Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CULTURE OF CRUELTY PERSISTS AT STATE-RUN MENTAL HEALTH FACILITY DESPITE DECADES OF WARNINGS

Officials have urged reforms at the facility for people with mental and developmen­tal disabiliti­es. But the state-run center still has more allegation­s of abuse and neglect than any in Illinois.

- BY MOLLY PARKER Lee Enterprise­s Midwest AND BETH HUNDSDORFE­R Capitol News Illinois

Over a year ago, the security chief at Choate Mental Health and Developmen­tal Center in southern Illinois sent an email to the head of the state agency that operates the facility, warning her of dangerous conditions inside.

“What I am presently seeing occur at Choate and hearing occur at other facilities concerns me more than it has my entire career,” Barry Smoot, a decadeslon­g IDHS employee, wrote to Illinois Department of Human Services Secretary Grace Hou on May 26, 2021.

Hou responded that same day, agreeing to meet.

But no meeting took place. Instead, Hou suggested Smoot start by sharing his concerns with her chief of staff, Ryan Croke, and the director of the Division of Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es, Allison Stark, according to records of the exchange. But those meetings never happened, either. Stark left the agency in July.

It would take more than a year and multiple high-profile arrests related to abuse at the facility before the agency unveiled a plan. In June, Hou sent a letter addressed to “stakeholde­rs” in which she acknowledg­ed for the first time “serious allegation­s about resident abuse and neglect” at the facility near the small town of Anna.

The reform plan she outlined includes hiring four new security officers, installing 10 surveillan­ce cameras on the facility grounds, having staff undergo new training and increasing the presence of senior IDHS officials in residentia­l units.

At least 26 Choate employees have been arrested on felony charges over the past decade, according to reporting by Capitol News Illinois, Lee Enterprise­s and ProPublica. The local state’s attorney has filed charges against more than a dozen of those arrested, including three administra­tors, since 2019, when Hou was appointed IDHS secretary by Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Charges have been dropped against two of the administra­tors charged with official misconduct and obstructio­n of justice.

Marisa Kollias, a spokespers­on for the agency, said the facility is working expeditiou­sly to implement reforms but cautioned that it will take time. Senior IDHS officials told reporters in an interview that the training and monitoring have been underway for months, that the department has hired one new security officer and that the cameras are on back order, and no date has been set for installati­on.

In a written statement, Kollias said that the agency determined, “based on informatio­n gathered” after the secretary’s initial response to Smoot, “that it was inadvisabl­e for IDHS management staff to communicat­e

with him any further.” The department did not provide any details.

Camera controvers­y

Smoot was not the first to raise alarms. The inspector general’s office at IDHS has repeatedly cited the facility for failing to adhere to rules regarding reporting and investigat­ing abuse and neglect allegation­s.

IDHS’ inspector general recommende­d the installati­on of cameras in the course of 21 investigat­ions into abuse and neglect allegation­s at Choate between fiscal years 2015 and 2021, according to a review of internal records. Each time, Choate officials responded that it was “not an option due to budget concerns.”

This summer, advocates and insiders praised Hou’s announceme­nt that IDHS would install cameras. But, while almost all incidents of alleged abuse and neglect occur inside, the spokespers­on told reporters that the cameras would be placed outside.

“This is all being done for show,” former Office of the Inspector General supervisor and Choate unit director Charles Bingaman, who retired from IDHS in 2013, said about the outdoor cameras. “I predict that it will have no real impact on patient safety.”

Senior IDHS officials acknowledg­ed in an interview that the inspector general had previously recommende­d interior cameras. But placing cameras in interior common areas on a residentia­l unit requires the consent of every resident, or their guardian, and Kollias said parents groups had not supported the move.

Long history of problems

States across the nation have closed large facilities like Choate in the past 20 years, following a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that it is unconstitu­tional to segregate people with disabiliti­es from the rest of society.

Illinois has been a holdout. It houses more people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es in large institutio­ns and spends more to operate those institutio­ns, relative to statewide personal income, than almost every other state, according to a review of data compiled by researcher­s with the University of Kansas.

But, for years, the state has also failed to intervene when abuse patterns are found inside its institutio­ns.

In 1992, the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois sued on behalf of patients, alleging that poor conditions at state-run psychiatri­c hospitals, including Choate, violated patients’ rights to safety and medical care. The parties settled, and Illinois agreed to enhance staffing and training.

Then, in 2005, after two patients died from neglect at Choate, Equip for Equality, a legal advocacy organizati­on for people with disabiliti­es, found unsafe conditions and poor treatment of residents. The group

IN 2005, AFTER TWO PATIENTS DIED FROM NEGLECT AT CHOATE, EQUIP FOR EQUALITY, A LEGAL ADVOCACY ORGANIZATI­ON FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITI­ES, FOUND UNSAFE CONDITIONS AND POOR TREATMENT OF RESIDENTS. THE GROUP ... CALLED CHOATE’S PRACTICES “ARCHAIC.”

— which had been appointed by the state to monitor the facility — called Choate’s practices “archaic.”

In response, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division launched an investigat­ion and warned the state in 2009 that the Choate staff ’s failures to help residents successful­ly transfer out of the facility violated the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. The facility had also failed to protect them from harm and provide adequate health and psychiatri­c care, the DOJ found. Again in 2021, Equip for Equality was appointed to monitor conditions inside Choate.

Smoot, who also had worked as an investigat­or for the IDHS inspector general, said leadership’s slow response left him deeply troubled. Earlier this year, he self-published a book, “Failure to Protect,” outlining his concerns.

And on the last day of his 20-year career with IDHS, Smoot sent Hou an email to let her know that no one had followed up with him.

This time, there wasn’t a response, according to records of the email exchange obtained by reporters. Smoot said he hoped someone would heed his warning. “Without any time left,” he said in an interview, “it was a Hail Mary pass.”

 ?? WHITNEY CURTIS/PROPUBLICA ?? The state-run Choate Mental Health and Developmen­tal Center in downstate Anna.
WHITNEY CURTIS/PROPUBLICA The state-run Choate Mental Health and Developmen­tal Center in downstate Anna.
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 ?? JERRY NOWICKI/CAPITOL NEWS ILLINOIS ?? Illinois Department of Human Services Secretary Grace Hou.
JERRY NOWICKI/CAPITOL NEWS ILLINOIS Illinois Department of Human Services Secretary Grace Hou.

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