Covington & Burling Sues State Psychiatric Hospital After More Than 100 Patients Contract COVID-19
At least two patients at California's Patton State Hospital have died from coronavirus, according to a lawsuit filed by a team of Covington lawyers in San Francisco and counsel from Disability Rights California in Oakland.
August 06, 2020 at 02:52 PM
4 minute read
Five people being held at one of the largest psychiatric hospitals in the United States are suing the facility's leadership and the California Department of State Hospitals (DSH) after hundreds of patients and staff have tested positive for COVID-19, with two patients dying as a result of the illness.
Covington & Burling attorneys filed the class action complaint Wednesday against Janine Wallace, the executive director of Patton State Hospital in Patton, and DSH Director Stephanie Clendenin in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. At least 112 patients and 147 staff and personnel at the 1,527-bed forensic psychiatric hospital have contracted the virus, according to the lawsuit surfaced by Legal Radar.
The reported outbreak at Patton is not an isolated incident. In an April report, NBC News found that more than 1,450 COVID-19 cases have been documented at state mental health facilities in 23 states and Washington, D.C. As of Tuesday, San Bernadino County, where the hospital is located, has had 34,215 cases of the virus, the fourth highest of any California county, according to the state's website.
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