What do we do about prisoners?
Dr. Dave Campbell, Chief Medical CorrespondentMorning Joe/MSNBC
Dave Aronberg, State Attorney for Palm Beach County
Surging past 83,000 cases, the viral tsunami in the United States has surpassed the total number of infected with coronavirus in China and Italy. At the same time, some prisons and jails across the world are opening like flood gates to allow the incarcerated to flee.
We have seen this before. Between the spring and fall of 1980, Cuba opened its locked cells to release scores of prisoners imprisoned Cubans so they could jump on boats and rafts navigating the open waters to arrive on the shores of the United States. The impact on hospitals like Jackson Memorial in Miami was profound. Even in 1981, when a much younger Dave Campbell started medical school in Miami, the population of former prisoners launched and freed from Mariel Harbor the year before was evident all through the halls and hospital beds of that university-based teaching hospital.
As the coronavirus has spread across the globe, prisons and jails have consistently been huge problem spots in places where the outbreaks are intense. As with any “congregate setting,” environments where groups of people are gathered in close-proximity, infectious diseases thrive. But the difference in jails and prisons is that residents cannot determine their own self-quarantine program. They can’t just leave and be quarantined elsewhere. And it’s not just the incarcerated who are at risk: guards, doctors and other prison staff returning to their communities after their shifts may carry the virus back to their families. Those in jail for only a few days or weeks rotate in and out of the community.
The most surefire way to avoid a COVID-19 breakout in a correctional facility is to temporarily release incarcerated people, as has occurred in Iran. But indiscriminate orders leading to mass jail exits could jeopardize public safety at a particularly tenuous time. Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey, who leads the largest office of state prosecutors in the country, recently announced that her office will delay the filing of new cases against nonviolent offenders who do not pose a risk to the community, and will allow defendants who violate their probation or parole on nonviolent and non-serious crimes to be sent home instead of returned to custody. Her office will also consider whether a defendant is at high risk from exposure to COVID-19 when making bail recommendations.
Defense lawyers, criminal justice reform advocates and even some prosecutors have been calling for more widespread action. The Federal Defenders of New York want anyone who tests positive for the virus to be quarantined in hospitals rather than prison, and that arrestees be detained only under “extraordinary circumstances” to avoid any new cases from entering prisons or jails.
“My ten years in state taught me a lot,” said Michael C. Knecht, who entered the Department of Corrections in the State of Florida at the age of 19. “Counter to what I see in the media, prisons will better control COVID-19 before the streets. They can lock down and isolate the inmates for as long as needed. The precedent for quarantine occurred with Scabies. While I was in, there were three- to four-day quarantines to rid the facility of an outbreak.”
At our request, Michael C. Knecht developed a strategy for COVID-19 Prison Outbreak Containment. Tens years inside has given him insight that most of us thankfully do not have. It is his unique and original opinion and has not been validated by any studies but is nonetheless innovative and intriguing.
COVID-19 Prison Outbreak Containment
Action Outline
1.) Mandatory prison lockdown nationwide
2.) No visitation
3.) Stop all nonessential inmate Jobs.
4.) Continue but closely monitor essential inmate jobs








