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Top News In கூட்டாட்சியின் பணியகம் ஆஃப் ப்ரிஸந்ஸ் Today - Breaking & Trending Today

US prison guards refusing vaccine despite COVID-19 outbreaks


US prison guards refusing vaccine despite COVID-19 outbreaks
NICOLE LEWIS of The Marshall Project and MICHAEL R. SISAK of The Associated Press
March 16, 2021
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1of5Kareen Troitino stands outside the Federal Corrections Institution, Friday, March 12, 2021, in Miami. Troitino, a local correction s officer union president, said that fewer than half of the facility s 240 employees have been fully vaccinated as of March 11. Many of the workers who refused had expressed concerns about the vaccine’s efficacy and side effects, Troitino said.Marta Lavandier/APShow MoreShow Less
2of5Kareen Troitino stands outside the Federal Corrections Institution, Friday, March 12, 2021, in Miami. Troitino, a local correction s officer union president, said that fewer than half of the facility s 240 employees have been fully vaccinated as of March 11. Many of the workers who refused had expressed concerns about the vaccine’s efficacy and side ef ....

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Vulnerable Inmates Left in Prison as Covid Rages


The Danbury Federal Correction Institution in Connecticut is one of three federal prisons that were singled out for prompt action last spring by former Attorney General William Barr because of its vulnerability to Covid outbreaks.Credit.Lauren Lancaster for The New York Times
Vulnerable Inmates Left in Prison as Covid Rages
At a federal compound in Connecticut, inmates in precarious health “are like sitting ducks,” one lawyer said.
The Danbury Federal Correction Institution in Connecticut is one of three federal prisons that were singled out for prompt action last spring by former Attorney General William Barr because of its vulnerability to Covid outbreaks.Credit.Lauren Lancaster for The New York Times ....

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Watchdog: Prisons Bureau Could Do a Better Job Using Data to Help With Hiring, Retention


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Advice comes as a House bipartisan caucus on BOP reform is relaunched. 
The Federal Bureau of Prisons should develop more reliable and consistent methods of using workforce data to help with hiring and retention and to improve employee well-being, a watchdog reported on Wednesday. 
The Government Accountability Office issued a report about data collection and analysis methods at BOP, which has about 151,735 inmates and 37,402 employees nationwide. Staff recruitment and retention challenges have persisted during the coronavirus pandemic and despite the fact that the federal inmate population has decreased by 29% from 2013 to 2020, as the Justice Department inspector general reported in November.  ....

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He Got COVID In Prison. The Government Said He Was 'Recovered.' Then He Died.


Updated
Feb 19, 2021
He Got COVID In Prison. The Government Said He Was Recovered. Then He Died.
The death of a federal prisoner in Indiana illustrates the incomplete and often misleading nature of COVID-19 data released by correctional facilities.
Illustration: Rebecca Zisser/HuffPost; Photos: Getty
When Joseph Lee Fultz arrived at the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Indiana, in January to begin a 27-year sentence, the prison was fighting to contain a COVID-19 outbreak.
Positive cases at the sprawling complex ― which consists of a maximum-security prison where death row prisoners are housed, a medium-security prison and an adjacent camp ― had jumped from fewer than a dozen in early November to more than 400 by the end of December, coinciding with a rash of executions conducted there. ....

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He was locked up for supporting Islamist terrorism before turning his life around


He was locked up for supporting Islamist terrorism before turning his life around
Ashley Powers, The Washington Post
Feb. 9, 2021
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2of6Mohammed Khalid s Koran.Photo for The Washington Post by Andre ChungShow MoreShow Less
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4of6Mohammed Khalid is pictured in Ellicott City, Md., near where he grew up.Photo for The Washington Post by Andre ChungShow MoreShow Less
5of6Mohammed Khalid.Photo for The Washington Post by Andre ChungShow MoreShow Less
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Terrorist. That s what the boys whispered after he stood up and introduced himself to his ninth-grade class. Terrorist. Soft enough that the teacher couldn t hear, loud enough to sting. The boys smirked, turned back to whatever was happening in English class. Mohammed Khalid didn t respond. He simmered inside. Mohammed was 13 and had arrived in suburban Baltimore from Pakistan just a few weeks before. He was a wisp of a kid in a collared shirt, with neatly trimmed black hair ....

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