The Marshall Project

Lax Masking, Short Quarantines, Ignored Symptoms: Inside a Prison Coronavirus Outbreak in ‘Disbeliever Country.’

The latest COVID-19 surge is happening behind bars, too. Here’s three accounts from an upstate New York prison hit by the pandemic.

The number of COVID-19 cases have spiked in recent weeks across New York’s state prisons, including at Greene Correctional Facility in Coxsackie. According to the state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision’s website, 137 Greene prisoners had tested positive and 92 had recovered as of Oct. 28.

Life Inside Perspectives from those who work and live in the criminal justice system. Sign up to receive "Life Inside" emailed to you every week. Related Stories

Multiple accounts from inside the prison suggest that the cases are concentrated in one dorm—D-1. Residents we interviewed said that on Oct. 23, about 40 of the 50 men who lived there tested positive.

The prison agency claims to have complied with guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and the New York State Department of Health. But Greene residents described a response rife with inadequate quarantining, ignored symptoms, lack of treatment, men moving around the facility during the outbreak and inconsistent mask-wearing among staff and residents.

Three men from D-1, Jermaine Archer, Cecil Myers and Eric Manners, shared their stories. The Department of Corrections and Community Supervision would

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Marshall Project

The Marshall Project2 min readCrime & Violence
Subjects To Debate
News Inside knows that political debates are always taking place behind the wall, even after the presidential election. That’s why Issue 6 is full of information that will help folks inside strengt...
The Marshall Project5 min readCooking, Food & Wine
Why My First Thanksgiving in Prison Was The Best One I’d Had In Forever
Between being sober, getting a visit and having a surprise feast with the mean girls in my unit, I still cherish that day.
The Marshall Project8 min readPolitics
No-Show Prison Workers Cost Mississippi Taxpayers Millions
When Darrell Adams showed up for an overnight shift at the Marshall County Correctional Facility in rural Mississippi, he was one of six officers guarding about 1,000 prisoners. Adams said he thought that was normal; only half-a-dozen guards had been

Related Books & Audiobooks