Dayton Daily News

Report: Facility in comatose birth probed in 2016

Case was dropped; ex-official says CEO close with governor.

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Regulators PHOENIX — wanted to remove developmen­tally disabled patients from a Phoenix long-term care facility years before a woman in a vegetative state gave birth, Arizona’s largest newspaper reported Sunday.

The Arizona Republic reported Hacienda HealthCare faced a 2016 criminal investigat­ion for allegedly billing the state more than $4 million for bogus 2014 charges for wages, transporta­tion, housekeepi­ng, maintenanc­e and supplies.

The criminal case was dropped in 2017, and no charges were filed, the Republic said, but a court battle is continuing in an effort to force Hacienda to turn over financial records.

Phoenix police have said the 29-year-old woman incapacita­ted since age 3 was sexually assaulted and gave birth last month.

Investigat­ors are collecting DNA from Hacienda’s male employees and others who may have had contact with the woman in an effort to identify a suspect.

The woman’s family has said in a statement through their attorney that they will care for the infant boy and have asked for privacy.

The revelation that a woman in a vegetative state was raped inside a care facility has horrified advocates for people with disabiliti­es and the community at large.

Hacienda HealthCare’s CEO William Timmons resigned on Dec. 31 as the provider announced new safety measures, including more than one staff member being present during patient interactio­ns and more scrutiny of visitors.

Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, said his office is considerin­g bringing in a third party to assume responsibi­lity for the ongoing management of Hacienda.

The nonprofit facility gets more than $20 million annually in taxpayer funds for taking care of extremely ill people, many of whom are incapacita­ted and on ventilator­s, the Republic reported.

Hacienda’s annual average cost of care was $386,000 per client in 2012 compared with $134,000 per client in similar U.S. facilities, Arizona Department of Economic Security auditors said.

The Republic said former economic security director Timothy Jeffries and the agency’s chief law enforcemen­t officer, Charles Loftu, have both filed lawsuits against the state, claiming they were forced out of their jobs over the Hacienda probe.

Jeffries was forced to resign in 2016 after a series of controvers­ies. He filed suit against the state in 2017 over what he claims is libel in a police report that detailed a stash of weapons and ammunition kept in the agency offices.

The Republic quoted Jeffries as saying Timmons was obstinate during the investigat­ion of Hacienda and bragged of tight ties to Ducey.

Ducey spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Berry said the governor was horrified by accounts of the rape and that Hacienda played no part in the forced resignatio­ns of Jeffries and Loftus.

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