The Mercury News

Family of San Quentin guard files suit.

Lawyer says officials created a ‘COVID cesspool’ with transfer

- By Julia Prodis Sulek jsulek@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> The family of the San Quentin prison guard who died last summer from COVID-19 after a botched transfer of infected inmates from another prison filed a federal civil rights lawsuit Tuesday against state prison officials, blaming them for a “culture of callousnes­s” that led to one of the largest outbreaks in the country and 29 deaths.

“I want to hold people accountabl­e and responsibl­e, but mainly get justice for him,” said Patricia Polanco, the widow of 55-year-old Sgt. Gilbert Po- lanco, who died a year ago. Twenty-eight San Quentin inmates also perished after the May 2020 outbreak.

The lawsuit comes six months after a scathing report from the state Office of the Inspector General found that the transfer of 122 inmates from a Chino prison by California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion was “deeply flawed.”

Not only were inmates not tested for weeks before the transfer, but they were packed onto five buses and not quarantine­d once they arrived. The infection raced

once they arrived. The infection raced through the antiquated facility, which still uses open-air prison bars to separate cells. Before the transfer, San Quentin had no reported COVID cases.

The inspector general report also blamed a prison health care executive in Chino for explicitly ordering that the inmates not be retested the day before the transfers.

The May 30, 2020, transfer occurred at the height of shelter-in-place lockdown orders across the state.

During a news conference Tuesday, the lawyers representi­ng Polanco’s widow and two grown children, Selena and Vincent, called his death a preventabl­e tragedy and the result of “disastrous choices.”

“They created a COVID cesspool and required their inmates and employees to marinate in it,” said lawyer Julia Sherwin from Oakland-based Haddad & Sherwin, which filed the lawsuit.

The lawsuit, which names San Quentin Warden Ronald Davis and others, appears to be the first federal lawsuit against the state of California for a COVID-related death of a state employee. The firm has filed two other lawsuits on behalf of families of inmates who perished.

The Department of Correction­s said in a statement Tuesday it had not been served with the lawsuit yet, “but we will evaluate the details and determine next steps. We extend our deepest condolence­s to Sgt. Polanco’s family, friends, and colleagues.”

The San Quentin outbreak stemmed from a decision to transfer medicallyv­ulnerable inmates from the California Institute for Men in Chino, where COVID was beginning to take hold. But what was supposed to save the mostly elderly inmates from infection led to a public health disaster at the storied prison perched on the edge of the San Francisco Bay.

Patricia Polanco said Tuesday that her husband, who was at high risk of infection because he suffered from diabetes, hypertensi­on and obesity, worked double shifts as the virus swept through the facility.

“It wasn’t safe. They didn’t have masks at that time — the inmates were making masks,” she said. “He just told me there was nobody to cover these shifts. They were working overtime. He explained to me that people were scared, they were leaving, they were retiring early.”

But her husband considered San Quentin staff his second family, she said, so he kept working.

After Polanco died on Aug. 9, 2020, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered flags lowered. The funeral was livestream­ed

through the prison.

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 ?? ARIC CRABB — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Family members of San Quentin prison guard Gilbert Polanco comfort each other during a ceremony in San Jose on Aug. 26.
ARIC CRABB — STAFF ARCHIVES Family members of San Quentin prison guard Gilbert Polanco comfort each other during a ceremony in San Jose on Aug. 26.
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Polanco

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