North Carolina
Prisons were some of the hardest hit places during the pandemic. What are the next steps forward?
By Elizabeth Thompson
It’s simple to disregard prisons and jails in the event you’re on the skin.
Inside and outdoors appear to be completely different worlds, however they aren’t. The COVID-19 pandemic’s affect on North Carolina’s jail system demonstrated the interconnectedness of the within and outdoors communities because the variety of circumstances behind the barbed wire ballooned by means of 2020 and 2021.
The North Carolina Division of Public Security (DPS) has now reported 58 incarcerated individuals who have died of COVID for the reason that pandemic started.
However deaths are just one approach that incarcerated folks have felt the toll of the pandemic.
Incarcerated folks have additionally been extra remoted from household and pals, as visits have been placed on maintain throughout COVID surges. Many incarcerated folks acquired sick with COVID, unable to guard themselves in a communal residing surroundings or safe their very own cleansing provides and private protecting gear. And communication between the within and outdoors – troublesome in the most effective of instances – turned an extra trial for inmates and their households.
Advocates for incarcerated folks and public well being specialists have been reflecting on the teachings discovered through the pandemic, and pondering how the teachings of the pandemic can inform the way forward for incarceration in North Carolina and the USA.
Speaking behind the veil
It was already troublesome to get involved with folks behind bars earlier than the pandemic, however as completely different surges closed prisons to the skin world, it turned much more troublesome, mentioned Kristie Puckett-Williams, the Statewide Marketing campaign for Sensible Justice supervisor for the American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina.
Communication between incarcerated folks and the remainder of the world is at all times restricted by restricted visits, paid cellphone calls and the mail system. These restrictions have been exacerbated by the implementation of a brand new mail supply methodology, inmates say. A part of the issue was that unlawful substances, akin to fentanyl – a potent opioid that solely wants a couple of grains to provide a harmful excessive – could possibly be hidden in envelopes.
“They liquify the medication they usually put it on the paper,” John Bull, a spokesman for the state jail system, advised WFAE radio in Charlotte. “They put it in what’s showing to be birthday playing cards or different kids’s drawings.”
He advised the radio station that the jail system intercepted 568 items of mail that included medication or paraphernalia over a one-year interval out of a jail inhabitants of greater than 28,000.
Now, incarcerated folks now not acquired bodily playing cards and notes from household, however scanned copies. The system eliminates the feeling of touching one thing dealt with by a beloved one. The affect on incarcerated folks, who look ahead to handwritten mail, was palpable, Puckett-Williams mentioned.
She referenced the devastation of 1 incarcerated man: “As someone who’s serving life, who by no means had the hope of getting out his solely lifeline to the skin world is thru his mail and thru telephones.”
Crystal Poole, program director of North Carolina Residents United for Restorative Effectiveness (NC CURE), mentioned the transition away from bodily mail was significantly onerous for incarcerated individuals who additionally weren’t in a position to see family members in particular person.
“They weren’t getting any of that exterior contact in any respect,” Poole mentioned. “They’re getting copies of playing cards from their households on prime of not having the ability to depart or go to work or do something, any form of social assist.”
DPS mentioned the brand new system was carried out in an effort to cease medication from being smuggled into the prisons by way of mail. Puckett-Williams argued that medication proceed to be smuggled in — by employees.
“They’ve been bringing stuff in,” Puckett-Williams alleged. “You don’t assume they don’t convey medication? They introduced COVID in, and other people died consequently.”
Epidemiological connection behind the veil
Jails and prisons throughout the nation confronted exchanges of the coronavirus because of the pandemic, mentioned Eric Reinhart, an anthropologist of prisons and public well being and a resident doctor at Northwestern College.
Reinhart is the writer of a research illustrating the early affect of the pandemic biking between Chicago’s Cook dinner County Jail and the bigger neighborhood. The research discovered that individuals biking out of the Cook dinner County Jail have been related to 15.7 % of the documented COVID-19 circumstances in Illinois as of April 19, 2020.
“We’re not interrelated just by area, by spatial proximity such that you can maintain someone up behind a wall and a cage [and] now they’re separate,” Reinhart mentioned. “We’re additionally interrelated by all these advanced organic and epidemiological processes … even when we by no means see the opposite.”
