Union officials warn of 'dire' situations at South Florida federal prisons

071620_istock_foottoo

iStock/FooTToo(MIAMI) — BY: LUKE BARR

As Florida has become the new COVID-19 hotspot, federal prisons in South Florida are feeling the brunt of COVID-19.

Union officials at Federal Correctional Complex Coleman and Federal Correctional Institution Miami sounded the alarm on just how bad the conditions are inside the facilities.

Kareen Troitino, the FCI Miami corrections officer union president, told ABC News that the virus was spread by one employee to inmates at the facility and, within a day, Troitino said that cases at the facility went from one to four.

A few days later, Troitino said there was an “enormous spike” in three of the units at the facility.

“Inmates complaining of extreme fatigue. Cold like symptoms. Strange headaches, they’ve never experienced a very strong, vomiting, diarrhea, but no one is showing a fever, and the administration decided to do a 21-day lockdown,” he said.

According to the Bureau of Prisons, 91 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19 at FCI Miami.

A communal open area of FCI Miami was also infected but, according to Troitino, the leadership at FCI Miami did not tell staff for a full 24 hours.

“So staff who went in there to do the counts and do the rounds and do shakedowns. They got infected,” he said.

Out of 60 inmates in that one area, 55 inmates tested positive.

Troitino said that if inmates don’t show a fever, the federal bureau of prisons will not give them a COVID-19 test.

“Know that the majority of institution inmates are showing, I mean hundreds of them are displaying symptoms but they don’t have a fever,” he explained.

He said staffing is low and most are working 16-hour shifts and, in a rare move, management has even stepped in to cover some of the facility.

An internal memo obtained by ABC News dated July 14, 2020, shows that an entire unit at Federal Detention Center Miami, a pre-trial jail not affiliated with FCI Miami, was quarantined because there were three positive cases in one wing of the facility.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons did not immediately respond to ABC News request for comment on the situation at FCI Miami.

Joe Rojas, the Council of Prisons Southeast Regional Vice President told ABC News the situation at Federal Correctional Institution Coleman, 60 miles north of Tampa is “dire.”

According to a complaint filed with the Department of Justice Office of Inspector General, which was obtained by ABC News, staff at FCI Coleman allege that certain staff members have still to report to work while COVID-19 tests are pending and the staff, they say, came in contact with a COVID-19 positive staff member.

The union points to a May 2020 memo which states that staff who come into contact with a COVID-19 positive staff member have to quarantine for 14 days.

Rojas explained that it is “reckless” for anyone to tell someone to stay at work despite coming into contact with the staffer.

“Everybody sees this and everybody knows friends that have died or have been in the ICU. So there’s a panic going on because of this and you can’t have people who have tested positive walking around the institution,” he continued.

Troitino says that the pandemic amplifies the problems inside the Bureau of Prisons.

“The public needs to understand that the Federal Bureau of Prisons, for many years, has had many deficiencies that have been ignored because nobody really cares about inmates. However, these are people’s families. And the pandemic has amplified all of our deficiencies of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, whether it’s staffing, whether it’s the poor health care, food, we’re getting complaints from our [Special Housing Unit], this last week because there were numerous disturbances because they’re undernourished.”

The Bureau of Prisons also did not immediately respond to ABC News request for comment on the situation at FCC Coleman.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.