Los Angeles Times - 06.04.2020

(Joyce) #1

A8 MONDAY, APRIL 6, 2020 LATIMES.COM


the disease caused by the
novel coronavirus, were in
evidence elsewhere in the
country — in New Jersey,
across the river from Man-
hattan, and in Louisiana,
whose governor warned that
ventilator capacity would
soon be exhausted.
In Europe, the picture
was mixed. Deaths were
still climbing in the United
Kingdom, where Prime Min-
ister Boris Johnson, whose
COVID-19 diagnosis was an-
nounced March 26, was hos-
pitalized Sunday. Trump ex-
pressed hopes for his recov-
ery, saying Johnson was
“strong.”
But Italy — the European
epicenter — said Sunday
that its daily toll was
at a two-week low, with
officials crediting strict
lockdowns for seemingly
slowing the progress of new
infections. Hard-hit Spain
also reported signs of a lev-
eling-off.
U.S. officials pleaded for
public cooperation in hopes
of replicating that pattern.
“We can look like that,”
said Dr. Deborah Birx, the
coronavirus task force coor-
dinator. Referring to strict


isolation measures in Spain
and Italy, she said: “The
promise is, if we do this,
we could potentially be
better.”
Adams, appearing on
“Fox News Sunday,” urged
Americans to follow physical
distancing guidelines and to
wear face coverings in public
when it would be difficult to
remain six feet apart.
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention last
week called on Americans to
wear masks in crowded pub-
lic places. Trump said Fri-
day of that precaution: “I
don’t see it for myself.”
The surgeon general, like

many in the president’s or-
bit, was at pains to avoid
publicly contradicting or
criticizing him. “The presi-
dent is making a choice that
is appropriate for him” re-
garding masks, said Adams,
who last week released a vi-
deo showing how to make a
simple face covering with
fabric and rubber bands.
Adams also deflected
questions about the need for
a nationwide stay-at-home
order. Trump has said he
prefers to leave the decision
to governors, nine of whom
have not issued such a direc-
tive in their states.
Governors, for their part,
renewed their pleas for more
federal help in procuring
necessary medical supplies
and equipment. In appear-
ances on news talk shows,
some sharply contested
Trump’s casting of blame on
states for a lack of readiness.
Washington state Gov.
Jay Inslee, appearing on
NBC’s “Meet the Press,”
cited good communication
with Vice President Mike
Pence and the CDC, but said
the overall lack of national
coordination in fighting the
outbreak had been “ludi-
crous.”

Without mentioning
Trump by name, he blasted
the president’s contention
that the federal government
was meant to serve as a
“backup” for states’ efforts
to obtain needed supplies.
“I mean, the surgeon gen-
eral alluded to Pearl Har-
bor,” said Inslee, a Demo-
crat. “Can you imagine if
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
said, ‘I’ll be right behind you,
Connecticut. Good luck
building those battleships.’
Look, we need a national
mobilization of the manu-
facturing base of the United
States.”
Michigan Gov. Gretchen
Whitmer, another Democrat
who has, like Inslee, been the
target of heated personal at-
tacks by Trump, said Sun-
day that more robust testing
efforts were needed to help
public health experts tamp
down scattered outbreaks
before they become major
conflagrations.
“My job is to do every-
thing I can to protect the 10
million people of Michigan,”
she said on “Fox News Sun-
day,” noting a worrying rate
of COVID-19 cases in Detroit,
the state’s largest city.
“Michigan is a hot spot; we

need assistance, and I’m
grateful for any partnership
at the federal level.”
Louisiana Gov. John Bel
Edwards said his state was
running out of ventilators
and hospital beds, as New
Orleans weathers one of the
nation’s worst outbreaks.
“We now think it’s prob-
ably around the 9th of April
before we exceed our ventila-
tor capacity, based on the
current number on hand,”
he said on CNN’s “State of
the Union.” Edwards also
said the state was “a couple
days behind that on [inten-
sive care unit] bed capacity
being exceeded.”
Some GOP governors
who have avoided criticizing
Trump or the federal re-
sponse nonetheless cited
worsening situations in their
states. Arkansas Gov. Asa
Hutchinson pointed to the
challenges of procuring per-
sonal protective equipment
for medical personnel.
“It’s difficult,” he said on
NBC’s “Meet the Press,” say-
ing Arkansas had some-
times been “outbid by an-
other state after we’ve had
the order confirmed.”
He added: “It literally is a
global jungle that we’re com-

