Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

2 charged over handling of outbreak at veterans home

- Alanna Durkin Richer

BOSTON – Two former administra­tors of a Massachuse­tts veterans home where nearly 80 people sickened by the coronaviru­s died have been charged for their handling of the outbreak, the state’s attorney general said Friday.

It’s believed to be the first criminal case in the country brought against nursing home officials for actions taken during the pandemic, Attorney General Maura Healey said.

Former Holyoke Soldiers’ Home Superinten­dent Bennett Walsh and former Medical Director Dr. David Clinton were indicted by a grand jury on charges stemming from their decision in March to combine two dementia units, packing residents who were COVID-19 positive into the same space as those with no symptoms, Healey said.

The veterans “risked their lives from the beaches of Normandy, to some the jungles of Vietnam and to know that they died under the most horrific circumstan­ces is truly shocking,” Healey told reporters.

A phone message was left Friday with a lawyer for Walsh. An email was sent to attorneys for Clinton. They could each face prison time if convicted of charges of causing or permitting serious bodily injury or neglect of an elder, Healey said.

The charges come three months after a scathing independen­t report said “utterly baffling” decisions made by Walsh and other administra­tors allowed the virus to spread there unchecked. The “worst decision” was to combine the two locked dementia units, both of which already housed some residents with the virus, said investigat­ors led by former federal prosecutor Mark Pearlstein.

Healey said Walsh and Clinton were the ones ultimately responsibl­e for the decision to combine the two units, which she said led to “tragic and deadly results.”

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