MORE COVID CONFUSION AT MCLEAN COUNTY JAIL

COVID-19 virus over a picture of McLean County Jail

Back on January 11th, 2022, in an interview with Howard Packowitz of WEEK, Sheriff Jon Sandage said there were less than ten positive COVID-19 cases among inmates at the McLean County Jail.

Yet, records requests from the Sheriff’s office paint a very different picture. According to the latest data, the Jail Medical staff is reporting that as of the 12th–one day after the Sandage interview–79 inmates were positive with COVID-19. (To reiterate, this is information is provided by the Sheriff’s office per a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request). The Sheriff’s office has not responded to requests for clarification on this dramatic discrepancy.

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McLean County Jail: COVID Confusion and Recent Stats

COVID-19 virus over a picture of McLean County Jail

Stats from the McLean County Jail, accurate as of January 5th, 2022:

Jail population: 211

Proportions by gender:
are female: 21
are male: 190

Proportions by race:
Black: 109
Hispanic: 8
Persons of a Colonial Complexion: 93

Number of people over 50: 24
Number of inmates sentenced: 38
Number of inmates pretrial (felony): 159
Number of inmates pretrial (misdemeanors): 9
Number of inmates pretrial for drug offenses: 58
Number of out of county residences: 82

Accurate as of January 5th, 2022:


The total number of inmates who have tested positive for COVID-19: 78
The total number of jail staff who have tested positive for COVID-19: 36
The current number of inmates positive for COVID-19: 65 (as of publication, the Sheriff claims cases are below ten)
The current number of jail staff positive for COVID-19: 2

Total number of inmates vaccinated for COVID-19 by the jail: 118. Last vaccination clinic by jail was 9/20/2021.


Total number of jail staff vaccinated for COVID-19: No records are being kept
The number of current inmates that have been fully vaccinated whether in the jail or on their own: No records are being kept


On December 16th, 2021, McLean County Sheriff Jon Sandage announced that a new outbreak of COVID-19 had struck the jail. 26 inmates and six staff members tested positive for COVID-19.

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FROM BLONO WITH LOVE

McLean County Jail: Solitary Confinement & Vaccination Misinformation

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Stats from the McLean County Jail, accurate as of the March 3rd:
Jail population: 244

Proportions by gender:
28 (11.5%) are female
216 (88.5%) are male

Proportions by race:
118 (48.4%) Black
9 (3.7%) Hispanic
116 (47.5%) Person of a Colonial Complexion

Number of people over 50: 16

Number of inmates sentenced: 30 (12.3%)
Number of inmates pretrial (felony): 204 (83.6%)
Number of inmates pretrial (property felony): 58 (23.8%)
Number of inmates pretrial (misdemeanors): 6 (2.5%)
Number of inmates pretrial for drug offenses: 79 (32.4%)
Number of out of county residences: 70 (28.7%)

The total number of inmates who have tested positive for COVID-19: 7
The total number of jail staff who have tested positive for COVID-19: 13
The current number of inmates positive for COVID-19: 0
The current number of jail staff positive for COVID-19: 1

The jail’s COVID mitigation strategy continues to be primarily solitary confinement. Inmates are isolated in their cells 23-hours a day. Sheriff Sandage said that jail inmates were scheduled for COVID vaccinations when the state enters Phase 1c. However, the Illinois Department of Public Health states inmates at all corrections facilities–including county jails–are eligible for the vaccines in Phase 1b. McLean County has been in Phase 1b since January 18th.

The United Nation’s Guidance around imprisonment, called the Mandela Rules, prohibit solitary confinement longer than 15 days unless absolutely necessary. Since December 1st, McLean County Detention Center inmates have spent around 2,415 hours in isolation, a little more than 105 days.

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0 COVID cases in McLean County Jail

COVID-19 virus over a picture of McLean County Jail

Thankfully, there are currently zero known cases inside the McLean County jail according to Sheriff Jon Sandage who spoke at the McLean County Justice Committee Tuesday, January 5th, 2020. Doubts were raised after evidence emerged that there were additional cases at the jail that were never reported to the public. Sandage said the average inmate population for December 2020 is around 222, and that there are currently 40 inmates who have been sentenced and are awaiting transfer to the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC). Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, IDOC has had serious outbreaks in their facilities & has been very reluctant to take in new inmates.

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CALL TO ACTION: Demand Accountability from the Sheriff

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01/02/2020

I recently discovered that additional cases of COVID-19 in the McLean County Jail occurred back in late November. Since the story broke, there has been no announcements from the Sheriff’s office about whether there are any current cases, how often testing is occurring, and what’s being done to mitigate spread.

This isn’t terribly surprising. I’ve reported before about how the Sheriff lacks transparency around COVID-19 (among other things).

For these reasons, I’m making a CALL TO ACTION:

I am calling on the County Board to pass a resolution asking the Sheriff to report all COVID-19 cases in the jail promptly & accurately. This should be the bare minimum, but apparently it needs to be specified.

Because of the Illinois constitution, County Boards have very little actual authority over the Sheriff’s Office. This allows the Sheriff to operate with almost impunity. However, the board members have a duty to the tax-payers to be fiduciary shepherds for the jail; which they can’t do that if they don’t have the proper information. It’s time for them to prove they are concerned about a transparent & accountable government. While they cannot force the Sheriff to cooperate, a resolution requesting that information shows a clear message.

We should all be able to agree that transparency is key to effectively overcoming this pandemic. The people demand accurate and prompt information, especially regarding tax-payer funded liabilities like the jail. It is unfortunate the Sheriff has chosen to conceal & prevaricate on such an important issue.

Contact your county board members & ask them to pass a resolution seeking transparency & accountability at the jail. I encourage you to e-mail the County Administrator for public comments at both the McLean County Health Committee & Justice Committee.

The next Health Committee meeting is Monday, January 4th, 2020 at 4:30 PM.

The next Justice Committee meeting is Tuesday, January 5th, 2020 at 4:30 PM.

Email public comment statements to County Administration at admin@mcleancountyil.gov. E-mailed Statements will be placed in the official minutes, even if the statement reads longer than the individual/group time limit (5 minutes for individuals or group spokesperson). All requests will be taken in the order in which they are received, and the total time allowed for public comment at Committee meetings per County Board rules is 30 minutes.

Notes on McLean County Jail 5

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McLean County Jail News

Published: 12/29/2020

As of December 21st, 2020:
Population: 230
Black: 52.6% (121)
People of Color: 56.96 (131)
People of No Color: 43% (99)

Pre-trial: 93%
Charged with Felony: 87.8%
Charged with Felony against Property: 21.7%
Charged with Felony against Person: 19.1%
Charged with Misdemeanor: 3.9%
Charged with drug offense: 34.3%

COVID-19:
Inmates: 7 have tested positive in total
Staff: 8 have tested positive in total.
Current positive cases: unknown 01

COVID-19 numbers silently rise in McLean County Jail

It seems COVID-19 infection numbers in the McLean County Jail have risen since I last wrote about the Law & (In)justice Center. Since August, COVID-19 numbers remained flat at 5 inmates & 2 staff. Yet, on November 25th, at least two inmates tested positive bringing the total number to 7. Recent information requests indicate staff numbers have skyrocketed with 6 additional cases making a total of 8. I’m still inquiring on when exactly the staff members tested positive and whether there are any active cases in the jail.

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Mask Up BPD

09/01/2020

Dear Bloomington Police,

Not wearing a mask during a pandemic when we, the people, HAVE to interact with you is inappropriate pandemic behavior.

Encourage your local police to wear masks to protect against COVID-19.

#MaskUpBPD

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