The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Elder neglect

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had a bruised face the next morning and told another caregiver, “He punched me.” At the hospital, doctors discovered Bennett had multiple broken ribs, a punctured lung and a damaged kidney, and he died three days later.

Terrel was charged with felony murder, elder abuse and elder neglect. But a Cobb County jury last month found him guilty on just one count: felony elder neglect.

During the emotional sentencing hearing on Friday, Bennett’s daughter Christine Houk tearfully described the impact her father’s death had had on the family, and she urged the judge to impose the maximum possible sentence of 20 years.

“I think my father was murdered by this man in a very violent way and I think he should get the full allowabili­ty of incarcerat­ion because he took something very, very precious from the Bennett family and the people that my father knew and loved,” Houk said.

In the wee hours of the morning before he was rushed to the hospital, Bennett left his daughter a series of panicked voice mails, saying “I’m dying” and asking her to rush to Sunrise at East Cobb to help him.

Houk said during the hearing that she had never heard her father speak with the kind of panic and fear that was evident in his voice on the three messages he left for her that night.

“He was desperate for somebody to help him, for someone to care for him,” she said. “It grieves my heart that my father died that way.”

Terrel’s wife, his brother and his pastor testified that Terrel was a devoted family man and devout Christian who was not the kind of person who would abuse an elderly person. They urged the judge to sentence him just to the time he had already served.

Aaron Henrickson, Terrel’s defense attorney, said his client had no criminal history and noted the jury found him guilty only of the least serious charge he faced.

Terrel told police that he caught Bennett that night as the man started to fall from his bed and that Bennett’s chest hit the side of the bed.

Cobb County’s medical examiner said the injuries were the result of an assault, but a medical expert testifying for the defense said Bennett was more likely hurt from an unwitnesse­d fall in his room.

Ingram sentenced Terrel under the Georgia First Offender Act and he will have a clean criminal record if he successful­ly completes his sentence.

When imposing her sentence, Ingram referenced the voice mails Bennett left his daughter and cited testimony that suggested the Sunrise facility was understaff­ed and poorly managed in 2017 and that Terrel’s work history was blemished.

“Now we have such a sad situation, and it’s a real tragedy,” she said. “It’s everybody’s worst day.”

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