More than 1,100 virus cases reported behind bars in Arizona

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The Arizona Department of Transportation posts new signage along highways urging the public to wear face coverings (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

The combined total of county jail inmates, state prisoners and federal immigration detainees in Arizona who have tested positive for the coronavirus has surpassed 1,100 cases.

Authorities report 496 positive cases among inmates in county jails, 318 among state prisoners and 317 among immigration detainees. More than 90% of the county-jail cases came in Maricopa County.

Three-hundred and sixty-nine employees at jails, prisons and immigration detention centers in Arizona also have tested positive, with 147 at state prisons, 131 at detention centers and 91 in county jails.

Officials attribute the rising numbers over the last month to more testing and contract tracing. Critics say the figures also are higher because the virus is spreading rapidly at corrections facilities, where people who live in close quarters often are unable to practice social distancing.

“Once it’s in the jails, it’s very difficult to stop,” said Jared Keenan, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona who is pressing a lawsuit against Maricopa County that seeks the release of medically vulnerable and disabled inmates who can’t afford bail.

Critics say the government was unprepared to protect incarcerated and detained people from the virus, while officials maintain they’re following government’s recommendations for protecting inmates and employees.

Officials say they are screening all people coming into facilities, providing cleaning supplies to inmates and detainees, have set up quarantine areas and reduced the overall size of county jail populations. The reductions were made through a series of steps, such as police agencies making fewer arrests and the courts temporarily suspending the sentences of inmates who were allowed to leave jail to go to work.

Critics say inmates often can’t practice social distancing while in lunch and medication lines, don’t have enough cleaning supplies to protect themselves and aren’t being given adequate instructions on guarding against the virus.

Maricopa County and its sheriff’s office both declined to comment on criticism that the county wasn’t doing enough to protect inmates.

All state corrections employees are being tested for the virus, and officials announced plans last week to test all state prisoners. Maricopa County officials are considering whether to test all county jail inmates.

Corrections officials said there have been four confirmed and five suspected deaths from COVID-19 among state prisoners.

Arizona has emerged as a COVID-19 hot spot since Republican Gov. Doug Ducey lifted his stay-home orders in mid-May.

Across the state on Monday, the number of new cases was slightly down from a day earlier.

There have been 2,196 additional cases, down from 2,592 on Sunday, pushing the statewide total to more than 54,000 cases. Three more deaths were reported, bringing Arizona’s total so far to 1,342.

The state’s surge in additional cases the past week set daily records for hospitalizations, ventilator use and use of intensive care beds for coronavirus patients.

Arizona hit a daily new-case record of 3,246 on Friday.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. But for some — especially older adults and people with existing health problems — it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.

Republished with the permission of the Associated Press.