More Than a Uniform: Remembering Annie Covarrubias and the Crisis Facing Correctional Officers

An angel raising a key to prison bars.
Image created by IVN staff.
Author: Chad Peace
Published: 20 May, 2025
Updated: 18 Jun, 2025
2 min read

Last week, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) officials announced the sudden passing of Annie Covarrubias, a correctional officer at the Correctional Training Facility (CTF) in Soledad. She was 35 years old. In the words of her colleagues, Annie was a “dependable, professional, and kind” officer, known for her dedication to both her peers and the incarcerated individuals she worked with every day.

Her death, though still unexplained publicly, comes as a growing number of correctional officers across the country face silent crises: physical, psychological, and institutional. The memorial shared by CDCR paints a picture of a public servant who “consistently demonstrated kindness, humility, and professionalism.” Those are qualities we should always recognize. But it’s worth asking: What does it take to consistently show up that way in a place built on punishment and control?

In the wake of her passing, Annie’s colleagues and loved ones launched a GoFundMe campaign to support her family and honor her legacy. The fundraiser describes Annie as a “beloved daughter, sister, partner, and friend” whose kindness and dedication left a lasting impact on everyone around her. As of this week, the campaign has raised nearly $20,000 -- just shy of its initial goal.

This June, IVN will launch a new How It Really Works series that explores the unseen pressures of prison systems, not just for the people who are incarcerated, but for the officers and staff who work inside the walls. While much of the public debate about prison reform focuses on sentencing laws, bail policy, or rehabilitation, we rarely stop to ask: What’s happening to the people on the job? What does it cost them, and what support do they receive?

Running for President as an Independent: How it Really Works

In our reporting, we found that correctional officers, like Annie, are at the center of a workplace many describe as emotionally isolating and physically dangerous. Suicide rates among correctional officers now exceed those of police officers and firefighters. One 2024 Health & Justice review concluded that corrections staff rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) approach or exceed that of military combat veterans. They suffer high rates of PTSD, depression, hypertension, and burnout, often with little institutional support.

And most never ask for help, for fear of losing their careers.

The loss of a colleague like Annie Covarrubias is a tragedy. But it’s also a reminder. Behind every title, badge, or uniform, there is a human being trying to navigate a system that wasn’t built to protect their well-being. We should be honoring their service not just in memorial, but in policy, practice, and care.

The upcoming How It Really Works: Health Care Behind Bars series will examine how the justice system treats those who are incarcerated—and how it often forgets the people charged with overseeing it. We hope it starts a new conversation, not just about accountability, but about humanity. Because what happens inside these walls affects all of us.

Related articles

Supreme Court building.
Supreme Court Sides with Federal Corrections Officers in Lawsuit Over Prison Incident
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled June 30 that federal prison officers and officials cannot be sued by an inmate who accused them of excessive force during a 2021 incident, delivering a victory for federal corrections personnel concerned about rising legal exposure for doing their jobs....
01 Jul, 2025
-
3 min read
How It Really Works Health Care Behind Bars
Health Care Behind Bars - How It Really Works
The health care crisis behind bars affects two distinct but deeply connected groups: incarcerated individuals and correctional officers. While incarcerated people are constitutionally entitled to care, access remains inconsistent, and most enter custody with significant medical and mental health needs. They face higher rates of chronic illness, infectious disease, and psychiatric conditions than the general public....
12 Jun, 2025
-
20 min read
POV shot from behind bars in a jail.
A History of California Criminal Justice and Prison Reform Initiatives (1994-2025)
Over the past 30 years, California voters have repeatedly turned to the ballot box to shape criminal justice policy, responding to concerns about public safety, justice, punishment, and rehabilitation. ...
13 May, 2025
-
8 min read

Latest articles

Workers in factory.
Lorena Gonzalez, California’s Top Labor Leader, Blasts ‘Anti-Labor Left’ Over Abundance Movement
Lorena Gonzalez, one of California’s most influential labor leaders, entered the fray this week in a growing Democratic debate over the so-called “abundance” movement. ...
09 Jul, 2025
-
2 min read
Don Bacon
'Why Am I Doing This?': Don Bacon’s Retirement Reflects a Congress Driving Out Problem Solvers
U.S. Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) recently announced his retirement from Congress, but the reasons he cites for his departure underscore a growing problem in Washington -- specifically, a rejection of problem solving in favor of division, partisan gamesmanship, and provocation....
09 Jul, 2025
-
4 min read
Jail cell.
Nixon Admitted Weed Wasn’t Dangerous, But Killed It to Crush Political Dissent
This seven-part series chronicles the milestones, backlash, and unintended consequences that have shaped the war on cannabis from the 1960s to the present day....
09 Jul, 2025
-
2 min read