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Prison reform advocates picket Lancaster facility

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About 200 advocates for prison inmates demonstrated outside the California State Prison in Lancaster to raise awareness of the risk of COVID-19 infection in the prison system.

The Jan. 9 protest was held in front of the prison at 44750 60th St. West.

Protesters carried signs with statements including “Prison Rights Are Human Rights.” Organizer Michelle Tran, of a group called Families United to End LWOP, wore a T-shirt that read, “Death by Incarceration.” She said the protesters want inmates at low risk for re-offending to be released and greater efforts at sanitation for those who remain.

“Someone needs to be held accountable,” Tran said. Her 43-year-old husband, Thai, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole for a murder conviction and has served 24 years in Avenal State Prison, near Fresno.

Prisons are still overcrowded despite the release of nonviolent offenders because more inmates are always coming in, she said. Her group is calling on the state to expedite the release of inmates age 50 and older and those with underlying medical issues.

She said 41,463 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19, including her husband. He didn’t become ill, but 144 men and women have died in prison, including 52 in the past 30 days.

“The health and safety of all who live in and work at our state institutions is our top priority,” CDCR officials said in a statement released to City News Service. “The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and California Correctional Health Care Services have worked closely together and taken extraordinary measures to address COVID-19 within our institutions and to keep staff and the population safe.”

Officials added, “Our active positive cases have decreased over the last several weeks, even as cases within the community continue to climb. We take the COVID-19 pandemic very seriously and will continuously adjust our response as new information and situations arise.”

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