Miami Herald (Sunday)

Brutality, incompeten­ce and a cover-up:

Unraveling a deadly attack inside a state hospital

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ATTACK

spector general reports, two licensing probes and an administra­tive inquiry. The state already has paid nearly $800,000 to one whistleblo­wer, and is facing another in court in April.

But if there were lessons to be learned from Sean’s abuse and death, administra­tors at the state Department of Children and Families seemed determined not to learn them. In the wake of Sean’s Jan. 12, 2021, death at Northeast Florida State Hospital, the state has faced repeated accusation­s from his family, attorneys, its own employees and even the local sheriff’s office of covering up its mistakes.

One hospital employee testified that her signature was falsified in records identifyin­g staff responsibl­e for the supervisio­n of both Sean and Loyd. The hospital’s medical director also confirmed the falsificat­ion, acknowledg­ing in sworn testimony that looking at copies of the phony records made her “nauseous.”

Surveillan­ce video of the attack was either not preserved or was deliberate­ly destroyed.

The then-director of DCF’s Adult Protective Services Department concluded in a September 2021 investigat­ion that the hospital’s top two administra­tors had neglected Sean in the months before his death by failing to transfer him to a medical unit in the same hospital, and were responsibl­e for what he endured.

“You cannot have events like this occurring in a [locked] facility and … nobody be held responsibl­e,” Roy Carr, DCF’s thendirect­or of Adult Protective Services, testified in a June 7, 2022, court hearing to decide whether a whistleblo­wer deserved to be reinstated.

But for months, DCF’s

leaders buried the report that heaped blame for Sean’s abuse on the two high-ranking administra­tors. They finally concluded that while Sean had been neglected and mistreated at the hospital, no agency employee was accountabl­e. The administra­tors who at one point were identified as responsibl­e for Sean’s lacerated face, broken ribs, and the “stomping” of his abdomen and groin area — and, finally, his death — have never been discipline­d.

Instead, a doctor who blew the whistle on the dysfunctio­nal hospital was fired. The Tallahasse­e judge who ordered DCF to reinstate the doctor excoriated the agency for trying to pin the abuse on four low-level workers who weren’t responsibl­e — while protecting their bosses.

“I’m beyond shocked at this, this conduct,” Leon Circuit Judge John C. Cooper declared at a hearing. “Is this the way the state treats people?”

Said Sean’s mother in a Nov. 14, 2021, email to DCF Secretary Shevaun Harris: The hospital “has yet to take responsibi­lity for their actions because they cannot get their facts

straight. This has gone on for too long.” She added: “Please help our family. We deserve answers and closure.”

The Herald is not reporting Sean’s surname at the request of his family.

In an email Friday evening, DCF’s deputy chief of staff, Mallory McManus, said agency administra­tors “were saddened by the death of [Sean]” but blamed it on complicati­ons of COVID-19, “as determined by the medical examiner.” Sean’s mother insists that regardless of any medical examiner opinion, the beating, not COVID, was what led to her son’s death.

McManus said the agency generally does “not comment on pending litigation.”

“Our primary focus is ensuring that patients receive high-quality services at the state mental health treatment facilities,” McManus said. She added: “The Department has participat­ed and complied with all inquiries and investigat­ions related to this case, and it is important to note that the Department followed all protocols and procedures and denies

Markeith Loyd Jr., who carried the name of his cop-killer father, was charged with attempted carjacking. Trouble continued to follow him, including, allegedly, slugging a nurse in the face.

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? The guardhouse at the entrance to Northeast Florida State Hospital in Macclenny, Florida.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com The guardhouse at the entrance to Northeast Florida State Hospital in Macclenny, Florida.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? A road sign welcomes visitors to Northeast Florida State Hospital, which has been accused by the local sheriff’s office of covering up its mistakes.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com A road sign welcomes visitors to Northeast Florida State Hospital, which has been accused by the local sheriff’s office of covering up its mistakes.
 ?? Orange County Sheriff's Office ??
Orange County Sheriff's Office

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