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‘A total disaster’: Families report AWOL admin, insufficient precautions as COVID runs rampant in Buckingham state prisons

 

“When we found out he had it, we was pretty sure he was going to die,” says a sibling of a man incarcerated in Buckingham Correctional Center.

Buckingham is home to the fourth-worst coronavirus outbreak of any correctional facility in Virginia—112 inmates have tested positive. Dillwyn Correctional Center, a lower-security facility across the street, has the state’s worst outbreak, with 122 active cases and 321 total positives. Families of inmates say that the prison administration has failed to adequately communicate with family members, failed to set up safe quarantine zones inside the facilities, and dragged their heels to release prisoners who should be eligible.

“Everything that’s going on at Dillwyn is a total disaster,” says Monet Anderson, whose son, Antonio Funn, is being held in Dillwyn and has contracted coronavirus. Anderson says Funn, 30, has lost his senses of taste and smell.

In Virginia, more than 1100 people have contracted the disease while incarcerated in the state prison system. Six people have died while incarcerated; one of those deaths occurred at Dillwyn and two at Buckingham.

Families of the incarcerated say administrators have been AWOL. “The [Dillwyn] warden has been gone, they don’t even see her,” Anderson says. “She doesn’t want to catch the virus.”

C-VILLE called Dillwyn Correctional Center Warden Dana Ratliffe-Walker on Wednesday afternoon, and found that her voicemail inbox was full. Staff at both Dillwyn and Buckingham referred inquiries about the situation to Department of Corrections spokesperson Lisa Kinney, who declined to respond to the suggestion that the warden had been absent.

A state resident, who asked to remain anonymous out of fear for the safety of a brother, says the brother, who is 64, tested positive for the virus in Buckingham. He was briefly quarantined inside the prison, then hospitalized, then returned to quarantine, but the family wasn’t aware that he had even tested positive until he was in the hospital. Later, when they called the hospital, they say the nurses reported he wasn’t there.

“Has he died?” the sibling wondered. The only way they were able to find out was by checking if the inmate’s prison-issued email was in service. When they saw it was active, they knew he was back in the prison, but the sibling thought he was too sick to write back.

“I just wish we could know what shape he’s in,” the sibling says. Normally, the family drives three hours each way to visit him a few times per month. “He lives for us to come visit him.” But the virus has made those trips impossible, and uncommunicative administration amplifies the problem.

“Our offenders are adults,” Kinney responded in an email. “Just as your doctor wouldn’t call your family members if you tested positive for a condition, we cannot share offenders’ confidential medical information.”

Families think the precautions being taken inside the prison are inadequate.

“They said they set up a bunch of beds in the gym, whatever the gym is,” says the anonymous source. “The nurses are checking him twice a day, taking his temperature. If they’re giving him medication, I have no idea.”

At Dillwyn, Anderson says her son’s living area is an “open pod. There’s no way to get away from anyone.”

Two weeks ago, four inmates were transferred out of Dillwyn and sent to a higher security facility. The DOC claims the move was in response to a hunger strike by the inmates, a claim the ACLU is investigating.

Anderson says the four men who were transferred had been in Funn’s pod, and that the DOC hasn’t been telling the full story. “[The inmates] blocked the doors to their pod, so [the prison] could not bring in any more infected inmates,” Anderson says. “Every time their 14-day quarantine period was coming to an end, they would try to bring in other inmates. And they were tired of it…They were trying to get well.”

Asked about the situation, Kinney responded that the DOC doesn’t release reasons for transferring prisoners, adding that “during the pandemic the DOC is restricting the transfer of inmates between DOC facilities unless it is necessary to transport an inmate for security reasons.”

Around the country, some prison systems have dealt with the virus by decreasing the number of people housed in their facilities, but the Virginia state prison system has been slow to act. The General Assembly approved an inmate release program on April 22, allowing those with less than a year of their sentence remaining and a record of good behavior to be transferred out. That program applies to just 2,000 of the roughly 30,000 inmates in the state system. As of May 24, just 208 inmates had actually been allowed to leave the correctional facilities, according to state data.

