Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Guilty Verdict in Elderly Exploitation Case

Lynn Marie Keller, 69, has been found guilty as charged of seven counts of Exploiting Elderly/Disabled Person and two counts of Grand Theft from a Person 65 Years or Older. The jury returned the guilty verdict Friday, following a five-day jury trial in Naples.

Assistant State Attorney Jessica Horowitz prosecuted the case.

On November 30, 2019, the victims’ son contacted the Collier County Sheriff’s Office in reference to grand theft of $20,000 in jewelry and a car. The defendant, a friend and neighbor of the victims, was the suspect. The victims were an elderly woman who was under crisis care by hospice and her husband, who was now living in a skilled nursing facility. The defendant was abusing their relationship for financial gain.

Further investigation revealed transactions made by the defendant utilizing a Power of Attorney of the female victim and the victims joint bank accounts.

The female victim died. The defendant then took many items from the house and fled the area. She also instructed a friend of the victim, not to tell the son that his mother died.

Deputies made contact with the defendant who admitted having possession of the jewelry, as well as the couple’s checkbooks, debit cards, and credit cards. She also admitted having the 2019 Kia Sorrento. The defendant transferred the car into her own name the day before the female victim died and without the male victim’s permission. The defendant told deputies she was in the Florida Keys but would return with the items. The vehicle was never returned.

A warrant was issued for her arrest. She was arrested by the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office and extradited to Collier County.

A status conference is set for December 16, 2024, at which time a sentencing date will be scheduled.

Samantha Syoen – State Attorney’s Office Communications Director

Source:
Guilty Verdict in Elderly Exploitation Case

Elderly exploitation, law officer impersonation charges facing Dothan man

by Michelle Mann

A Dothan man is in Houston County Jail charged with first-degree financial exploitation of the elderly and impersonation of a police officer.

Kendrale Lafayette Magwood, 37, was arrested by Dothan Police Department Narcotics Investigators Monday, DPD Public Information Officer Lt. Scott Owens said.

"Investigators say Magwood, posing as a law enforcement officer, used a ruse to convince the victim to buy narcotics from various sources over the course of two months," Owens said. "After receiving information about Magwood, DPD investigators used their own ruse to apprehend Magwood without incident."

Owens said that on Dec. 5, the victim reported to police that he had been used by a law enforcement officers as an informant to buy suspected narcotics for nearly two months. "The victim said he had been made to purchase the 'narcotics' with his own money even though the substances turned out to be imitation controlled substances," Owens said. "The victim had been made to believe he would receive leniency on a previous criminal charge."

Owens said DPD investigators waited for Magwood to set up another “operation” and took him into custody. "Evidence confirming Magwood posed as a law enforcement officer was found in his possession," Owens said. 

Magwood is in the Houston County Jail in Dothan with no bond.

Full Article & Source:
Elderly exploitation, law officer impersonation charges facing Dothan man

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Nurse faces sentencing for wanton neglect in death of nursing home resident

By: Clark Kauffman


An Iowa nurse who was criminally charged in the death of a nursing home resident is facing up to two years in prison after entering a plea in the case.

In March, Pocahontas County prosecutors charged Becky Sue Manning, 70, of Lake View, with felony wanton neglect of a health care facility resident, an aggravated misdemeanor.

Court records indicate Manning recently entered an Alford plea of guilty to the charge in which she didn’t admit to the underlying allegations, but acknowledged there is sufficient evidence to prove wanton neglect should the case go to trial. Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 13, 2025.

The charge carries a minimum penalty of an $855 fine and a maximum penalty of two years in prison plus $8,540 in fines.

According to prosecutors, Manning, a licensed practical nurse, refused repeated requests to provide physician-ordered care for Marvin “Pete” Jacobs, who died Feb. 19, 2023 at the Fonda Specialty Care nursing home. Manning was working at the home in 2023 while employed by the GrapeTree Medical Staffing temp agency.

According to state inspection records, Jacobs had undergone a tracheostomy, and because his airway tended to become clogged, the staff kept a suctioning machine by his bedside. On the afternoon of Feb. 19, 2023, an aide later told inspectors, Jacobs was sitting in his recliner when another worker said Jacobs appeared to be “in trouble” and instructed her to get a nurse right away.

Jacobs was pointing at his neck, gasping for air, and mouthing that he could not breathe, the aide told inspectors. The aide said she left the room to get the only nurse on duty — alleged by prosecutors to be Manning — and was absent for a few minutes.

According to inspectors, the nurse alleged to be Manning told inspectors the “staff wanted me to suction him (and) I told the staff no. I was told that I would not have to do anything with the tracheostomy.”

