Starting Phase Seven (Because the First Six Have Worked So Well) – Update for May 26, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

TIME FOR PHASE SEVEN…

The BOP launched Phase Seven of its COVID-19 Action Plan last week, announcing (among other things) that it will begin moving about 6,800 inmates who have been waiting in local detention centers across the U.S. to federal prisons to avoid further jail overcrowding.

fail200526 And why not? When Phase Five began on April 2, the BOP had 75 sick inmates, 39 sick staff and two inmate deaths from COVID-19. That was over 3,000 COVID-19 cases ago. With a record of success like that, the BOP really ought to stick with a winner, and implement Phase Seven.

BOP Director Michael Carvajal told BOP staff in his weekly video message that the BOP will set up three designated testing and quarantine sites, at FTC Oklahoma City, FCC Yazoo City and FCC Victorville. The transferees will be tested for COVID-19 when they arrive at the quarantine site facility and again when they are transferred to their designation institution.

No plans have been announced for mass testing of people currently in BOP facilities, although groups as diverse as the ACLU and the Council of Prison Locals (representing 30,000 BOP employees,  earlier this month called for universal testing in all prisons.

crazynumbers200519The number of inmate COVID-19 cases reported by the BOP dropped throughout the past week from 2,402 to 1,603, but the staff COVID-19 case numbers have remained stubbornly above 175. Likewise, the number of institutions with active COVID-19 cases has remained above 50. Three more inmates died last week, bringing the total dead to 60. More ominously, at least two facilities that had reported COVID-19 inmate cases but were later declared to be coronavirus-free are back on the list: FCI Talladega reports one inmate and one staff member with the illness, and FMC Devens- with no cases just two weeks ago – reports 24 inmates and two staff sick with the virus.

The real problem with the BOP numbers is that no one really believes them. Reuters reported last week that while a May 6 report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that surveyed local, state and federal prisons for COVID-19 reported 5,000 inmate cases. Reuters performed its own data analysis, and found about 17,300, over three times CDC’s tally.

The infectious disease experts who filed the Supreme Court amicus brief in the FCI Elkton case noted that “over 3,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus have emerged in BOP’s federal correctional facilities. Given the dearth of testing, these numbers likely dramatically understate the problem.”

gtfo200526Incidentally, at the facility that started it all for the BOP, FCC Oakdale, has resumed universal testing of inmates. Also, last Friday, USA Today reported that the BOP reassigned Oakdale warden Rodney Myers to “temporary duty” at the BOP South Central Regional Office.

Although the BOP did not elaborate on the reason for the move, Ronald Morris, president of the local union representing the corrections workers, told the Wall Street Journal last Friday, “Warden Myers’s continued negligence and endangering of staff and inmates was creating a more difficult situation to control the spread of Covid-19.”

USA Today said that Myers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Reuters, Across U.S., COVID-19 takes a hidden toll behind bars (May 18)

USA Today, Feds reassign warden at Louisiana prison hit hard by coronavirus (May 22)

Wall Street Journal, Warden at Prison Besieged by Coronavirus Is Reassigned (May 22)

KDBC-TV, El Paso, Texas, Federal prison system to begin moving nearly 7K inmates (May 22)

– Thomas L. Root

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