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Oregon Governor Plans To Release Inmates To Reduce Risk Of COVID-19

An incarcerated man works at Snake River Correctional Institution in Ontario, Ore., during a community event Aug. 25, 2019.
An incarcerated man works at Snake River Correctional Institution in Ontario, Ore., during a community event Aug. 25, 2019.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown is preparing to release medically vulnerable inmates as the number of incarcerated individuals who have tested positive for coronavirus climbs to more than 160.


Brown on Friday sent a letter to the Oregon Department of Corrections director noting that inmates who meet certain criteria will have the remainder of their term commuted.

“Given what we now know about the disease and its pervasiveness in our communities, it is appropriate to release individuals who face significant health challenges should they contract COVID-19,” Brown wrote in a letter to Colette Peters, the director of DOC.

The governor outlined criteria, including:

Inmates must be identified by DOC medical staff as particularly vulnerable.

Their sentence cannot be for committing a crime against another individual.

They must have served 50% of their sentence, have a suitable housing plan, have a good record of conduct for the last year and not present a risk to the community.

The governor asked the DOC to provide a “case-by-case” analysis of medically vulnerable inmates and provide her office with a list of eligible adults by June 22. The eligible individuals must then take a COVID-19 test before release. If they test positive, they must be isolated rather than released until they are better, according to the letter.

The DOC expects about 100 inmates could fit the criteria outlined by the governor and potentially be eligible for early release, according to the governor's office. 

The Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem has one of the state’s largest outbreaks — with 139 positive cases and 36 staff members who have tested positive. 

Bobbin Singh, with the Oregon Justice Resource Center, who is behind the lawsuit,  said the decision was overdue. 

Oregon has one of the oldest prison populations in the nation. 

 
Copyright 2020 Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Lauren Dake is a politics and policy reporter for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. Her reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.
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