County prosecutors allege that no fewer than four workers asked Manning to suction Jacobs’ airway right away. Manning reportedly acknowledged to inspectors that her fellow workers had each told her Jacobs needed his airway cleared and that he had been pointing to his neck and mouthing that he couldn’t breathe.

Prosecutors also allege Manning prevented the staff from calling 911 when it became apparent Jacobs couldn’t breathe.

The Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals fined Fonda Specialty Care $10,000 for the death, then reduced that penalty 35%, to $6,500, due to the lack of an appeal in the case.

Shortly after she was criminally charged in the case, Manning signed an agreement with the Iowa Board of Nursing in which she agreed to suspend her practice indefinitely.

On Oct. 31, 2024, Jacobs’ family filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Manning, GrapeTree, Fonda Specialty Care and the nursing home’s corporate owners, Care Initiatives of West Des Moines. The defendants in that case have yet to file a response to the lawsuit.

Full Article & Source:
Nurse faces sentencing for wanton neglect in death of nursing home resident

Florida Guardianships: Who Shall Live and Who Shall Die?


Beverly Rochelle Newman
First Edition Design Publishing, 2022 - Family & Relationships - 44 pages
 

"A powerful and revealing glimpse into the world of corrupt legalized human trafficking that takes place every day in Probate Courts around America" Dr. Sam Sugar is a licensed Board Certified Florida physician, president of Americans Against Abusive Probate Guardianship, and author of Guardianships and the Elderly: The Perfect Crime.

Next door, down the street, or somewhere nearby, an entire world of crises and human suffering exists unbeknownst to you. The victims are everywhere around us but concealed for years, even from their own spouses and adult children, clergy, physicians, and colleagues. These are the voiceless hidden victims of violent, abusive professional guardianships, in which successful lives are buried suddenly and covertly in piles of court documents prepared to rob victims of their due process, civil, and human rights.

From the Congressional Record:

"It will shock you, as it did me, to learn just how frequently abuse can occur following the establishment of a guardianship .... The typical ward has fewer rights than the typical convicted felon .... By appointing a guardian, the court entrusts to someone else the power to choose where they will live, what medical treatment they will get and, in rare cases, when they will die. It is, in one short sentence, the most punitive civil penalty that can be levied against an American citizen ...."

Even though you do not know it, veterans or some other elderly or disabled persons you know are being held in any of thousands of nursing homes, group homes, medical facilities, and private residences against their wills, with enormous medical, emotional, and financial consequences to these scores of thousands of Wards of the State of Florida and to generations of their families trying to see and free their beloved ones. The system in reality is worse than science fiction. In this book, you will see for yourself the secret reality close by!


Bibliographic information

"A powerful and revealing glimpse into the world of corrupt legalized human trafficking that takes place every day in Probate Courts around America" 

Dr. Sam Sugar is a licensed Board Certified Florida physician, President of Americans Against Abusive Probate Guardianship, and author of Guardianships and the Elderly: The Perfect Crime.

Beverly Newman, Ed.D.

Director, The Al Katz Center for Holocaust Survivors and Jewish Learning, Inc.

Producer of Feature Film, OUTRAGE, Winner of 23 International Film Awards

Author of K-12 Holocaust Babies Book Series and Guardianship Abuse Book,

Who Shall Live and Who Shall Die?

Source:
Florida Guardianships: Who Shall Live and Who Shall Die?

See Also:
LEAVING THE DOORS BEHIND HIM FOREVERMORE

Outrage: The Life and Times of Al Katz

Source:
Outrage: The Life and Times of Al Katz



Monday, December 9, 2024

Messenger: Treating mental illness becomes an afterthought in Missouri


by Tony Messenger

NORMANDY — Lisa Poppe’s sister is a dubious statistic.

She’s among more than 3,000 mentally ill adults in Missouri who have spent more than 100 days in a nursing home in the past year. Poppe’s sister, Jill, isn’t elderly. She doesn’t have Alzheimer’s or dementia. She’s 50 and in a nursing home, with Medicaid picking up the expenses, because so many people in the state with mental disabilities or illness are being warehoused in nursing homes.

They are in facilities like the Normandy Nursing Center, where Jill lives, because of a “series of systematic failures of the state” of Missouri.

That’s what a Department of Justice report determined this past summer, when the federal government notified Missouri that it was likely in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act by failing to provide mentally ill people with access to services in their communities.

“Specifically, the State fails to provide sufficient community-based services, fails to assertively engage people who have struggled with traditional services, and improperly relies on guardianship for people who have frequent hospitalizations or otherwise are not engaged in treatment,” the report says. “Instead of focusing resources and attention on serving this group of people in the community, the State relies on nursing facilities as a key piece of the system for serving people with mental health disabilities.”

