by Janice Limon
alyssa beth steele, charged with practicing medicine without a license
SOURCE: Anderson County Detention Center
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A woman
faces charges in three Upstate counties for practicing medicine without
a license at seven nursing and assisted living facilities, state
officials said Thursday.
Alyssa Beth Steele, 37, of Anderson, is charged in Anderson, Greenville and Pickens counties, where investigators said she worked as a registered nurse without the required certifications, qualifications, or training, according to the South Carolina Attorney General's Office.
Steele was arrested in Anderson County Monday, in Greenville County on Tuesday, and in Pickens County on Wednesday, officials said.
Investigators said between Jan. 15, 2020, and June 13, 2021, Steele used a State of Georgia Board of Nursing license number belonging to someone else to gain employment as a registered nurse in seven facilities.
"By holding herself out as having credentials she did not possess, Steele’s conduct resulted in a failure to provide adequate medical care and services to vulnerable adults and presented a substantial risk of causing physical or mental injuries to the residents under her care," officials said in a news release.
Investigators said Steele worked as a registered nurse at the following Upstate nursing and assisted living facilities:
- Cascades Verdae Assisted Living Facility in Greenville
- Iva Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center in Iva
- Piedmont Post Acute, in Piedmont
- Brookdale Assisted Living Facility, in Anderson
- Condor Health, in Anderson
- Easley Place Assisted Living Facility in Easley
- Fleetwood Rehabilitation and Healthcare Assisted Living in Easley
All the above facilities fully cooperated with the investigation, officials said.
Steele faces the following charges:
- 7 counts of neglect of a vulnerable adult, felony, carries up to 5 years in prison
- 5 counts of unlicensed practice as a registered nurse, carries one year in prison or a fine of not more than $50,000 dollars
- Financial identity fraud to obtain employment, felony, carries a fine or imprisonment up to 10 years
- Obtaining signature or property under false pretenses, value of $10,000 or more, felony, a fine of up to $500 and up to 10 years in prison
Attorney General Alan Wilson said his office’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit led the investigation.
Full Article & Source:
Anderson woman charged in 3 Upstate counties with practicing medicine without license, officials say
1 comment:
This is very scarey that she was able to work without a license and take care of these vulnerable patients, I hope she gets the maximum sentence, she deserves it, I don't know how she could get by with using someone else's license.
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