By Monivette Cordeiro
A
judge has threatened to hold AdventHealth officials in contempt of
court, writing that the Central Florida hospital company failed to hand
over records related to its financial relationship with Rebecca Fierle, the former professional guardian currently under criminal investigation.
Circuit
Judge Janet C. Thorpe ordered AdventHealth on July 10 to produce
documents involving Fierle. During a hearing the next day, an attorney
for the hospital system told the judge that AdventHealth paid the
court-appointed guardian to provide services for roughly 50 patients —
an arrangement which was not disclosed to the court.
In
an order dated Tuesday, Thorpe wrote that AdventHealth had only
“partially complied” with her order to produce the documents, which were
to be given to Wynter A. Solomon-Cuthbert, a court monitor assigned to
investigate the disgraced guardian.
The
hospital company still had not given Solomon-Cuthbert all checks and
invoices for payments made to Fierle and her various business entities,
Thorpe’s order said. AdventHealth also failed to provide a list “of all
patients receiving services from Rebecca Fierle, referred to by
AdventHealth as 'permanent’ or 'forever’ patients,” the judge wrote.
“You
are hereby ordered, within 5 days of entry [of] this order, to submit
the listed documents ... or to show cause why you should not be held in
contempt for failing to do so,” Thorpe wrote, emphasizing the contempt
threat in bold type.
Court
records show Thorpe set a hearing earlier in August to let AdventHealth
explain why the company should not be held in contempt for failing to
comply with her order from July. A transcript of that hearing, which was
not publicly noticed in advance, was not immediately available.
AdventHealth spokesman Bryan Malenius told the Orlando Sentinel the company had complied with Thorpe’s orders.
“We
have responded to all requests from the court and are in the process of
re-sending and providing additional documents the court has requested,”
Malenius said.
He
said the hospital company uses the term “forever patients” to describe
“patients who have no family or friends willing to assume guardianship,
and as an absolute last resort, a professional guardian may be appointed
by the court.”
During
the July 11 hearing, AdventHealth attorney Troy A. Kishbaugh told
Thorpe the company thought it should not be responsible for paying
private guardians, who are typically compensated for their time from
their clients’ funds or by the state.
“You
shouldn’t be,” Thorpe told him, according to the transcript. “All
payments to guardians come through the court based on the statutes. ... I
haven’t seen your payments come through to me.”
“They don’t,” Kishbaugh responded.
“That’s a problem, sir,” the judge said.
A
review by the Orange County Comptroller’s office of 30 of Fierle’s
cases found the guardian appeared to have entered into a contract with
AdventHealth without telling the judge — a potential violation of
Florida law, which says guardians may not “have any interest, financial
or otherwise, direct or indirect, in any business transaction or
activity with the guardianship.”
The death of one of Fierle’s clients, 75-year-old Steven Stryker, sparked a scandal that has embroiled Florida’s guardianship program
and led to increased scrutiny over how guardians are appointed to make
legal, financial and medical decisions for minors and incapacitated
adults, known as wards.
Stryker
died at at a Tampa hospital after staff could not perform life-saving
procedures because of a “do not resuscitate” order Fierle filed against
his wishes, according to an investigation by the Okaloosa County Clerk
of Circuit Court and Comptroller.
After
details of the Stryker case came to light, Thorpe sought Fierle’s
removal from all 95 cases the guardian then had pending in Orange
County. Eighteen of those cases involved wards who were AdventHealth
patients when petitions to place them under guardianship were filed,
more than any other care provider, according to data compiled by the
Sentinel.
Fierle, who is not currently facing charges and has resigned from all cases statewide, is the subject of a criminal investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and a separate Medicaid fraud probe by the state’s Office of Attorney General. Earlier this month, authorities found the cremated remains of nine people when they searched the Orlando office for Fierle’s business, Geriatric Management.
Full Article & Source:
Judge threatens to hold AdventHealth in contempt over records on embattled guardian Rebecca Fierle
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