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St Louis Jail Director Resigns After Pressure From City Officials, Activists

St. Louis Public Radio St. Louis Corrections Commissioner Dale Glass announced he plans to resign from his position on Wednesday, after a tumultuous year. Glass has held the position since 2012. St. Louis Corrections Commissioner Dale Glass will resign from his position on June 1, following months of criticism over the management and condition of the city s jails. Glass s resignation, announced Wednesday in a statement from the mayor s office, came as little surprise to city politicians and criminal justice activists. “Failed leadership overseeing the city’s Corrections division has left the city with a huge mess to clean up,” Mayor Tishuara Jones said in a statement. “Between failing locks, lackluster maintenance, and subhuman conditions for the detainees under our care, it only further justifies my promise to shut down the Workhouse within my first 100 days.”

After Jail Unrest, St Louis Task Force Chair Calls For New Urgency — And New Management

Published April 7, 2021 at 3:50 PM CDT Listen KSDK Inmates at the St. Louis Justice Center gather around a third-floor window on Sunday. Inmates appeared to throw objects out of the windows and start a fire Since late December, five protests have erupted at the City Justice Center in downtown St. Louis. The latest came Sunday night, when a group of detainees broke windows on the third floor and threw objects to the streets below. Inmates could be heard chanting “We need help” and “We want court dates.” The number of people being incarcerated pre-trial in St. Louis, as well as the amount of time they spend waiting for trial, is one of the main focuses of a recent task force report looking into unrest at the jail. Commissioned after detainees seized control of a floor of the jail for hours on Feb. 6, the report contained 68 recommendations 13 of them considered urgent.

Wednesday: Latest Unrest At City Justice Center Was Avoidable, Task Force Chair Says

This interview will be on “St. Louis on the Air” over the noon hour Wednesday. This story will be updated after the show. You can listen live. Since late December, five protests have erupted at the Justice Center in downtown St. Louis. This latest came Sunday night, when a group of detainees broke windows on the third floor and threw objects out of the windows. Inmates could be heard chanting, “We need help” and “We want court dates.” The number of people being incarcerated pre-trial in St. Louis, as well as the amount of time they spend waiting for trial, is one of the main focuses of a recent task force report that recommends a host of items to improve conditions within the city’s correctional facilities. The March 12 report made 68 recommendations 13 of them considered urgent.

Inmate had COVID for weeks, St Louis jail didn t know: Documents | Coronavirus pandemic News

The City Justice Center (CJC), a jail in St Louis, Missouri, that saw three revolts in two months over allegedly brutal conditions and unsafe COVID-19 protocols, housed a COVID-positive detainee for two weeks before the jail was informed, documents obtained by Al Jazeera show, raising questions about COVID-19 safety protocols inside the jail, and the city’s testing procedures. Litel Gilmore, a pretrial detainee at CJC, tested positive for COVID-19 on December 15, according to confidential medical records obtained by Al Jazeera, which Gilmore agreed to share. The “notification date” for the test is December 29, records show. Another positive test was performed on December 30, the day Gilmore was placed under full quarantine. The notification date for that test is January 5.

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