Los Angeles Times

5 in county jail system test positive

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an and Matt Hamilton

An inmate and four people who work in the Los Angeles County jails have tested positive for the coronaviru­s infection, heightenin­g fears that the disease could spread quickly in the overcrowde­d jail system.

The inmate, who was at Twin Towers Correction­al Facility, displayed symptoms Thursday and was moved to the jail’s Correction­al Treatment Center for isolation, Correction­al Health Director Jackie Clark said. His test came back positive over the weekend, and he is now at L.A. County-USC Medical Center.

The inmate had been held in a one-man cell in a “high observatio­n housing” area reserved for mentally ill inmates. About 16 others in that housing area were being quarantine­d, with staff monitoring them with temperatur­e checks, Clark said. She added that classes and therapy sessions for that group were halted about three weeks ago to minimize the risk of exposure.

“We don’t have a huge concern for the 16 that’s in quarantine,” she said. Clark said it’s likely the inmate was exposed in the jail, where he’s been housed since about December. Officials are working to track his movements and determine exactly where he was exposed and by whom.

Four people who work in the jails — a deputy, a custody assistant, a nursing assistant and a doctor — also have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, Clark said. The doctor, a contractor, had not worked in the jails for weeks, but notified Correction­al Health Services that he had been exposed elsewhere and would not be scheduled to return.

Clark said the three staff members stayed home when they started feeling ill and subsequent­ly tested positive. “None of them came into work with a fever,” she said.

L.A. County Sheriff Alex Villanueva told reporters Monday that two other Sheriff’s Department employees — one in the Court Services Division and the other in East Patrol Division — have tested positive. Seven employees had either tested negative or were waiting on results, he said.

More than 40 inmates have been tested for the coronaviru­s and nine tests are pending, Clark said.

The Sheriff’s Department has taken steps in recent weeks to cut the jail population, releasing inmates with fewer than 30 days of jail time left to serve, and citing, instead of arresting, people whose alleged misdemeano­r offenses carry a bail of less than $50,000. That doesn’t include people suspected of domestic violence. L.A. County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey moved last week to release hundreds more pretrial detainees accused of nonviolent crimes.

As of Friday, there were fewer than 14,500 inmates in the jails, which typically house about 17,000 people.

Board of Supervisor­s Chairwoman Kathryn Barger, meanwhile, ordered public health officials last week to examine conditions in the lockups to identify “all necessary and appropriat­e measures” to prevent the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s, among inmates and staff.

Clark said officials are checking the temperatur­es of anyone who enters the treatment center. She said there had been discussion­s about temperatur­e-scanning everyone entering the jails, but ultimately officials decided it would cause more harm than good by creating bottleneck­s at the more than 40 points of entry into the buildings.

“It’s not appropriat­e for me to deploy healthcare staff to take temperatur­es of people coming,” she said. “I have my healthcare staff taking care of people in the jail that need healthcare.”

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