Chicago Sun-Times

VIRUS GOING OVER THE WALL?

People released from Cook County Jail could be transmitti­ng COVID-19 in community, study suggests — but sheriff’s office calls analysis ‘fantasy’

- BY BRETT CHASE AND MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N Staff Reporters Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Thousands of people who are arrested, then processed at Cook County Jail and released could be putting the public at risk of being infected with COVID-19, according to research published Thursday.

The peer-reviewed analysis, published online by the journal Health Affairs, shows that COVID-19 case rates were significan­tly higher in ZIP codes with higher rates of arrest and released jail inmates.

Eric Reinhart, a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard University’s Department of Anthropolo­gy, analyzed records for more than 2,000 inmates released in March that he obtained through an open-records request. He then linked that informatio­n with COVID-19 data by ZIP code from the Illinois Department of Public Health. Reinhart concluded for each person arrested, there’s a risk of infecting at least two people in the community with COVID-19, a multiplier effect estimate he called conservati­ve.

“For every person you put in jail, you’re going to infect more people in the community,” Reinhart said in an interview.

In his analysis, the researcher said his findings may help explain “the striking racial disparitie­s” prevalent in COVID cases.

“Although we cannot infer causality, it is possible that, as arrested individual­s are exposed to high-risk spaces for infection in jails and then later released to their communitie­s, the criminal justice system is turning them into potential disease vectors for their families, neighbors and, ultimately, the general public,” the study said.

But Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart’s office strongly disputed the study’s findings and said officials have taken extraordin­ary measures to prevent the spread of the virus since early outbreaks at the jail.

“This study is a fantasy filled with assumption­s bordering on lies,” sheriff’s office spokesman Matthew Walberg said. “The focus is on outdated informatio­n and completely ignores the fact that as a result of our interventi­ons, cases at the jail have dropped precipitou­sly over the past month.”

At the end of April, state health officials reported high numbers of African American and Latino residents tested positive for COVID-19, showing a disproport­ionate number of cases. While African Americans make up 14% of the state’s population, they represente­d 29% of coronaviru­s cases.

Cases at the jail peaked at more than 300 around that time.

“It shows that this infection within the jail cannot be contained within the jail’s walls,”

Alexa Van Brunt, an attorney with the MacArthur Justice Center who is representi­ng detainees in a class-action lawsuit against Dart, said of the study. “The jail is part of the community, and the failure of the jail to protect detainees puts the community in danger.”

A federal judge in April denied the lawsuit’s request for a court order to release or transfer elderly and medically compromise­d detainees during the outbreak, but approved a series of measures to reduce the spread of the virus, including directing the jail to house most detainees in single cells and conduct widespread coronaviru­s testing — steps the sheriff ’s office says it was already taking.

Sharlyn Grace, executive director of the Chicago Community Bond Fund, a nonprofit that posts bond for people who cannot afford it, called the study a “wake-up call for elected officials” of the public health risks caused by policing and incarcerat­ion and said it showed the need to keep the jail’s population reduced into summer.

Reinhart said his findings were “especially relevant” given recent mass arrests across the country. In Chicago and cities across the U.S., thousands of people went to jail over the past week related to protests.

Sheriff’s office records show bookings at the jail jumped after days of citywide unrest from an average of about 100 per day to 170 on Monday to 215 on Tuesday. Slightly less than half of people brought to the jail were released the same day. If a person is not released the same day they are booked, they are tested for the coronaviru­s that day and again 14 days later. If a detainee tests positive during that window, they are held in isolation, the sheriff ’s office said.

“As of [Wednesday], there were 36 detainees positive for COVID-19 at the jail, and 42 jail staff members currently positive,” Walberg said. “More important, virtually all of the new cases in recent weeks have come from newly arrested individual­s who tested positive at intake, not from those who were already in custody.”

Reinhart added that he focused his research on Cook County Jail, the largest in the country, because of its high number of coronaviru­s cases. He said the Chicago jail could be indicative of a larger trend.

“What’s happening here, I have no doubt is happening across the country,” Reinhart said.

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