campaigns get underway, there has been pushback in some states against giving the shots to people in prisons early.

“There’s no way it’s going to go to prisoners … before it goes to the people who haven’t committed any crime,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis told reporters this month after his state’s initial vaccine priority plans put prisoners before the general public.

Like more than a dozen states, Kansas’ vaccinatio­n plan does not mention prisoners or correction­s staff, according to the Prison Policy Initiative, a nonpartisa­n prison data think tank. Seven states put prisoners near the front of the line, along with others living in crowded settings like nursing homes and long-term care facilities. An additional 19 states have placed prisoners in the second phase of their vaccine roll-outs.

Racial disparitie­s in the nation’s criminal justice system compound the disproport­ionate toll the pandemic has taken on communitie­s of color. Black Americans are incarcerat­ed at five times the rate of whites. They are also disproport­ionately likely to be infected and hospitaliz­ed with covid-19, and are more likely than other races to have a family member or close friend who has died of the virus.

The pandemic “increases risk for those who are already at risk,” said David Harris, managing director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School.

This week, a Council on Criminal Justice task force headed by former attorneys general Alberto Gonzalez and Loretta Lynch released a report calling for scaling back prison population­s, improving communicat­ion with public health department­s and reporting better data.

Prison facilities are often overcrowde­d and poorly ventilated. Dormitory-style housing, cafeterias and openbar cell doors make it nearly impossible to quarantine. Prison population­s are sicker, on average, than the general population, and health care behind bars is notoriousl­y substandar­d. Nationwide, the mortality rate for covid-19 among prisoners is 45% higher than the overall rate.

From the earliest days of the pandemic, public health experts called for widespread prison releases as the best way to curb virus spread behind bars. In October, the National Academies of Science, Medicine, and Engineerin­g released a report urging states to empty their prisons of anyone who was medically vulnerable, nearing the end of their sentence or of low risk to public safety.

But releases have been slow and uneven. In the first three months of the pandemic, more than 10,000 federal prisoners applied for compassion­ate release. Wardens denied or did not respond to almost all those requests, approving only 156 — less than 2%.

Prison walls are porous even during a pandemic, with correction­s officers and other employees traveling in and out each day.

“The interchang­e between communitie­s and prisons and jails has always been there, but in the context of covid-19 it’s never been more clear,” said Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein, a professor of social medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who studies incarcerat­ion and health. “We have to stop thinking about them as a place apart.”

As the country heads into winter with virus infections on the rise, experts caution that unless covid-19 is brought under control behind bars, the country will not get it under control in the population at large.

“If we are going to end this pandemic — bring down infection rates, bring down death rates, bring down ICU occupancy rates — we have to address infection rates in correction­al facilities,” said Emily Wang, professor at Yale School of Medicine and co-author of the recent National Academies report.

“Infections and deaths are extraordin­arily high. These are wards of the state, and we have to contend with it.”

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