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San Quentin COVID-19 Outbreak Grows To 450 Total Cases

SAN QUENTIN (CBS SF) -- An outbreak of coronavirus among staff and inmates at San Quentin grew to 450 confirmed active cases Tuesday, state prison officials said.

A total of 407 inmates have contracted the virus as of Tuesday afternoon, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation COVID-19 website.

That number represents more than ten percent of the total prison population at San Quentin. 3,800 inmate cases of coronavirus in the California penal system have been confirmed.

As of Tuesday, 43 staff members have tested positive for COVID-19 at San Quentin with six staff member having already recovered and returned to work. A total of 346 prison workers in the California Correctional system have contracted the virus.

The latest spike in coronavirus cases comes after the number of cases among prisoners more than doubled over the weekend.

There have been no confirmed deaths at San Quentin, but state prison officials said that 19 inmates have died of the virus at other facilities around the state.

Last week, advocates, prisoners and their families demanded urgent action to release prisoners and curb the spread.

During their virtual press conference, activists with Oakland's Ella Baker Center for Human Rights said the coronavirus started rapidly spreading through the prison last week.

A coalition of criminal justice activists said some of the cases at San Quentin stem from a May 30 transfer of 121 inmates from Chino where there have been 13 coronavirus-related deaths.

San Quentin had zero confirmed cases prior to the transfer, according to the coalition. At least four inmates transferred from the California Institution for Men have since tested positive, the group said.

One prisoner called into the conference from the jail to comment on the current conditions.

"At the beginning of the pandemic, the prison passed out hand sanitizer donated by UCSF. We got one small bottle and haven't received any since. When it comes to this pandemic, they have absolutely no idea what they are doing, the prisoner said. "The statewide order to socially distance does not contain a footnote excluding incarcerated persons. Our right to be free of grave physical harm is not being afforded to us in the same manner that other human beings are receiving it."

The governor has started releasing prisoners within 180 days of their original release date, but some are arguing that's not enough people to make a difference.

A spokeswoman for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said San Quentin's testing rate is roughly three times the state and national coronavirus testing rates and state correctional officials are working to secure the capacity for mass testing both at San Quentin and the state prison system at large.

The state has also installed alcohol-based hand sanitizer stations in areas where sinks and soap are not available and prison facilities are being routinely cleaned and sanitized. Mandated staff testing is also underway at San Quentin and four other state prisons, according to CDCR spokeswoman Dana Simas.

"CDCR takes the health and safety of our incarcerated population and the community-at-large very seriously and have taken unprecedented steps to address this public health crisis," Simas said via email, noting that prisons have also reduced dorm density, provided temperature screening and masks and suspended in-person visiting.

"We will continue to expand on our efforts to safely and securely increase physical distancing within our institutions," she said.

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