Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Juvenile Lifers' Worry They'll Lose Their Lives From COVID Before They Get Their Shot At Freedom
Darnell Johnson long believed that he would die alone in a prison cell. In 1998, a Michigan court sentenced him to life behind bars without the possibility of parole for killing a woman and shooting two others during a botched armed robbery when he was 17, court records show. Johnson had been in prison for more than a decade when the U.S. Supreme Court issued two rulings, one in 2012 and another in 2016, that said 鈥渏uvenile lifers鈥 like him must have their sentences reviewed, taking into account that they were not yet adults when they committed their crimes. In many states, hundreds saw their prison terms shortened or were released. (Hager, 6/3)
As states unevenly begin to reopen, researchers are scrambling to learn more about the coronavirus and 鈥渉erd immunity.鈥 That is when a large enough portion of the public has contracted the disease and developed antibodies so that it restrains the spread of the virus. Prisons, it turns out, may be a key place to study the nature of this virus鈥攊ncluding how it transmits and how immunity to it works. Because while antibody rates for the general public, estimated between 1 and 20 percent in most places, remain far too low for herd immunity to kick in, it鈥檚 an entirely different story in a number of prisons. (Lartey, 6/1)
The state鈥檚 highest court on Tuesday denied a lawsuit seeking the quick release of convicted prisoners due to the ongoing pandemic.In its ruling, the court acknowledged that prisoners are at an increased risk for COVID-19, but found that incarceration during a pandemic does not necessarily amount to cruel and unusual punishment. The court noted that the state鈥檚 Department of Correction has followed federal health guidelines and is conducting extensive testing in its facilities. (Coleman, 6/2)
The justices, however, did rule that those involuntarily committed to addiction treatment can seek immediate release. The SJC also asked a Superior Court judge to continue to review issues related to the case. (Becker, 6/2)
Patricia Olsen said she doesn鈥檛 know which of her friends are dead or alive. It鈥檚 what鈥檚 unknown, she said, that鈥檚 the hardest. As an inmate at MCI-Framingham, Olsen said incarceration is all about structure and routine. Her days would normally start at 7:15 a.m. when she鈥檇 leave her cell to take a shower before heading to the chow hall. After breakfast, she鈥檇 go to work as a digitizer for Massachusetts Correctional Industries. On the weekends, she would go to church, spend time with her friends of almost 15 years, cook a good meal, and draw to relax.聽(Cromar, 6/2)
The federal Bureau of Prisons has ordered a national lockdown amid civil unrest in cities across the country in a move that resembled the agency's most severe restrictions at its聽facilities in 25 years. Federal authorities, already struggling to contain deadly outbreaks of the coronavirus that has left 68 inmates dead, had imposed nationwide restrictions on inmate movements in March in an attempt to limit the virus' spread. But officials took the more restrictive action late Monday as a surge of violent clashes between protesters and police erupted after the death of George Floyd, whose neck was聽pinned under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer.聽(Johnson, 6/2)
Oklahoma County Jail officials on Tuesday unveiled a newly-repainted room dedicated to those who have served in the United States armed forces as part of an effort to increase mental health treatment for inmates. Jail officials said they hope that the refurbished pod, a group of 50 cells with a maximum capacity of 98 inmates, will show inmates who have served in the military that law enforcement officials care about them even when they鈥檙e incarcerated. They also hope that the pod will boost the morale of jail employees. (Green, 6/3)