Poppe has seen the damage the system can do as she navigates her sister’s care.

Jill, who has schizophrenia, took a turn for the worse not long after her father’s death in 1993. The family lived in St. Charles County, and her father was killed by a drunk driver. She landed in trouble, with some arrests. In 1999, she became a ward of the state. Her guardian put her in a nursing home.

Poppe had moved away to live her life. She went to college, got married and served in the Air Force, retiring as a major. In 2019, while in graduate school in Florida, she came home to Missouri to reconnect with her sister.

“She was in bad shape,” Poppe says.

So Poppe went to court and was named her sister’s guardian. Poppe planned to take her back to Florida and care for her there. But she struggled with getting the Medicaid funding transferred. And then the COVID-19 pandemic hit, complicating matters even more as many facilities stopped taking new patients.

“It truly consumed my entire life,” she says.

In 2021, Poppe brought her sister back to Missouri and terminated the guardianship. The state took over again. Jill was back in a nursing home. This time, the state guardian ordered Jill to undergo extensive electroconvulsive therapy, or ECT, which sends electric currents into her brain.

Poppe said her sister started experiencing memory loss and her behavior became more aggressive. Poppe came back to Missouri and obtained guardianship again last year. She put a stop to the ECT treatments and found her sister in a nursing home in Florissant. At one point last year, Jill’s behavior led to a long stay at SSM DePaul Hospital, from October 2023 until March of this year.

While Jill was at the hospital, she allegedly scratched and pulled the hair of somebody. She was charged with assault by the prosecutor in the city of Bridgeton. Poppe then started learning about another all-too-common issue in Missouri: the criminalization of mental illness.

Poppe pleaded with the prosecutor to drop the charges. Her sister was at the hospital for treatment. She needed help, not jail.

“There’s nothing right about this,” Poppe says.

If Jill ended up in jail, she might have been there a very long time. There are more than 300 people in Missouri jails who have been found by a judge to be mentally incompetent to stand trial. But the jails can’t send them for the treatment judges are requiring because there are no beds in mental treatment facilities. It’s a massive crisis in Missouri, Illinois and other states that have abandoned their responsibility to treat to people with mental illnesses.

So people waste away and get worse in jails or nursing homes, or on the streets.

“It’s a huge problem,” says Lindsay Ponce, an attorney with nonprofit law firm ArchCity Defenders who represented Jill in her criminal case.

The case was deferred for a year. If Jill doesn’t get into trouble during that time, the case goes away.

“The intersection between the criminal justice system and people who have mental illnesses is huge,” Ponce says. “It’s extremely difficult to find mental health services. As a whole, we do not put enough resources into helping people with mental illness. There’s nowhere for people to go.”

So it is for Poppe’s sister, and the thousands of people like her. She’s back at a nursing home for now because Poppe’s top priority is making sure her sister doesn’t end up in jail.

“I feel like I have to keep my sister locked up for one year to protect her from going to jail, which would be worse,” she said. “It’s such a waste of taxpayers’ money.”

There are moments, however brief, when Poppe sees the sister she grew up with — a smile here, a burst of lucidity there. “That’s what keeps you going,” she says. “They’re in there somewhere.”

But after decades in a system that wants people like Jill to be forgotten, those moments are rare.

The DOJ has threatened Missouri with a civil rights lawsuit if the state doesn’t change a system that has replaced treatment with a lifetime sentence, shoving people with mental illnesses out of sight.

“If there was any way she could have been rehabilitated in the beginning, she might have had an opportunity to succeed,” Poppe says of her sister. “But not after 20 years in this system.”

Full Article & Source:
Messenger: Treating mental illness becomes an afterthought in Missouri

Abuse charges against four eldercare workers underscore gaps in state oversight

by Bryant Furlow


Four New Mexico caregivers have been criminally charged for abusing elderly residents at assisted living, group home and home care facilities in Rio Rancho, Las Vegas and Santa Fe, following investigations by the state’s Department of Justice (NMDOJ). 

In three of the cases, the alleged assaults were caught on video. Such dramatic evidence of alleged eldercare abuse is rare, one national expert told New Mexico In Depth on Wednesday, adding that abuse often goes unreported and unaddressed, in part because there are gaps in oversight of such facilities. 

The four defendants are Salomon Sanchez, 20, a worker at Community Options, Inc.’s facility in Santa Fe; Lee Carrizales, 64, an employee at Pacifica Senior Living in Santa Fe; Edwards D. Bonilla-Aguinada, 34, of MorningStar of Rio Rancho Assisted Living; and Linda Romero, 52, a paid home caregiver who allegedly repeatedly struck a developmentally disabled patient in front of witnesses, according to court filings.