peting in now.”
While upending daily
lives and livelihoods across
the country, the pandemic
has also disrupted the 2020
election cycle.
Former Vice President
Joe Biden, who appears
likely to clinch the Demo-
cratic presidential nomina-
tion, on Sunday floated the
idea of a “virtual” conven-
tion rather than a tradi-
tional one.
The party had already
pushed back the date for
anointing its nominee to
mid-August from mid-July
over pandemic fears. Speak-
ing on ABC’s “This Week,”
Biden suggested that the
event might need to be
moved online.
“I think we should be
thinking about that right
now,” he said. “We may not
be able to put 10 [thousand],
20 [thousand], 30,000 people
in one place.”
The former vice presi-
dent also said he intends to
follow CDC guidelines and
cover his face in public, for as
long as that recommenda-
tion remains in place.
Of Trump’s balking at
that, he said, “He may not
like how he looks in a mask.”

MANHATTAN’S skyline serves as a backdrop for a pedestrian. In New York City, the outbreak’s U.S. epicenter, the caseload has overwhelmed the medical system.


Spencer PlattGetty Images

Hardest days lie ahead, experts warn


JEROME ADAMS, the
surgeon general, called
for physical distancing
and use of face coverings.

Alex BrandonAssociated Press

[U.S.,from A1]


contact, many parents who
spoke to The Times on the
condition of anonymity said
they feel unable to protect
their kids. Advocates and at-
torneys, meanwhile, say
they face barriers such as
court closures preventing
them from arguing for the
release of their clients.
“There’s a real discon-
nect ... between what we are
hearing at every level of state
government, county and
city, compared to what’s go-
ing on in the Probation De-
partment and the juvenile
courts,” said Jerod Guns-
berg, a Los Angeles defense
attorney. “There is just not
the same sense of urgency.”
The situation in juvenile
halls is a microcosm of the
broader struggle across the
country to balance public
safety against public health.
The infection of more than
200 people in New York City
jails has highlighted the
virus’ potential to spread
rapidly through incarcer-
ated populations.
In California, a group of
advocates and defense at-
torneys has called for the re-
lease of all juvenilesawaiting
trial or being held on techni-
cal probation violations. The
Legal Aid Society in New
York City has sued for the re-
lease of several youths 13 to
17 years old being held by a
child welfare agency. Penn-
sylvania’s Supreme Court
received a petition Wednes-
day asking for the release of
nearly 2,000 juvenile defend-
ants, many of whom are con-
sidered medically fragile.
Advocates are concerned
that incarceration during
the pandemic — as well as
isolation or quarantine in
their rooms — could also en-
danger children’s mental
health because of the pro-


longed separation from their
families.
“We know that kids do
better when they are con-
nected with their families,”
said Michael Umpierre, di-
rector of the Center for Ju-
venile Justice Reform at
Georgetown University. “In
this context, it’s really chal-
lenging because you have
the public health concerns,
but you have to figure out
a way to keep families en-
gaged in the process in the
meantime.”
For those serving time in
county jails, sheriffs have the
authority to release inmates
early in an emergency. The
L.A. County jail population,
typically about 17,000 people,
is now fewer than 14,500.
But attempts to enact a
broad release of juvenile in-
mates in L.A. County have
been blocked by court offi-
cials, according to a person
with knowledge of the mat-
ter who spoke on the condi-
tion of anonymity in order to
discuss the issue candidly.
In a meeting of attorneys
and court officials late last
month, some raised the idea
of trying to identify young
detainees who could be eligi-
ble for release, including
nonviolent offenders, youths
with compromised immune
systems or those nearing the
end of their sentences, the
source said.
But the initiative was
blocked by L.A. County Su-
perior Court Judge John C.
Lawson, who oversees De-
linquency Court, the source
said. Lawson said juvenile
releases would continue to
be determined on a case-by-
case analysis, depending on
the youth’s conduct and per-
formance during custody
programs.
Lawson was not available
for an interview, Mary

Hearn, a spokeswoman for
the court, said.
“We recognize the ur-
gency of protecting these
youths,” Hearn said in an
email. “We are working with
our juvenile justice partners
to identify minors for release
to slow the spread of
COVID-19 in county juvenile
facilities.”
Adam Wolfson, commu-
nications director for the
L.A. County Probation De-
partment, said the agency is
actively working to reduce
its juvenile population.
“We continuously screen
for early release due to
youths meeting their treat-
ment goals,” he said. “Those
that meet eligibility criteria
will be sent to court with a
recommendation for re-
lease; however, only the
court can authorize a re-
lease.”
L.A. County juvenile halls
and camps hold 677 youths,
down from the 2,455 held in
county facilities in 2012, re-
cords show. But at least 285
of those in custody are
awaiting trial, a group advo-
cates argue should be re-
leased because of the virus.
The vast majority of chil-
dren in the facilities are
black or Latino boys, county
records show. Children in
the juvenile justice system
are more likely to have ex-
perienced trauma, which
can be linked to poor health
outcomes, said Samantha
Buckingham, the director of
the Juvenile Justice Clinic at
Loyola Law School.
Last month, probation
officers began “verbally
screening” anyone entering
a juvenile facility and turn-
ing away those with symp-
toms that could be linked to
a respiratory illness. Youths
newly entering county cus-
tody are also undergoing

