The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cursory death inquiry leads to family’s quest for answers

- By Brad Schrade brad.schrade@ajc.com and Carrie Teegardin cteegardin@ajc.com

Aday after a violent episode at a Cobb County assisted living facility resulted in a 72-year-old with Alzheimer’s being hospitaliz­ed, Smyrna police arrived to investigat­e.

They gathered no physical evidence. Made no request for video or records. Expressed no interest in interviewi­ng the employee involved in the altercatio­n. And within a couple of minutes of fact-finding, officers concluded there was no crime. They made their determinat­ion based on the facility director’s statement of what happened, according to police records.

“The only reason we would do a report is to kind of keep y’all safe,” one officer explained to Elaine Austin, executive director of Provident Village at Creekside, in a conversati­on captured on police bodycam video.

Another officer told Austin the police report would document the incident in case “this resident’s family was to come in and try do something ... so it doesn’t become a

big thing as to why it wasn’t documented.” Eighteen days later, the resident, Ronald West, died of complicati­ons from a head injury suffered in the scuffle. An autopsy would later classify his death as a homicide, a determinat­ion that West died because of the actions of another person.

While that doesn’t necessaril­y mean he was the victim of a crime, nearly two years after the Feb. 22, 2018, episode, the West family remains on an odyssey to find independen­t answers about what happened to their father in the upscale facility’s dining room that day. The actions of the Provident Village leadership, Smyrna police and state regulators with the Department of Community Health have undermined those efforts. The case was reopened earlier this month after the AJC raised questions. But key evi

dence was never collected at the time of the episode, making it more difficult now to verify what happened.

The case is emblematic of problems families across Georgia face after breakdowns in care at assisted living communitie­s or large personal care homes, an AJC investigat­ion found. Police can be quick to accept the story of caregivers when incidents involve dementia patients and miss signs of potential elder abuse or neglect because of a lack of training. Regulators, who are shortstaff­ed, also can fail to conduct thorough and timely reviews.

In the Provident case, that left the West family largely on its own to seek answers.

Their cause has been complicate­d by an arbitratio­n agreement the family signed when they moved their father into the facility in July 2017, waiving their right to sue. West’s son, Jobe, said the family had been in a crisis for more than a year trying to find help for his dad as his dementia worsened. So when Provident Village, a new facility that offered special memory care services, said it could take him, Jobe West said he thought their worries were over. Amid a stack of paperwork presented to him, he said he unwittingl­y signed the arbitratio­n agreement. The family is now fighting the agreement in court. “He had plenty of life to live and to share,

and it was taken from him,” said Jobe West. “And that’s probably the most difficult thing to truly comprehend. Somebody basically took his life, and I’m here now trying to get somebody to admit their part in what has taken place.”

Provident Resources Group, the Baton Rouge, Louisiana, company that operates the facility, declined to comment about specifics of what it called an “unfortunat­e incident.” Provident Chairman and CEO Steve Hicks noted pending litigation restricts what he can say. He said the company followed the law and self-reported the incident to state regulators and police. Austin, Provident’s former director, didn’t respond to a request for comment. DCH also declined to comment.

Ronald West had spent his life working and saving from his career in the constructi­on business in Maryland. He had started with a shovel in hand and worked his way up to running a large constructi­on company. He had moved to his retirement cabin in Whitesburg, Georgia, in 2014 to be closer to Jobe, the youngest of his three children, then to Provident Village to be closer to his son’s office.

Up to the time of the incident, Jobe West said, his father’s care at the facility had been good. And the facility staff seemed to like him. Though his father had Alzheimer’s, he was relatively active.

His background in constructi­on led West to want to help the Provident Village maintenanc­e staff, and he would sometimes assist with older residents who were more feeble. Just a week before the incident, Jobe West said, he and his sister had a wonderful visit with their father where he was laughing and cutting up. Jobe West said he’d never received a complaint from the facility about his dad.

So when Austin, the executive director, called to say his father had been in an accident and was in the hospital, he said he had no reason to be suspicious. When West arrived at the hospital, his father had bandages on his head and elbow and struggled to explain what had happened.

“My father couldn’t remember a whole bunch about it,” West said. “He complained about his elbow and his head and was wondering why it was bleeding and bandaged.”

But West later learned that Austin withheld some key details that day.

Son not given ‘full story’

Emergency call records show Austin phoned 911 the morning after the incident and reported that a caregiver and a resident had fought. When Smyrna’s uniformed officers arrived about 12 minutes later, Austin told them she didn’t know if what happened was a crime but expressed a need to report it.

