Coronavirus Fears Mount in D.C. Jail After Quarantines
Lawyers, inmates' families, and correctional officers worry the jail is ill-prepared to handle an outbreak.

Coronavirus quarantines and lockdowns at the D.C. Jail have inmates, staff, and their loved ones on edge, and advocates are calling for stronger measures to protect everyone inside its walls from a potential outbreak.
Correctional officers say their requests for more protective equipment are being ignored, prisoners rights lawyers say inmates aren't getting basic information on the virus, and jail staffers say leadership has been leaving them out of the loop.
On Friday, a union representing correctional officers at the D.C. Jail voted "no confidence" in the jail's leadership for "guaranteeing and accelerating the rampant spread of COVID-19," The Washington Times reported.
The union also sent a letter to the D.C. Department of Corrections (DOC) calling for the removal of Warden Lennard Johnson, Deputy Warden Kathleenjo Landerkin, and DOC Deputy Director Wanda Patten.
The vote and the letter came after the D.C. Jail quarantined 65 inmates last Thursday "out of an abundance of caution" because a U.S. marshal at the D.C. Superior Court tested positive for coronavirus.
According to an attorney representing the union, correctional officers asked for personal protective equipment to transfer the inmates to quarantine, but jail leadership refused their request, forcing officers to move possibly infected inmates while wearing only masks and gloves.
The jail released the inmates from quarantine on Saturday after determining they hadn't come into contact with the marshal, but the last week's lockdowns and quarantines rattled people inside the jail's crumbling infrastructure.
In 2017, Reason reported on the jail's deteriorating conditions and its 150-year history of decrepitude. The jail is already plagued by well-known mold and ventilation problems.
Compounding those concerns, attorneys say inmates aren't receiving information on even basic preventative measures. Laura de las Casas, a prisoners rights attorney and former prison inspector, says she talked to six inmates inside the D.C. Jail on Friday.
"For each of the six guys, they hadn't heard anything about washing hands for 20 seconds," de las Casas says. "I'm not saying that's going to cure everything, but [the DOC] can do a better job just explaining very basic preventative measures. I've been asking if there's increased access to hand sanitizer, and it's only if they buy it from the commissary."
There have been no confirmed cases of coronavirus at the jail yet, but the criminal justice system is particularly vulnerable to a fast-moving diseases. The daily operations of courts involve innumerable interactions between police, lawyers, inmates, court clerks, judges, and correctional officers—all in close quarters and heavily-used public spaces. Jails and prisons are petri dishes.
Late Sunday, the New Jersey Supreme Court authorized the release of all inmates from county jails, although releases are subject to challenge by prosecutors. The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey estimates this could result in the release of roughly 1,000 people. Other jails across the country, such as in Ohio and Florida, have worked to reduce their populations in response to the virus. Over the weekend, 21 inmates and 17 staffers tested positive for coronavirus at Riker's Island in New York City.
But in Washington, Mayor Muriel Bowser and the U.S. Attorneys Office, which handles prosecutions in the District, have resisted calls for a mass release of inmates from the D.C. Jail.
On Sunday, WAMU reported that the D.C. Superior Court had created procedures for filing emergency motions for inmates to be released, a change that defense attorneys had been pressing for. Those procedures appear to prioritize inmates over 60 and with chronic health conditions.
Some inmates' family members fear this will leave their loved ones at risk for no reason other than their age:
https://twitter.com/aliciakenworthy/status/1241869839398055937
Staff members at the jail say they, too, aren't being informed about what's going on.
"They're not forthcoming with us," says one D.C. Jail administration staffer who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. "Everybody's really concerned. We don't feel safe."
"The jail has been falling apart forever," the staffer continued. "The circulation inside the jail is all inside air."
The Department of Corrections declined to comment on the union letter.
The staffer said sanitation has at least improved: "They're cleaning the way they should have all along."
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Perhaps jailers should start by banning sodomy.
What a fucking shitshow.
"Quarantines good! Shelter in place!"
"Quarantines bad! Empty the jails!"
Radical suggestion:
Release the multitudes who are in jail for forging doctor's signatures on false prescriptions for cheap plastic flutes!
Release the multitudes who are in jail for black-market sales of non-prescribed "lung flutes"!
Meanwhile... STAY SAFE from the dreaded Flute Police!
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ … This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
Hello there Most Righteous Feelz -
How are you coping with the great panic?
What do you think of the cold, sterile practice of no hugging, no kissing, and no touching, a/k/a social distancing?
Methinks we could sure use a man like Leo Buscaglia again.
Amen! I recall Leo Buscaglia!!!
I saw a cartoon the other day, it showed a "social distancing group hug"...
Whoa! The Google knows EVERYTHING!!!
Here it is!!!
https://theweek.com/cartoons/902928/editorial-cartoon-world-group-hug-coronavirus-social-distancing
Leo Buscaglia and I... And the Tater Tots... Are doing fine! As I hope you are as well!
Leo would laugh at the cartoon, but encourage the folks to do the real thing.
In fact, he would even hug Tulpa and Michael Hihn and Rev. Art.
DC won't care if he dies from COVID-19.
If he's not over 60 and doesn't have underlying health issues he's not going to die. What's the problem?
That wasn't supposed to be a response to you, but I do agree with your post
Did they all get the same talking points memo?
No, letting out prisoners who have sufficient evidence of their malum in se crimes that they couldn't bond out, is a terrible idea. Do you want all of these shuttered businesses to get broken into?
As Red Rocks notes, the irony of demanding people get locked up in their own houses, who've done nothing wrong, to shelter from the virus, while simultaneously demanding prisoners be let out, is absolutely overwhelming.
Conservatives on "both" sides wanted the death sentence for enjoyable plant leaves and should get what they asked for. Here's hoping China bubonic plague victims released from jail are able to track them to where they live and sneeze in their wizened faces. The predators who hang about birth control clinics ought to be on some sort of sexual offender list that would make them easier to find as well. This could have as happy an ending as Stranger in a Strange Land
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