Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Former coroner's investigat­or accepts $3M award

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A former coroner's office investigat­or has accepted a reduction of less than half of a jury's award of $8.4 million in her whistleblo­wer lawsuit against Los Angeles County.

Her suit says she was forced into early retirement in 2017 in retaliatio­n for raising suspicions about the death of an 8-year-old disabled boy.

Lawyers for plaintiff, 59-year-old Denise Bertone, filed court papers Tuesday with Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Robert S. Draper saying their client has agreed to an award of $3 million with interest.

On June 21, the judge denied a motion by county lawyers to grant a retrial of Bertone's entire case. However, the judge did find that the amount of damages was excessive and he gave her until Aug. 31 to decide whether to take less money or go through a partial retrial.

On Dec. 17, a jury deliberate­d for less than a day before finding in favor of Bertone, who also is a registered nurse. She was hired in 2002 and for years investigat­ed the deaths of infants and children, according to her lawsuit filed in November 2018.

Lawyers for the county denied that Bertone was subjected to retaliatio­n and argued that all actions taken regarding her employment were for legitimate, non-discrimina­tory reasons.

According to the suit, the coroner's office received a case in 2013 involving an 8-year-old disabled boy who was in a coma after being found head-first and submerged in water and clothing in a top-loader washing machine.

The boy was taken to a hospital, where the nonprofit organ and tissue harvesting company One Legacy obtained permission to have his organs harvested for donation after his death, the suit said.

But when the boy kept breathing after being taken off of a ventilator, the attending physician gave him a large dose of fentanyl, a synthetic opiod used to treat severe pain, as a “comfort measure” that instead caused cardiac arrest and the boy subsequent­ly died, the suit said. One Legacy then harvested his organs, the suit said.

Bertone investigat­ed the boy's death

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