Chattanooga Times Free Press

Criminal probe into Hutcheson requested

- STAFF WRITER BY TYLER JETT

RINGGOLD, Ga. — Former Hutcheson Medical Center administra­tors could soon be under criminal investigat­ion.

The Catoosa County Commission voted 4-0 Tuesday night to ask Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit District Attorney Herbert “Buzz” Franklin to look into whether any crimes occurred inside the hospital’s walls before it temporaril­y shut down last year.

The request is not specific. The commission­ers did not hint at any particular crimes. They merely voted to formally tell Franklin they wanted him to empanel a grand jury to examine the inner workings of Hutcheson. They also asked Franklin to consider bringing in agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion.

The GBI cannot look into potential crimes without a request from another government official. And, in fact, the County Commission can’t even make that request. But Franklin can.

It’s unclear what Franklin will do in response to the commission’s request. He did not return an email seeking comment Tuesday.

The commission­ers weren’t sure what — if any — criminal activity is out there, waiting to be uncovered. But some said the whole situation didn’t add up: Erlanger Health System loaned Hutcheson $20 million in 2011. Catoosa and Walker counties’ elected leaders promised to pay off that loan, if necessary.

“As a commission­er and a taxpayer, I’d like to know where the money went,” said Keith Greene, the County Commission chairman.

Despite the loan five years ago, Hutcheson continued to struggle, filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November 2014, closing for two weeks last December and

then getting bought out by ApolloMD, a physican’s group from Atlanta. The hospital — now private — has been rebranded Cornerston­e Medical Center.

Former Hutcheson employees have painted a picture of mismanagem­ent at the hospital. Some said CEO Farrell Hayes (who did not return a call seeking comment for this story) pressured the emergency room staff into admitting more patients into the hospital, a ploy that could have yielded more revenue.

Others said they practiced without enough supplies. Still others were upset because the administra­tors didn’t pay vendors for their supplies. Some employees weren’t covered for health insurance, even though money was taken out of their paychecks for that very reason.

Erlanger attorney Jeff Woodard, who attended Tuesday’s meeting with Chief Administra­tive Officer Gregg Gentry, declined to comment after Catoosa County’s vote. So did a contigency of Walker County representa­tives: attorney Don Oliver and Hutcheson board members Bill Cooke and John Culpepper.

“Let the chips fall where they may,” Culpepper said as he, Cooke and Oliver left the meeting.

Before Tuesday’s meeting, Catoosa County Attorney Chad Young said he didn’t know if anything that happened at the hospital equated to a crime. But after paying $6.2 million to Erlanger and about $3.5 million to Regions Bank as part of its investment into Hutcheson’s well-being, some of the county’s elected officials wanted to explore the potential for a prosecutio­n.

“If [an investigat­or] finds anything he thinks warrants looking into, fine.” Young wrote in an email. “If not, fine. Just feel as though we owe it to the taxpayers & ex employees to at least request that someone look into it.”

Added Commission­er Bobby Winters: “I’m sure there’s some wrongdoing somewhere. You can’t let a business go down like that. Something ain’t right.”

Commission­er Ray Johnson said he wanted to hear from Young and fellow County Attorney Clifton “Skip” Patty to understand his options.

“But the way [other commission­ers are] talking about it, we just want to make sure everything is above board,” Johnson said. “There was a lot of money. And it went south pretty quick.”

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