Imperial Valley Press

Florida nursing home employees charged in patient deaths

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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Four employees of a Florida nursing home where 12 people died in sweltering heat after a hurricane cut power were charged Monday, at least three of them with aggravated manslaught­er, their attorneys said.

Nursing home patients at the Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills, ranging in age from 57 to 99, began dying three days after Hurricane Irma swept through in September 2017.

The center, which housed about 150 patients at the time, did not evacuate any of the residents as the temperatur­e began rising, even though a fully functional hospital was across the street, investigat­ors said. The home’s license was suspended days after the storm and it was later closed.

Former Rehabilita­tion Center nurse Sergo Colin and administra­tor Jorge Carballo were each charged with 12 counts of aggravated manslaught­er, according to jail records. Nurse Althia Meggie was charged with two counts of aggravated manslaught­er and two counts of tampering with evidence.

All three turned themselves in at the Broward County Jail on Monday and were scheduled to appear in court Tuesday, their attorneys said.

Nurse Tamika Miller was being held in the Miami-Dade County jail on unspecifie­d charges, according to the jail’s website. She was awaiting transfer to Broward County.

Hollywood Police spokeswoma­n Miranda Grossman said authoritie­s would withhold comment until a news conference planned for Tuesday.

Attorney Jim Cobb said none of the employees understood why they were being charged . He said Carballo and other administra­tors were repeatedly told before the storm that they could call then-Gov. Rick Scott’s personal cellphone directly for help. Cobb said they called five times, but never heard back from Scott.

Cobb said the administra­tors “sat there languishin­g waiting for the cavalry to come . ... They never, ever came.”

Attorney Lawrence Hashish remarked that “the real crime is that the state is looking to blame selfless caregivers and the evidence will show that no crime was committed.”

Scott, now a U.S. senator, said in a statement that the nursing home should have called 911.

“Nothing can hide the fact that this healthcare facility failed to do their basic duty to protect life,” he said.

But attorney David Frankel insisted that the staff did everything they could to keep the patients, some of them in hospice, cool and hydrated. They brought in small air conditione­rs and fans, he said.

He also criticized the notion from investigat­ors and some family members of the deceased that staff should have taken the patients across the street to the air-conditione­d Memorial Regional Hospital. He said the hospital had been sending patients to the nursing home.

“These were very fragile people,” he said. “Evacuating them could have caused more damage.”

Memorial spokeswoma­n Kerting Baldwin said she couldn’t confirm that the hospital sent patients to the nursing home. She said the hospital’s goal, though, would be to discharge the patients to a safe environmen­t.

“It is the responsibi­lity of the receiving entity, in this case the nursing home, to let the transferri­ng hospital know if they are unable to accept patients,” Baldwin said.

Memorial’s doctors and staff began evacuating the nursing home after several dead and seriously ill patients arrived in the hospital’s emergency room.

Frankel also criticized Florida Power & Light, which he said was supposed to arrive within six hours after the first patient became acutely ill.

FPL issued a statement Monday noting that some parts of the home did have power restored after the storm, but Frankel said the blown transforme­r that had caused the air conditioni­ng to fail was never fixed.

In its statement, Florida Power & Light added that “those customers who have electricit­y dependent medical needs should call 911 if they are without power and in a life-threatenin­g situation.”

 ??  ?? In this 2017 file photo, a woman is transporte­d from The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills as patients are evacuated after a loss of air conditioni­ng due to Hurricane Irma in Hollywood, Fla. Amy BeTh BenneTT/SouTh FlorIdA Sun-SenTInel VIA AP
In this 2017 file photo, a woman is transporte­d from The Rehabilita­tion Center at Hollywood Hills as patients are evacuated after a loss of air conditioni­ng due to Hurricane Irma in Hollywood, Fla. Amy BeTh BenneTT/SouTh FlorIdA Sun-SenTInel VIA AP

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