health screenings.
“Youth and staff in Pro-
bation facilities are practic-
ing social distancing strate-
gies when feasible by lim-
iting groups, assigning beds
that can provide additional
space between individuals,
rearranging scheduled
movements to minimize
mixing of individuals from
different housing areas, and
utilizing social distancing
during recreation,” the Pro-
bation Department said in a
statement.
Wolfson said probation
officers are limiting the con-
gregation of youths to
groups of six or less, having
them shower individually
and staggering meal times
to prevent large groups from
gathering in mess halls.
Complaints coming from
inside the facilities, however,
paint a different picture.
An 18-year-old being held
at an L.A. County juvenile
camp, who requested ano-
nymity for fear of retribu-
tion, told The Times that
physical distancing is nearly
impossible where he’s being
housed. Youths still shower
in groups as large as seven
and sleep in tightly spaced
beds, according to the teen,
who said he turns his head
away from others, fearing
someone may cough or
sneeze in his face.
With nearly all educa-
tional and counseling pro-
grams on hold, he said, resi-
dents of the camp spend
most days in their beds or in
a recreational room that
houses a television and a
PlayStation 4 console. But
the room is not large, and
teens often end up sitting
shoulder to shoulder on a
couch or sharing the same
video game controller.
Surgical masks and
gloves have been handed out

inside the facility, he said,
but only to probation staff.
“They don’t want them to
get it, but why can’t they
help us? They’re just helping
their staff, like we not no-
body here,” the teen said.
“They take care of them
more than us.”
Probation officials did
not respond to questions
about the boy’s description
of conditions at the camp.
His concerns echoed
those shared in a recent let-
ter sent to the L.A. County
Department of Public
Health by a number of de-
fense attorneys and criminal
justice reform groups.
“The most pressing con-
cerns are system-wide re-
ports that social distancing
is not being enforced by pro-
bation officers who super-
vise the children,” the letter
said. “At the probation
camps, it is our understand-
ing that youth are still
housed in crowded dormi-
tory settings and that the
‘six foot rule’ is neither ex-
plained nor enforced.”
Gunsberg, the defense
attorney, said there is no
purpose in continuing to de-
tain nonviolent teens while
most educational, counsel-
ing and job training pro-
grams are on hold because of
the coronavirus outbreak.
“The whole point of the
juvenile justice system is re-
habilitation ... so if there’s no
rehabilitative purpose, what
are they doing?” he asked.
“Wouldn’t they be better off
at home?”
Some parents complain
that they have received little
information from probation
officials, worsening their
stress.
Domonique said she was
unaware a public defender
assigned to the Sylmar Ju-
venile Court had tested pos-

itive for the coronavirus un-
til she was contacted by The
Times. Neither probation of-
ficials nor the public defend-
er’s office have answered
questions about whether
the attorney had contact
with detainees.
Domonique, who is a
healthcare provider, said her
son has been largely keeping
to himself in recent weeks,
fearful that anyone he con-
tacts could be infected. After
she heard that a public de-
fender and a probation offi-
cer connected to the Sylmar
hall had both become sick,
the hours between phone
calls from her son have be-
come agonizing.
“If I don’t hear from him,
I’m like, is he OK? What is he
doing? Why hasn’t he called
me? Did my baby get sick?”
she said.
The concern goes both
ways. Gabriela, whose 18-
year-old son is housed in the
Sylmar juvenile hall, said
she’s told him about how
parks and movie theaters
have closed because of the
pandemic. She has assured
him that she’s exercised
care, as have his father and
sister, not to leave the house
unless it’s necessary.
“He’s very depressed and
worried about us, because
he hasn’t been able to see
us,” she said.
For some parents, recent
developments at Sylmar
have been bittersweet. One
of them, Yolanda, said she
felt a huge relief when she
learned that her son might
be released soon because of
the virus.
But after she heard about
the infected probation offi-
cer, the mother’s joy quickly
turned to anxiety.
“I hope that my son won’t
bring the virus home,” she
said.

Parents with children in lockup left to wait and worry


[Juveniles,from A1]

Free download pdf