A nurse who was supposed to be looking after an incapacitated woman at a long-term health care
facility was charged Wednesday with raping her, weeks after she stunned
her caregivers and family by giving birth to a baby boy .
Nathan Sutherland, a licensed practical nurse, has been arrested and charged with one count of sexual assault and one count of vulnerable adult abuse, according to court records.
"We
owed this arrest to the victim. We owed this arrest to the newest
member of our community — that innocent baby," Phoenix Police Chief Jeri
Williams said.
The surprise birth late last month triggered
reviews by state agencies, highlighted safety concerns for patients who
are severely disabled or incapacitated and led to disciplinary
actions and resignations of staffers and managers. It also prompted
authorities to test the DNA of all the men who worked at the
Hacienda HealthCare facility.
Sutherland, 36, submitted his
DNA sample under court order Tuesday and the results came back a few
hours later, showing he was a match to the baby. He declined to speak
with police and invoked his Fifth Amendment rights, police spokesman
Tommy Thompson said.
Sutherland appeared in court Wednesday
but did not enter a plea. A Maricopa County Superior Court commissioner
set a $500,000 cash-only bond. If Sutherland posts bond, he would need
to wear an electronic monitoring device.
Defense attorney
David Gregan had asked for a lower bond on the grounds that Sutherland
didn't have a criminal record. He described his client as a family man
with young children who has lived in Arizona since 1993.
"There's
no direct evidence that Mr. Sutherland has committed these acts,"
Gregan said. "I know at this point there's DNA. But he will have a right
to his own DNA expert."
Gregan did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
Investigators
found that Sutherland had treated the victim and spent a lot of time
with her, according to a probable cause statement. Investigators believe
Sutherland raped the patient sometime between February and April.
A
former neighbor, Esella Burr, said she lived next to Sutherland, his
wife and four children for more than five years. She often saw the
couple leave for church on Sundays and they would chat occasionally.
"I can't believe it," Burr said. "He told me he was a nurse and he liked his job."
Court
records indicate his wife filed for divorce seven weeks ago. A message
left at a number listed for her was not immediately returned.
Hacienda
officials fired Sutherland after learning of his arrest. The company
said it was "troubled beyond words." Sutherland had passed an extensive
background check.
"Once again, we offer an apology and send
our deepest sympathies to the client and her family, to the community
and to our agency partners at every level," Hacienda said in a
statement.
The 29-year-old victim has been in long-term care
since age 3 and gave birth at the facility on Dec. 29. Employees said
they had no idea she was pregnant. As her guardian, the woman's mother
was required to submit an annual report to the court that included
results of a medical exam.
The case has prompted the
departure or discipline of key figures at Hacienda HealthCare, including
the CEO. The provider says one doctor who had cared for the woman
resigned and another had been suspended.
Earlier stories had
described the patient as being comatose or in a vegetative state. But
her parents released a statement Tuesday disputing that
characterization.
They described her as intellectually
disabled because of seizures in early childhood. While she doesn't
speak, she has some mobility in her limbs, head and neck. She also
responds to sound and can make facial gestures.
The family's attorney, John Micheaels, said in a statement that they knew about the arrest but did not want to comment.
Thompson
said he believes the baby has since been released from the hospital.
The woman's family has said they will care for him.
Full Article & Source:
Lawyer: No proof nurse raped Arizona patient who had baby
See Also:
Nurse arrested in rape of woman in vegetative state who gave birth at care facility
Center where comatose woman had baby faced criminal probe
Lawyer: Incapacitated woman who gave birth not in coma
Patient alleges abuse at Hacienda Healthcare, two staff members placed on leave
Facility CEO resigns after woman in vegetative state gives birth; new allegations emerge
Patient in vegetative state gives birth, sex abuse investigation underway: report
2 comments:
We'll see what proof when it all goes to trial.
Yes. There should be a presumption of innocence until guilt is proven. Too often, media and lawmakers want a ‘quick fix’ and innocent people go to jail.
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