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Incarcerated Texans Enlisted to Work in County Morgue as COVID-19 Deaths Overwhelm El Paso

The morgue in El Paso is so overwhelmed by the number of people dying from COVID-19 that inmates from the county’s detention facility are being brought in to assist with the overflow of bodies awaiting autopsy.

While the work these inmates do in the community typically goes unpaid, Chris Acosta, a spokesperson for the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office, said “trustees refused to work unless they were compensated.” They’re making $2 per hour.

Between four and eight inmates from the detention facility’s trustee program are volunteering daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The inmates doing the work are misdemeanor offenders and those in minimum custody. The shifts started Monday, Acosta said.

Acosta said she couldn’t speak to the exact nature of the work the inmates are doing at the morgues, but she said that the inmates, one deputy and two detention officers are given personal protective equipment and are required to wear it.

Images and video show the trustees moving bodies to the eight, soon to be 10, mobile morgues set up outside the medical examiner’s office.

It’s a temporary assignment, Acosta said, while the county awaits the arrival of the National Guard.

Due to the recent COVID-19 surge in El Paso in recent weeks, the Medical Examiner’s Office has asked the county jail for help. Credit: REUTERS/Ivan Pierre Aguirre

The number of hospitalized coronavirus patients in the far West Texas city has shot up nearly tenfold since the start of September. Earlier this month, the Department of Defense sent medical teams to help and local funeral homes are readying extra refrigerated storage space.

El Paso County recorded a total of 45 new deaths Thursday and Friday caused by the virus. About 1,105 people are hospitalized, including 319 in intensive care, according to the latest city statistics.

Attempts by city and county officials to shut down nonessential businesses to try to slow the spread of the virus have bounced around in the courts, sowing confusion, Acosta said.

“A lot of the businesses have been calling my office, ‘Do I shutdown or not shutdown?’ The people are very confused. We’re just trying to follow the judge’s ruling and follow the law,” she said.

El Paso County inmates help move bodies to mobile morgue units outside the Medical Examiner’s Office on Nov. 14, 2020. Credit: REUTERS/Ivan Pierre Aguirre

Late Friday, a state appeals court again blocked El Paso County’s shutdown of nonessential businesses that was scheduled to last until Dec. 1. El Paso County Judge Ricardo Samaniego issued the shutdown order Oct. 29 in an effort to slow the latest outbreak of COVID-19 here, but a group of local restaurants and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton quickly sued to block it.

Asked about the precautions taken to keep the jail population safe, given trustees’ exposure to the virus, Acosta said anyone entering a county building is screened, which includes asking about symptoms and taking their temperature.

Ivan Pierre Aguirre contributed to this report.

This story originally appeared on the Texas Tribune. To read this article in its original format, click here.

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