Sunday, May 26, 2019

Claim seeks $45M for incapacitated woman who gave birth at long-term care facility

FILE - This Jan. 25, 2019, file photo shows the Hacienda HealthCare facility in Phoenix. The long-term care facility in Arizona is shutting down a unit where an incapacitated woman was raped and later gave birth, officials with Hacienda HealthCare announced Thursday, Feb. 7, 2019. Hacienda officials say they're working with state agencies to develop a plan to move the remaining 37 patients to other facilities. (AP Photo/Matt York, file)
Lawyers for an incapacitated woman who later gave birth at a Phoenix long-term care facility have filed a $45 million notice of claim against the state, saying she may have been impregnated before.

The claim, which is a precursor to a lawsuit, also alleges the woman was raped repeatedly before giving birth last December.

A former licensed practical nurse at Hacienda Healthcare has been charged with sexually assaulting the 29-year-old woman, who has been in long-term care since age 3 after suffering a near-drowning.

She gave birth to a boy at the facility on Dec. 29. Employees said they had no idea she was pregnant.

The claim seeks a $25 million settlement for the victim and $10 million for each of her parents within 60 days or the lawyers will take the case to court.

Calls and emails sent to the office of Gov. Doug Ducey and the Arizona Attorney General's Office seeking comment on the 55-page claim weren't immediately returned Wednesday night.

The Arizona Department of Health Services said in an email that it doesn't comment on pending litigation.

According to medical records cited in the claim, the woman was "violently and repeatedly raped" while living at Hacienda and a doctor who examined her on the day she gave birth noted that she could have been pregnant before.

"At a minimum, there were repeated violations of (the victim) from the scarring," John Micheaels, an attorney representing the victim and her family, told Phoenix TV station KPNX.

The surprise birth triggered reviews by state agencies, highlighted safety concerns for patients who are severely disabled or incapacitated and prompted the resignations of Hacienda's chief executive and one of the victim's doctors.

Investigators say Nathan Sutherland's DNA matched a sample from the woman's newborn boy, who is being cared for by her family.

Sutherland, 37, has pleaded not guilty to charges of sexual abuse and abuse of a vulnerable adult.

Hacienda fired Sutherland after his arrest. He has since given up his nursing license.

According to the notice of claim, the victim's mother had specifically requested "female-only staff," saying her daughter was at risk for exploitation.

The claim says Sutherland provided unsupervised care for the victim over 1,000 times, including more than 800 times overnight.

Full Article & Source:
Claim seeks $45M for incapacitated woman who gave birth at long-term care facility

See Also:
A disabled woman who gave birth at a Phoenix care facility was likely pregnant before, documents allege

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Arizona care unit where incapacitated woman gave birth to stay open

Hacienda HealthCare to cease operation at South Phoenix facility

Arizona governor calls for stronger protections after incapacitated woman’s pregnancy

Ex-nurse accused of impregnating a severely disabled Arizona woman pleads not guilty

Lawyer: No proof nurse raped Arizona patient who had baby

Nurse arrested in rape of woman in vegetative state who gave birth at care facility

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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   

1 comment:

NASGA member said...

I think that's appropriate but could the facility come up with that much?