The News-Times

Suit: Some FCI inmates at ‘grave risk’ of COVID-19

- By Kelan Lyons

Attorneys from a Stamford law firm, Quinnipiac University School of Law and Yale Law School filed a class action federal lawsuit Monday night to force authoritie­s to take emergency measures to protect the more than 1,000 men and women incarcerat­ed at the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Danbury.

“Public health experts uniformly agree that prisons are hot spots for the spread of COVID-19 that require prison officials to take swift action to protect the lives of those in their custody,” said Sarah Russell, a professor at Quinnipiac University and one of the lawyers on the case. “FCI Danbury has completely disregarde­d these warnings, placing incarcerat­ed people at an unbearable and unconstitu­tional risk of contractin­g the disease.”

The lawsuit alleges the Bureau of Prisons and Danbury prison officials are aware of the dangers posed by COVID-19 but have failed to take action to protect those in their custody.

Due to the “unlawful and unconstitu­tional confinemen­t,” the suit’s petitioner­s are seeking an emergency order to immediatel­y transfer the prison’s most medically vulnerable inmates to home confinemen­t, and the implementa­tion of social distancing and hygiene measures for those who remain incarcerat­ed, to lower the risk of spreading the virus.

A request seeking comment from the Bureau of Prisons was not immediatel­y answered Tuesday morning.

Attorney General William Barr ordered the expedited release of inmates from the low-security Danbury penitentia­ry to home confinemen­t, but it is unclear how many incarcerat­ed people have been sent home to serve out their sentence. More than 40 inmates

and 30 staff have contracted the virus, making it one of the largest outbreaks in the federal prison system.

The case features four named incarcerat­ed plaintiffs, all of whom have underlying medical conditions that, the suit alleges, put them at risk of death if they contract COVID-19: Dianthe MartinezBr­ooks, a 50-year-old woman who suffers from lupus, asthma and hypertensi­on; Rejeanne Collier, a 64-year-old woman with lupus, hepatitis C and hypertensi­on, and who has been treated for cancer since becoming incarcerat­ed; Jackie Madore, a 50-year-old woman who has hypertensi­on, hypothyroi­dism and hepatitis C; and Kenneth Cassidy, a 54-year-old man who has suffered three heart attacks and suffers from chronic asthma. None of the plaintiffs are Connecticu­t residents.

Because of each inmate’s

medical conditions, the suit says, they each face a “grave risk” that they will “not make it out of FCI Danbury alive or will become terribly ill.”

The lawsuit alleges officials have been “deliberate­ly indifferen­t to the known serious medical needs” of the four plaintiffs. Officials routinely deny inmates have fevers by attributin­g high temperatur­es to medical equipment or operator error, or by requiring sick inmates to drink a glass of ice water before testing them again. Even when medical staff confirm the fever, inmates are often sent back to their units and told to take Tylenol.

Those incarcerat­ed at the prison live in close quarters, with 100 people sleeping beside each other in bunk beds, sharing communal bathrooms and dining areas. Many individual­s have high fevers or difficulty breathing, the lawsuit says, but have not

been tested or removed from crowded living spaces.

Unlike many prisons in the federal system, the suit says, Danbury does not have a separate medical unit or facility for sick inmates. There is no space where someone who is ill can recover, isolated from their peers. And, the correction­al facility has a “woefully inadequate” number of nasal swab COVID-19 test kits, requiring prison staff to ration them and refuse testing inmates exhibiting symptoms of the virus.

Failure to isolate sick inmates and staff from the healthy population creates a serious risk for others, the class action lawsuit states. The lawsuit also alleges that those who complain of symptoms of COVID-19 are unable to immediatel­y obtain a medical exam, are not tested for the virus and are returned to the general population until the symptoms worsen. Instead, the lawsuit says, prison staff tell the sick they “did the crime” and should “do the time,” and that the virus is not “going to get you out of prison.”

“The only effective way to minimize the potential devastatio­n from COVID-19 in BOP facilities generally and at FCI Danbury in particular is to downsize immediatel­y the incarcerat­ed population and, for the prisoners who remain at the institutio­n, to undertake aggressive­ly the detection, prevention, and treatment measures that public health and medical experts have recommende­d, including effective social distancing,” the lawsuit says. “These measures are not possible in prisons, like FCI Danbury, without substantia­l reductions in the prisoner population.”

 ?? U.S. Bureau of Prisons ?? A federal class action lawsuit has been filed aimed to protect the more than 1,000 inmates at the Danbury prison amid coronaviru­s concerns.
U.S. Bureau of Prisons A federal class action lawsuit has been filed aimed to protect the more than 1,000 inmates at the Danbury prison amid coronaviru­s concerns.

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