An inmate at Moose Lake prison and a corrections officer at the Red Wing juvenile facility each tested positive for COVID-19 over the weekend, marking the first signs of an outbreak behind bars in Minnesota.
The inmate remains in isolation alongside three other prisoners he had close contact with in recent days, while the officer is recovering at home. Both infections have produced mild symptoms and don't require hospitalization.
In an e-mail to employees Sunday evening, Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell said an unidentified staff member tested positive for the respiratory disease. He explained that they had developed a fever outside of work and sought medical attention. Although three colleagues and three minors who closely interacted with the officer are not exhibiting symptoms, they are all on a 14-day quarantine.
Early Monday morning, he announced that an inmate at another facility 2½ hours north also tested positive.
"We fully expect to see more confirmed cases among both staff and the people we serve," Schnell wrote. "We are working with the Department of Health to conduct contact tracing for this case and make sure we are mitigating the risk of exposure in the facility — especially for those people who are medically most at risk."
So far, the department has tested 22 prisoners across the state who have fallen ill with flu-like symptoms; 17 of those came back negative, while four others are awaiting results.
Moose Lake Warden William Bolin placed the unit where infected inmate lived on indefinite lockdown pending further instructions from medical professionals, according to an e-mail obtained by the Star Tribune.
The development comes nearly three weeks after Schnell closed all 11 Minnesota prisons to visitors to try and protect inmates and workers from the virus.