She described how around 4:45 p.m. the previous day, Ronald West had become agitated in the dining hall as a 24-year-old male caregiver, Monte Bowser, tried to get him to move to a different chair. Ronald West, she said, punched Bowser across the right jaw, and Bowser reacted by immediatel­y pushing the elderly man back. During that exchange, she said, West fell into a wall, causing the gash that required an emergency room visit and four stitches.

After listening to her story for less than two minutes, police told Austin that West wouldn’t be charged because of his dementia and Bowser wouldn’t face charges because he acted in self-defense.

Austin also acknowledg­ed to officers that she hadn’t told Jobe West the “full story” about what happened to his father and that she had scheduled a meeting later that morning to explain.

“Last night, we just let him know, ‘Your dad had a fall, and we’re sending him to the hospital,’” Austin said.

She met with Jobe West about an hour after she told the story to police, and West said she gave him a similar account.

Hours later, Austin spoke with state regulators at the Department of Community Health, and the facility created a one-page incident report. It said that the facility had conducted a thorough internal review and fired the employee.

Though the facility told police that Bowser was acting in self-defense, Bowser’s separation notice said he was fired for “violation of policies — Disorderly Conduct & Violence-Free Workplace.”

Days later, state regulators closed the case without ever visiting the facility, noting that their review of the facility’s report “revealed that appropriat­e actions were taken.”

There’s no indication that DCH tried to determine if Bowser had been trained in how to recognize and handle agitation in residents with dementia. DCH apparently didn’t inquire, either, about whether the dining area was appropriat­ely staffed at the time of the incident, or whether there were improvemen­ts the home should make to prevent future incidents.

In fact, there’s no public record at all of the 2018 incident on the agency’s regulatory website. The AJC learned of DCH’s limited review only by obtaining some internal documents through a state open records request.

The case of Ronald West is emblematic of problems families across Georgia face after breakdowns in care at assisted living communitie­s or large personal care homes, an AJC investigat­ion found. Regulators, who are shortstaff­ed, also can fail to conduct thorough and timely reviews. Up to the time of the incident, Jobe West said, his father’s care at the facility had been good. And the facility staff seemed to like him. Though his father had Alzheimer’s, he was relatively active. ‘He had plenty of life to live and to share, and it was taken from him.’

Smyrna detectives revisited the case of Ronald West several weeks after the incident when the Medical Examiner’s Office contacted them during its review. A detective met with Elaine Austin, who said there was a witness to the incident: an employee who said that West attacked Monte Bowser. There’s no indication in the police report that officers followed up with the witness to corroborat­e the story.

Meanwhile, West’s health declined rapidly. He picked at the staples in his head, and he suffered an infection. He was readmitted to the hospital, and his organs started to fail. He was placed in hospice care. His family was in shock when he died 19 days after the initial incident, less than a month after

their last regular family visit when Ronald West was laughing with his adult children. “It was a hard pill to swallow,” Jobe West said. Nagged by skepticism about the facility’s story, he asked that the Cobb County Medical Examiner conduct an autopsy. When the results came back several months later, the word homicide stung him. His father died, the medical examiner ruled, of complicati­ons from the head injuries he suffered during the altercatio­n.

Smyrna detectives revisited the case several weeks after the incident when the Medical Examiner’s Office contacted them during its review. A detective met with Austin, who said there was a witness to the incident: an employee who said that West attacked Bowser.

There’s no indication in the police report that officers followed up with the witness to corroborat­e the story. There’s no record that detectives interviewe­d Bowser.

The more Jobe West learned about the way the investigat­ion was handled, the more he came to distrust the accounts he’d been told.

“You feel like, obviously you’ve been misled or lied to, and then you start finding out informatio­n,” West said. “So I just need the truth. I need to understand what

happened, why it happened.”

Police apologize to son

Today, police investigat­ors acknowledg­e mistakes were made.

Smyrna police reopened the case earlier this month after the AJC’s inquiry. Police now

believe that Bowser may have been the only employee in the room at the time of the incident. An employee in a nearby room heard the commotion but may not have witnessed the scuffle. Police said last week they have interviewe­d Bowser, but that Austin, the former director, had not responded to their recent efforts to reach her.

Smyrna Chief David Lee has ordered a policy change to ensure cases involving seniors

and senior care facilities receive a comprehens­ive review. The agency has also apologized to Jobe West for its handling of the case last year.