Each of the four is charged with abuse of a resident, a petty misdemeanor punishable with up to six months in jail. Two of the facilities told New Mexico In Depth on Wednesday the charged employees had been fired. 

“These charges send a clear message that abuse of vulnerable New Mexicans will not be tolerated,” Attorney General Raúl Torrez said Tuesday in a press release. 

The NMDOJ disclosed videos of two of the incidents, involving Sanchez and Carrizales, but did not publicly release video of Bonilla-Aguinada’s alleged assault of an 89-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s, out of sensitivity for the victim, who had soiled herself, according to spokeswoman Lauren Rodriguez. The incident with Romero was not recorded. 

On May 11, 2024, two videos — one taken shortly after the other at Community Options, Inc.’s Camino Esquina group home for people with developmental disabilities, in Santa Fe — show a person identified as Sanchez slapping, grabbing and shoving a wheelchair-bound resident. At one point he grabbed the resident from behind, forcing their head down.

“No one’s taking you to the bathroom, fool – no one,” he can be heard saying in the video. “Play with your toys. No bathroom!”

In a May 5, 2024 video taken at MorningStar of Rio Rancho Assisted Living, which was not released by NMDOJ, a person identified as Bonilla-Aguinada is seen aggressively forcing an 89-year-old resident with Alzheimer’s to disrobe after soiling herself, according to a NMDOJ court filing: The defendant pushed the victim onto the bed, snapping her head backwards, then aggressively removed her clothes, forcing the victim off the bed and onto the floor.

Pacifica’s caregiver, Lee Carrizales, is charged with verbally assaulting two different residents on January 4, 2024. A video of the first incident shows a person identified as Lee yelling in the face of one resident who was sitting in a wheelchair at Pacifica’s Memory Care Unit. “Stop your (expletive) crying already, stop it!,” Lee can be heard yelling. “You’re on your own now, I’m not dealing with you anymore!” A second video shows Lee yelling and cursing at another resident in the Memory Care Unit, later that day. The first victim could not recall the incident and “seemed confused,” according to NMDOJ court filings; the second victim told an investigator she was scared of Lee.

“[S]omeone who is not going to be able to remember or is not going to be able to communicate well, is a prime target,” Richard Mollot, executive director of the Long Term Care Community Coalition (LTCCC), a New York-based patient advocacy group, said in a telephone interview Wednesday. 

Community Options and Pacifica have been sued by residents and their families, court records indicate. In an April 9, 2024 news story in the Santa Fe New Mexican, family members of another Pacifica resident described living conditions at the facility as substandard, alleging, the paper wrote, “constant staff turnover and a lack of medical care.” 

The publicly released videos are “horrific,” Mollot said. 

Mollot has testified before Congress on elder care, including testimony given before the Senate Special Committee on Aging in January. The committee’s hearings focused on quality of care, patient safety, and the assisted living industry’s lack of accountability or federal regulatory oversight. 

“It’s a nightmare to be in a situation like that,” Mollot said. “Living at these facilities, you are vulnerable and count on people that are paid and that are trained.”

The situation is worse at assisted living facilities than more regulated skilled nursing homes, Mollot noted. The federal government requires regular inspections of nursing homes. But no such requirements for assisted living centers exist, meaning oversight falls to states.

New Mexico has struggled to fill that gap. A New Mexico In Depth review of complaint investigations, inspection reports, and court filings for 215 facilities with nearly 6,000 beds found that many assisted living centers across the state have fallen short of the mark on resident safety, and instances of neglect and delayed medical attention are prevalent.

An agency spokesman told New Mexico In Depth in March the Division of Health Improvement is tasked with inspections when a new facility applies for a license or when ownership changes hands, or to investigate complaints. The division also requires facilities to report critical incidents, which then spur investigations. 

But unlike their approach with skilled nursing homes, state inspectors do not conduct regularly scheduled onsite compliance inspections of assisted living centers. 

Administrators at Pacifica Senior Living in Santa Fe and defendant Romero, the paid caregiver accused of striking a developmentally disabled patient repeatedly in front of witnesses, could not be reached for comment. 

A spokesperson for MorningStar said in an email that immediately after learning of the assault, the facility investigated, and fired Bonilla-Aguinada the following day.

“When in July the [state] Department of Justice called our executive director as part of its continuing investigation, we cooperated fully,” the spokesperson said. “There is no higher priority at MorningStar than that of resident safety and quality of compassionate care.”