As soon as inside prisons and jails, illnesses akin to COVID fester, mentioned Amanda Klonsky, analysis and coverage fellow on the UCLA Legislation COVID Behind Bars Knowledge Challenge.
“The crowded, poorly-ventilated, and unsanitary situations in most American jails and prisons present preferrred situations for this virus to unfold,” Klonsky mentioned in an e mail, “which is why we have now seen huge, fast-spreading COVID outbreaks behind bars with each new COVID wave.”
And what occurs in prisons impacts what occurs on the skin, even when they seem separate, Reinhart mentioned. One tangible instance of that connectedness is the truth that about 98 % of individuals incarcerated in North Carolina’s prisons will sooner or later reenter society, based on DPS.
When these folks come dwelling to their households and neighborhoods, their well being will doubtless have been impacted by their incarceration. One research has discovered that every 12 months in jail reduces an individual’s life expectancy by two years.
Individuals depart jail typically experiencing well being issues akin to psychological well being points, diabetes or coronary heart illness, and now, the opportunity of lengthy COVID. They’ll be looking for therapy for these situations locally.
Alternative for change
Sandra Hardee, govt director of NC CURE, mentioned that proper now, COVID numbers are low within the prisons, so now could be the second to arrange for the subsequent surge.
Hardee mentioned she additionally hopes that with much less virus in circulation there may be extra alternatives for incarcerated folks to be linked with applications that may assist them reenter, such because the profitable Sexual Offender Accountability and Duty Program.
“Persons are being warehoused,” Hardee mentioned, quoting a letter from an incarcerated particular person. “They’re not being provided restoration, redemption, rehabilitation.”
Puckett-Williams mentioned there needs to be extra alternatives for incarcerated folks to be linked to the neighborhood, together with extra alternatives for training.
“COVID has actually uncovered plenty of fissures in efficiencies and effectiveness of locking folks up,” Puckett-Williams mentioned. “It could be my hope that we proceed to make transformational adjustments that really get us to what we’re in search of.”
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North Carolina
North Carolina Governor Josh Stein declares state of emergency ahead of winter storm
(WGHP) — Governor Josh Stein declared a statewide state of emergency on Thursday evening ahead of a winter storm expected to sweep through the Piedmont Triad on Friday.
He is urging people across North Carolina to prepare for cold temperatures, snow and ice.
“This storm will likely bring significant impacts from snow, sleet and freezing rain in different parts of the state,” Stein said. “North Carolinians should pay close attention to their local weather forecast, make sure they are prepared with what they need at home before Friday afternoon and stay home if possible as ice on the roadways will likely create dangerous driving conditions.”
On Wednesday, Stein activated state resources to set into motion a cross-agency storm response and enable the potential of federal reimbursement if the event qualifies.
The North Carolina Department of Transportation has begun brining roads. They will work around the clock in 12-hour shifts to plow and treat snow and ice until all state-maintained roads are cleared.
“State emergency officials are monitoring the situation and are prepared to assist the counties and municipalities if needed,” NC Emergency Management Director Will Ray said. “Residents across the state should be prepared to shelter in place. If the power goes out, be sure to operate generators outside and away from open windows or doors to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning.”
North Carolina
No. 24 Cal Women Beat No. 21 North Carolina State
The 24th-ranked Cal women’s basketball team defeated a ranked opponent for the second time this season on Thursday night when the Bears knocked off No. 21 North Carolina State 78-71 at Haas Pavilion.
“I think this was one of the biggest wins for Cal women’s basketball in some time,” Cal coach Charmin Smith.
The Bears defeated then-No. 19 Alabama back on December 5 at Haas Pavilion, and on Thurday Cal beat a team that reached the Final Four last season.
Marta Suarez scored 17 points for Cal (15-2, 3-1 ACC.), and 14 of those points came in the first half when Cal took control late in the second quarter. Ioanna Krimili, Michelle Onyiah and Kayla Williams added 15 points apeice to help the Bears end the Wolfpack’s seven-game winning streak while keeping Cal unbeaten at home (11-0).
Krimili was just 6-for-18 from the the field, including 3-for-12 on three-pointers, but she hit one of the biggest shots of the game when she nailed a three-point shot with 4:57 left, 21 seconds after the Wolfpack had scored six straight points to close Cal’s nine-point lead to three points.