The department is committed to ensuring these cases don’t fall through the cracks, said Sgt. Louis Defense, a department spokesman. “It’s the mission of our agency to never shortchang­e our citizens,” he said.

The Cobb District Attorney’s Office also opened a review of the case this month after the AJC’s questions. “We are committed to protecting our elder and disabled citizens,

and we appreciate the case being brought to our attention,” said Jason Marbutt, a senior assistant district attorney who specialize­s in elder abuse cases.

Even if the review raises more questions about Bowser’s actions, it may be too late to hold him accountabl­e.

After getting fired at Provident Village, Bowser went to work at Dunwoody Health and Rehabilita­tion Center, a nursing home in Sandy Springs.

The new job didn’t go well.

A dispute with another employee led to violence in July. The co-worker told Sandy Springs police Bowser cursed and threw a protein drink on him, then physically assaulted him.

Bowser acknowledg­ed to police that he attacked his co-worker in a dispute over work assignment­s, records show. Both employees were fired, and Bowser faces a misdemeano­r charge of battery with substantia­l physical harm in Fulton County court. Yet his Georgia certified nurse aide license is still in good standing, according to a state registry website. Bowser declined to comment for this story.

A spokeswoma­n with the rehab facility told the AJC it didn’t know about the incident involving Bowser’s terminatio­n at Provident Village.

This and the other disturbing informatio­n Jobe West has learned since his father’s death have left him doubting Georgia’s entire oversight system.

He hopes a court hearing next month will lead to the arbitratio­n agreement being voided so he can pursue his lawsuit against Bowser and Provident. He said his legal fight has never been about money but about getting at the truth.

“I have a sense of responsibi­lity to ensure that this doesn’t happen to another family,” he said. “That you don’t put your loved one in a facility that you think everything is being taken care of, that you think everything is just perfect. Then you get the call that there’s been an accident and come to find out it wasn’t an accident. It was something that should have been prevented.”

 ??  ?? Ronald West’s family was relieved when it found a facility that offered memory care services. But the dementia patient died following an incident with an employee there.
Ronald West’s family was relieved when it found a facility that offered memory care services. But the dementia patient died following an incident with an employee there.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Jobe West (left) and his sister, Kelly Blottenber­ger, get together with their father, Ronald West, the week before the Feb. 22, 2018, incident. The elder West, seen below at Tranquilit­y Hospice at Cobb Hospital in March 2018, died 19 days after being pushed by a caregiver at a Smyrna facility. The family’s recourse has been complicate­d by an arbitratio­n agreement signed when they moved their father into the facility in July 2017, waiving their right to sue.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Jobe West (left) and his sister, Kelly Blottenber­ger, get together with their father, Ronald West, the week before the Feb. 22, 2018, incident. The elder West, seen below at Tranquilit­y Hospice at Cobb Hospital in March 2018, died 19 days after being pushed by a caregiver at a Smyrna facility. The family’s recourse has been complicate­d by an arbitratio­n agreement signed when they moved their father into the facility in July 2017, waiving their right to sue.
 ?? SMYRNA POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? Provident Village at Creekside’s then-executive director, Elaine Austin, speaks with police a day after a Feb. 22, 2018, incident where a facility caregiver pushed resident Ronald West. Officers in the 3-minute, 42-second video never gather evidence or express skepticism. She left the facility in May 2018 and now works at another metro Atlanta senior care facility.
SMYRNA POLICE DEPARTMENT Provident Village at Creekside’s then-executive director, Elaine Austin, speaks with police a day after a Feb. 22, 2018, incident where a facility caregiver pushed resident Ronald West. Officers in the 3-minute, 42-second video never gather evidence or express skepticism. She left the facility in May 2018 and now works at another metro Atlanta senior care facility.
 ??  ??
 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Jobe West’s father died after being pushed by a caregiver at a Smyrna facility. He keeps some of his father’s ashes in an acorn-shaped wood urn. The more West learned about how the inquiry into his father’s death was handled, the more he came to distrust accounts he’d been told. “I need to understand what happened, why it happened,” he said.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Jobe West’s father died after being pushed by a caregiver at a Smyrna facility. He keeps some of his father’s ashes in an acorn-shaped wood urn. The more West learned about how the inquiry into his father’s death was handled, the more he came to distrust accounts he’d been told. “I need to understand what happened, why it happened,” he said.

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