Funn, whose sentence ends in July, meets the state’s criteria for early release. Anderson says a home plan was approved weeks ago, but nothing happened. Then, last week, “after numerous calls and emails,” the family heard Funn had been approved for release last week—but he still hasn’t moved.

Kinney declined to comment on Funn’s case but wrote that “offenders are being reviewed for release as quickly as is responsibly possible.”

“We’re just trying to figure out, why is this moving so slow.” Anderson says. “You have guys sitting, who have home plans in place, and they’re not moving, they’re sitting.”

“Because he’s an inmate, it’s almost like we don’t count,” says the sibling whose brother is sick.

“No one listens to them in there,” says Anderson. “My job, as the mother, is to get out there and get this voice. I tell him it’s not just for you, it’s for everyone.”

 

Categories
Coronavirus News

COVID cases soar in Buckingham state prisons; Charlottesville poised for reopening

Correctional facilities, where inmates live in tight quarters, have proven (entirely predictably) to be hotbeds for coronavirus outbreaks. Some jails and prisons in the area have managed to avoid major transmission within their walls—as of May 8, the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail has reported just four cases, all among “support staff” who do not come in regular contact with inmates. The Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women reports zero cases.

But in Buckingham County, two state prisons have become the sites of major outbreaks. As of May 11, the Dillwyn Correctional Center reports that 205 total offenders have tested positive for COVID, and Buckingham Correctional Center reports 75, according to data from the Virginia Department of Corrections.

These situations show how quickly outbreaks can spread within prisons once the virus is present. Dillwyn saw seven cases turn into more than 200 in the span of one week at the end of April, and Buckingham reported just 13 cases last Wednesday. (Mid-April expansion of testing may have contributed to the increases, notes the DOC, but the Dillwyn outbreak did not pick up steam until early May.)

As C-VILLE reported in March, many facilities have been releasing nonviolent inmates to house arrest and limiting pretrial detention, in an effort to slow the spread of the virus. The Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail has moved 16 percent of its inmates out of the facility. Because it’s a regional jail, the effort to identify and release low-level offenders, and inmates with health risks, has been spearheaded by our local commonwealth’s attorneys, who have pursued such policies more aggressively than state-level administrators.

The two Buckingham facilities with severe outbreaks are state prisons, meaning they are monitored and managed by the Virginia Department of Corrections. The DOC has been moving inmates out of prison at a far slower rate than the ACRJ. As of last Thursday, 130 prisoners had been moved out of state prisons—a tiny fraction of the roughly 38,000 prisoners in the Virginia state system.

The state prison system also oversaw an outbreak at Bon Air Juvenile Detention Center, near Richmond, in which more than 30 teens tested positive for the disease. The Washington Post characterized the Bon Air outbreak as the worst at a youth prison in the nation. On May 9, a 66-year old man died from COVID while incarcerated in the Buckingham facility, became one of five people to die from the disease while in prison in Virginia.

 

Is Charlottesville ready for Phase 1?

Last week, Governor Ralph Northam announced that Virginia would move to Phase 1 of reopening on Friday, May 15. Phase 1 keeps gatherings limited to 10 people, strongly encourages teleworking, and keeps schools and entertainment facilities closed. But the eased restrictions allow non-essential retail, restaurants with outdoor seating, and places of worship to operate at 50 percent capacity, and lets Virginians seek “personal grooming” by appointment.

The state set two case-based criteria for beginning to ease restrictions: declining rates of positive tests over 14 days, and declining hospitalizations over 14 days. On Monday, Northam gave some places in northern Virginia permission to delay moving to Phase 1, as the situation there is more dire than elsewhere in the state.

The Charlottesville area passes the test for declining hospitalizations, according to data from the state: In Charlottesville and Albemarle combined, the Virginia Department of Health shows that only one person has been newly hospitalized with coronavirus in the last two weeks.

Since the pandemic began, the Thomas Jefferson Health District, which includes Charlottesville, Albemarle, Greene, Louisa, and Fluvanna, has seen 62 total hospitalizations, according to the state.

Total reported cases in the area continue to rise at a slow but steady rate. Twenty out of the last 21 days have seen at least one new case confirmed. The area might technically satisfy the governor’s criteria for reopening, but that doesn’t mean the virus is under control.