A Florida woman who has been quarantined at a Nebraska medical facility since May following hantavirus exposure is being held against her will under an order signed by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., her attorney said.“It’s an unfair system,” attorney Steven Hyman told HuffPost on Tuesday of Angela Perryman’s order to remain at the University of Nebraska Medical Center under lock and key.“Florida is willing to accept her and supervise her, and all this talk about freedom and fighting the COVID and the mandates ... fly in the face of what Kennedy is doing,” Hyman said of the health secretary, who opposed COVID-19 restrictions during the pandemic and likened following mask mandates to “living like a slave.”Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., pictured earlier this month, ordered Angela Perryman to continue quarantining in Nebraska despite a CDC expert saying she could do so safely at home.Richmond Times-Dispatch via Getty ImagesKennedy personally signed an order on Monday to continue quarantining Perryman despite a quarantine medical officer with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention concluding last week that she could leave and be adequately monitored at home.Kennedy’s order did not give a reason for overriding Dr. Michael Bell’s conclusion, only stating that it was “necessary to protect public health,” according to a copy obtained by Inside Medicine.“They’re polite and they’re not using physical violence against me, but otherwise it’s a prison,” Perryman told The New York Times on Monday of her now weekslong quarantine.Perryman was one of more than a dozen people quarantining at the Nebraska facility after being exposed to hantavirus on a cruise ship. Initially, federal health officials said the cruise passengers could leave at any time and self-monitor for symptoms at home.U.S. health officials said last month that the people taken to a Nebraska quarantine facility could leave whenever they'd like and quarantine at home. Admiral Brian Christine, Kennedy's assistant secretary for health, is seen at the press conference announcing the quarantine.Dylan Widger via Getty ImagesHealth officials later reversed this decision and said everyone had to stay at the quarantine facility for at least two weeks. Then, they said people could not leave unless health officials in their home state agreed to conduct in-person monitoring and station a 24-hour guard outside their door, as The Times previously reported.Perryman must now remain at the facility until June 22, said Hyman.“It clearly is a political statement by him,” he said of Kennedy, who does not have any formal medical background, “because the medical reviewer made it very clear that there was no medical basis for either the in-person monitoring or the fact of having a guard.”Perryman is currently the only person who is trying to leave the facility, Hyman said. And health officials in Florida, where Perryman has requested to self-quarantine, have refused HHS’s strict demands to secure her release.Nebraska Medicine's Davis Global Center in Omaha, Nebraska, is where American passengers from a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship were ordered to quarantine last month.via Associated PressA spokesperson for the Florida Department of Health told HuffPost that the state is willing to facilitate Perryman’s return ― “and any appropriate public health monitoring consistent with established public health practices” ― but said the state won’t provide “round-the-clock surveillance measures.”“The state does not believe unnecessarily intrusive restrictions are warranted when established public health practices can effectively protect both public health and personal freedom,” DOH Communications Director Brian Wright said in a statement.Representatives for HHS and the CDC did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s requests for comment.