Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawsuit: Patient died from heat, dehydratio­n

- BY ZACK PETERSON STAFF WRITER

A longtime Orange Grove Center patient whose body was found in a transport van died from hypertherm­ia and dehydratio­n, according to a recent lawsuit calling for $7.5 million from the facility.

Chattanoog­a authoritie­s are nearly finished investigat­ing the death of Carrie Lee Parkey Jr., a 60-year-old man whom Orange Grove staff located around 3 p.m. in the back of a van at a group home on Lillian Court.

Once they’re finished, Hamilton County District Attorney General Neal Pinkston will review the evidence for “several weeks” to determine whether he wants to bring any criminal charges, his spokeswoma­n, Melydia Clewell, wrote in an email.

In the meantime, Parkey’s sister, Edith, has teamed up with Cleveland attorneys Robert Thompson and James Logan, who filed a civil lawsuit last month claiming Orange Grove is responsibl­e for the wrongful death of its “cognitivel­y impaired and disabled” patient.

“The defendant failed to remove Mr. Parkey from the van or failed to prevent Mr. Parkey from re-entering the van,” the lawsuit says, adding that Orange Grove instead marked the 60-year-old as “absent.”

The lawsuit, filed in Hamilton County Circuit Court on Aug. 30, contains the informatio­n Parkey’s legal team has been able to glean from the investigat­ion so far, Thompson said.

“Edith Parkey filed the lawsuit in order to obtain further informatio­n and explanatio­n as to what caused him to be left behind and die from hypertherm­ia in the van,” Thompson said. “Often times the legal system provides the opportunit­y for people to get an explanatio­n and also to prevent such further conduct that might injure others.”

The suit does say Parkey died of hypertherm­ia, where a person’s body temperatur­e rises to higher levels than normal. The Hamilton County Medical Examiner’s Office said Wednesday it cannot release the autopsy report. But the Times Free Press obtained a copy that confirms the manner of death: hypertherm­ia and exposure to high environmen­tal temperatur­es. The cause is also marked “accidental” as opposed to suicide or homicide.

That report is just one piece Pinkston will have to consider.

“That medical determinat­ion is not absolute,” said defense attorney Bill Speek. “It’s simply a piece of evidence that can be used by a prosecutor in bringing charges. They are relied upon pretty heavily, though, in Hamilton County.”

Orange Grove spokeswoma­n Heidi Hoffecker said Wednesday the facility received the lawsuit but declined to comment because of the pending investigat­ion and litigation. Once the center responds, attorneys will exchange evidence and work toward a settlement, trial or dismissal in court.

Orange Grove released a statement in April highlighti­ng its long record of caring for the mentally disabled and lamenting the death of Parkey, a patient since 1974.

The Tennessee Department of Intellectu­al and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es has investigat­ed 210 allegation­s of abuse, neglect or exploitati­on of Orange Grove clients since January 2012, the Times Free Press reported in May. Though a little more than a third were substantia­ted by evidence, that’s still considered a low rate by Tennessee standards, according to the report.

 ??  ?? Carrie Lee Parkey Jr.
Carrie Lee Parkey Jr.

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