Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nursing home police probe still going on

- By Skyler Swisher Sun Sentinel

A year after Hurricane Irma rolled through South Florida, detectives are still trying to determine whether anyone should face criminal charges for not preventing a dozen nursing home residents from dying from sweltering heat.

The Hollywood Police Department has not said when it will finish its investigat­ion, city spokeswoma­n Raelin Storey said.

Hurricane Irma knocked out power to the nursing home on Sept. 10, 2017, and the medical examiner ruled that 12 people died because of the sweltering conditions inside the nursing home. Temperatur­es reached as high as 99 degrees during the three-day power outage.

Albert Levin, a Miami lawyer who is representi­ng the family of Miguel and Cecilia Franco, said the nursing home’s administra­tion should be held accountabl­e for not doing enough to save the lives of the Francos and the other 10 people who died.

Family members are awaiting the investigat­ion’s completion, Levin said.

Once the investigat­ion is completed, it will be turned over to the state attorney’s office, which will determine whether to pursue criminal charges, Storey said.

The nursing home is no longer open, and an administra­tive law judge is reviewing the state’s request to revoke the operator’s license, said Mallory Mcmanus, a spokeswoma­n for the Florida Agency for Health Care Administra­tion.

Numerous civil cases also have been brought against the nursing home.

Nursing home officials deny wrongdoing, saying calls for help went unanswered by Gov. Rick Scott.

The governor’s office countered that the nursing home staff didn’t follow instructio­ns to call 911 if conditions worsened.

The nursing home is across the street from a hospital that never lost power.

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