WAILUKU, Maui — Families of people held at the Maui Community Correctional Center are calling for accountability over concerns that the overcrowded jail isn鈥檛 taking adequate measures to protect their loved ones from COVID-19.
Among other concerns, families say that the MCCC is in the Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission鈥檚 September report, like social distancing between bunks. The commission, which was put in place in 2019 but has never received money to hire staff or carry out its duties, has authority to set inmate population levels.
But practicing social distancing is nearly impossible inside the MCCC, a Wailuku jail with an occupational capacity of 301 that held 303 inmates as of last week, .
Forty-three inmates have COVID-19 at the MCCC, according to Department of Public Safety . Forty-four people are currently in medical isolation and 211 are in quarantine, the DPS data shows. About half of Maui鈥檚 42 new cases are part of a cluster at MCCC, .
鈥淚t鈥檚 always possible鈥 that COVID-positive inmates come in close contact with the jail鈥檚 general population, said Hawaii Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Toni Schwartz.
鈥淲e haven鈥檛 made any secret of the fact that our facilities are overcrowded, and we do our best to try and separate them as best as possible,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 always a possibility that offenders might come in contact with other offenders who later have been determined to be tested positive.鈥
One inmate says he was relocated to a cell with COVID-positive inmates after receiving his first shot of the vaccine.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e exposed me to it basically,鈥 Wade 鈥淜alani鈥 Nakoa, who is currently being held at MCCC, told his fiancee, Nicole Ottersen, in a phone conversation Friday. Civil Beat was allowed to monitor the conversation but did not participate in the call due to prison rules that prohibit three-party conversations.
鈥淚f I didn鈥檛 have it before, I probably have it now. But I got the first round of the vaccination so I got a little bit of help,鈥 Nakoa said.
After Nakoa got his first shot in late February, he began feeling body aches, chills, and a headache, so he asked for medication like Tylenol, he said.
He says prison staff took it that he was complaining he was sick, so they sent him to a new two-bunk cell where he has been sleeping on the floor because there were already three inmates there when he arrived. 鈥淎t no time鈥 are the beds 6 feet apart in the cell, Nakoa said.
Other inmates who receive the vaccine are also 鈥渆nding up down here,鈥 Nakoa said, because they show side effects of the vaccine and COVID-19 antibodies on an antigen test.
Nakoa said he doesn鈥檛 know when he will be released from the COVID-positive cell and that prison staff are not giving him much information.
Nakoa told Ottersen in the phone call that he knew he could face repercussions for having his remarks appear in the media, but he thinks people need to know what the inmates are facing. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just voicing our concerns on how we鈥檙e being treated down here.鈥
Three people Civil Beat contacted would not speak on the record or allow printing their jailed family member鈥檚 name, citing fear of retaliation against their family members from authorities inside the jail.
Asked if inmates face retaliation from correctional officers for talking about the COVID-19 situation inside the jail, Schwartz said, 鈥淣o.鈥
Kahealani Cramer worries about her husband, Robert Cramer, who, she said, is currently in 鈥渢he hole but they鈥檙e using it for quarantine.鈥
Robert reported there being 鈥渇our of them to a cell,鈥 Cramer said. 鈥淭hey have one mask, one-layered, they have to hand-wash it. They only have soap to shower. Hot water for the shower only got on three days ago.鈥
After Cramer wrote on Facebook about what she鈥檇 heard from Robert, he was put on the 鈥渟hit list,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 been in there 11 days, and he鈥檚 got no laundry.鈥
Schwartz said that inmates are issued two masks upon entry; 鈥渉ave frequent supply鈥 of soap, disposable paper towels, and hand sanitizer; and have laundry done 鈥渆very Tuesday and Thursday, every day but each module is different.鈥
Angelika Serafica said that her son, Christopher Jenkins, reported being put in a quarantine cell after a COVID-positive inmate was put in the same van on their way to the court. Afterward her son tested negative, Serafica said, but he was put in a cell with three other men, two of whom were positive.
鈥淗e finally tested positive on the 28th,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow they鈥檒l let him go after 10 days because they know he鈥檚 not contagious. Basically they forced him to get sick before they let him out. It seems like they鈥檙e practicing herd immunity,鈥 she said, adding, 鈥淗e feels that they purposely gave him the virus.鈥
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About the Author
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Jack Truesdale is a freelance writer and Civil Beat contributor on Maui. You can email him at jtruesdale@civilbeat.org.