The Morning Call

2 charged over handling of outbreak at Mass. vets home

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

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

It’s believed to be the first criminal case in the country brought against nursing home officials for actions 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 positive for the coronaviru­s 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 horrific 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 causing or permitting serious bodily injury or neglect of an elder, Healey said.

Relatives of veterans who died at the home said they hope “justice will prevail.”

The charges come three months after a scathing independen­t report said “utterly baffling” decisions made by Walsh and other administra­tors allowed the virus to spread 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.” More than 40 veterans were packed into a single unit that usually had 25 beds, and space was so limited that nine veterans — some with symptoms and some without — were sleeping in the dining room, Healey said.

Since March 1, 76 veterans who contracted the coronaviru­s at the home have died, officials said. The first veteran tested positive March 17. Even though he had shown symptoms for weeks, staff “did nothing to isolate” him until his test came back positive, allowing him to remain with three roommates, wander the unit and spend time in a common room, investigat­ors found.

When a social worker raised concerns about combining the two dementia units, the chief nursing officer said that “it didn’t matter because (the veterans) were all exposed anyway and there was not enough staff to cover both units,” investigat­ors said.

One staffer who helped move the dementia patients told investigat­ors she felt like she was “walking (the veterans) to their death.” A nurse said the packed dementia unit looked “like a battlefiel­d tent where the cots are all next to each other.”

As the virus took hold, leadership shifted “to preparing for the deaths of scores of residents,” the report said. On the day the veterans were moved, more than a dozen additional body bags were sent to the combined dementia unit, investigat­ors said.

The next day, a refrigerat­ed truck to hold bodies that wouldn’t fit in the home’s morgue arrived, the report said.

Walsh was fired after the release of the report, but a judge invalidate­d his terminatio­n this week after his lawyer argued that only the board of trustees could hire and fire the superinten­dent.

 ?? DON TREEGER/THE REPUBLICAN 2018 ?? Dozens of veterans died of COVID-19 at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke, Mass.
DON TREEGER/THE REPUBLICAN 2018 Dozens of veterans died of COVID-19 at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke, Mass.

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