“She made it when we needed it, and we have a habit of doing that,” Smth said.
North Carolina State (11-4, 3-1 ACC) never got closer than four points the rest of the way and suffered its first conference loss despite 21 points from Aziaha James and 19 from Tilda Trygger.
Cal took the lead for good with 1:01 left in the third quarter, then held off every North Carolina State surge after that.
An important reason for Cal’s consistency throughout the game was the play of point guard Kayla Williams, who played all 40 minutes, shot 7-for-13 from the field and added six assists with just two turnovers while doing all the ball-handling chores and driving the lane to create opportunities for herself or others.
“I thought Williams killed us off the bounce,” North Carolina State coach Wes Moore said.
Williams may be the key to Cal’s success this season, because her strong play has come as a surprise to casual observers. She did not start any games for USC last season when she averaged 10.8 minutes, 2.6 points and 0.6 assists per game. After transferring to Cal, Williams has started every game for the Bears this season while averaging 33 minutes, 12.2 points and 4.6 assists to go along with 44.5% three-point shooting.
Thursday was the first time two top-25 women’s teams played a game at Haas Pavilion since Dec. 22, 2018, when 14th-ranked Cal lost to No. 1 UConn.
Cal led by eight points entering the fourth quarter, and the Wolfpack got as close as three points, but the Bears maintained the lead throughout. Cal had scored the final eight points of the third quarter to break away from a 52-52 tie to grab that 60-52 advantage after three quarters.
Cal held a 39-33 lead at halftime, thanks in large part to a one-minute shooting spree by Suarez. She hit three-pointers on three consecutive Cal possessions over a span of 56 seconds to cap a 16-0 Bears run that took Cal from a 22-14 deficit to a 30-22 lead with 5:22 left in the first half.
Suarez’s one-minute shooting spree seemed to change the complexion of the game. Cal never trailed after that.
“I was feeling it,” Suarez said.
Suarez was 4-for-4 from long range in the first half and had 14 points and 10 rebounds at intermission. The rest of the Cal team was just 3-for-12 on three-pointers, and Krimili was 1-for-7 from beyond the arc at halftime. Her one made three-pointer came from well behind the line with the shot clock running down.
Cal shot 44.4% from the field in the first half, while the Wolfpack made just 35.3% of its shots. Cal attempted just one free throw in the first half, and missed it.
NOTES: The top two scorers from North Carolina State’s Final Four team of last season are starters on this season’s Wolfpack squad – Aziaha James and Saniya Rivers.
Heading into Thursday’s action, Cal was averaging 10.1 made three-pointers per game, sixth-most in the country, and were making 37.8% of its three-point shots, which is 12th-best in the nation.
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North Carolina
Gunman in
A man who fired an assault rifle inside a Washington, D.C., restaurant in December 2016 while claiming to investigate the “pizzagate” hoax died this week after being fatally shot by police during a traffic stop in Kannapolis, North Carolina.
On the night of Jan. 4, Edgar Welch was a passenger in a 2001 GMC Yukon that was stopped by officers, Kannapolis police said Thursday in a news statement.
The traffic stop was conducted after officers linked the vehicle to Welch, who was wanted at the time on an outstanding arrest warrant, police said.
When officers recognized Welch and moved to arrest him, he produced a handgun from his jacket and pointed it at one of the officers, police said, and after refusing commands to drop the gun, two officers opened fire on him.
He died of his wounds at an area hospital two days later, on Jan. 6, police said.
The three officers involved in the traffic stop and the two other occupants in Welch’s vehicle were uninjured, police said.
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation confirmed to CBS News Thursday Welch’s identity as the “pizzagate” shooter.
Welch fired his weapon inside the Comet Ping Pong restaurant on Dec. 4, 2016, after he drove there from North Carolina to investigate a false far-right conspiracy theory claiming that Democrats were running a child sex ring out of the restaurant, a claim that had garnered numerous threats against the eatery.
After he entered the crowded restaurant with an AR-15 assault rifle and a revolver, he fired the rifle into a door, authorities said at the time. No one was hurt.
He later pled guilty to one federal count each of interstate transportation of a firearm and assault with a dangerous weapon. In June 2017 he was sentenced by Supreme Court Justice Ketanji B. Jackson, then a U.S. district judge, to four years in prison.
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