Noemi Rivera, New Mexico state director for Community Options, responded to an email from New Mexico In Depth, writing that the company is “committed to providing safe and supportive housing for people with disabilities and has a zero-tolerance policy for abuse or mistreatment of any kind.” 

“Upon learning of the incident, the employee was immediately suspended and subsequently terminated,” Rivera’s email stated. “We are fully cooperating with authorities to ensure that justice is served.”

But changing systemic problems at eldercare facilities can require more than firing an abusive caregiver, Mollot emphasized. “You have to go up the chain of command because that’s what is going to make a difference,” he explained. “Too often, we see something horrific and they get rid of an employee, but that doesn’t solve the problem by itself. What helps address the problem is when you are actually going after the operator [administrator]. They have ultimate responsibility.”

For now, the NMDOJ is focusing on prosecuting the defendants for their behavior, not pursuing additional investigations into their employers, according to Medicaid Fraud and Elder Abuse Division Director Joseph Martinez, in a phone call Wednesday. 

It’s also crucial that the state conduct unscheduled on-site inspections at eldercare facilities, Mollot said.

“There’s nothing more important,” he told New Mexico In Depth. “It’s critical that you have inspectors coming in, in a way that it’s not predictable for the provider, because you want to see what is going on there. You don’t want it to be sugar coated or problems including abuse or neglect being covered up — and we know those happen.”

The NMDOJ separately charged a fifth caregiver of abuse earlier this year, Rodriguez said. She did not have the details before New Mexico In Depth published this story. 

Full Article & Source:
Abuse charges against four eldercare workers underscore gaps in state oversight

Settlement offers nearly $9M to Louisiana nursing home residents kept in warehouse during hurricane

Associated Press


Some of the elderly residents of seven Louisiana nursing homes who were sent in 2021 to ride out Hurricane Ida in a crowded, ill-equipped warehouse are being offered shares of a nearly $9 million settlement after they sued.

Retired state judge William “Rusty” Knight told The Times-Picayune of New Orleans that all the 427 former residents who filed legal claims are being sent letters outlining the proposed settlement. Knight said amounts differ based on patients’ individual circumstances.

People who don’t contest the amount offered can expect to receive money within a few weeks. A hearing for those who want to fight the settlement will be held in January.

“It’s been a longer road getting here than we wanted it to be,” Knight said. “Nobody’s getting what they should. quite frankly, because there’s not enough money.”

Bob Dean Jr., 70, owned seven nursing homes in New Orleans and southeast Louisiana. As Ida approached, Dean moved hundreds of residents into a building in the town of Independence, roughly 70 miles (110 kilometers) northwest of New Orleans.

Authorities said conditions at the warehouse deteriorated rapidly after the powerful storm hit on Aug. 29, 2021. They found ill and elderly bedridden people on mattresses on the wet floor, some crying for help, some lying in their own waste. Civil suits against Dean’s corporation said the ceiling leaked and toilets overflowed at the sweltering warehouse, and there was too little food and water.

Within days after the storm hit, the state reported the deaths of seven of the evacuees, five of them classified as storm-related.

By the time Dean was arrested on state charges in June 2022, he had lost state licenses and federal funding for his nursing homes. Dean pleaded no contest to 15 criminal counts in July and was sentenced to three years of probation, paying $258,000 in restitution and more than $1 million as a penalty.

Last month, Dean agreed to pay $8.2 million to the federal government to settle allegations that he misused assets and income from four nursing homes whose loans were insured by the Federal Housing Administration. Prosecutors say he funneled nursing home money to his personal bank accounts, using the money to buy antiques, guns and cars.

But Dean also faced civil lawsuits or legal claims from 427 of the 843 patients who were taken to Independence, or their surviving relatives. Many of the plaintiffs and their lawyers have suggested Dean was hiding other assets.

Knight said he knows of 165 of Dean’s former residents who have died since the evacuation, and he said he expects to learn more people have died as responses to the settlement offer are returned.

Full Article & Source:
Settlement offers nearly $9M to Louisiana nursing home residents kept in warehouse during hurricane

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Heroic Mobile man enters burning house to save elderly neighbor

by Aubrey Spears


MOBILE, Ala. (WPMI) — The heroic actions of a Mobile man saved the life of his elderly neighbor whose house was filled with smoke and flames.

On Thursday morning, the Mobile Fire-Rescue Department received reports of a residential fire on Louisiane Drive. When firefighters arrived, they saw heavy, dark smoke coming from the back of the house and a woman on the front lawn. It was soon determined that the woman on the lawn was pulled from the burning home by a neighbor.

Shawn Stojanik was doing electrical work around his home when his electrician noticed smoke coming from a neighbor's house.

“Originally I was thinking, well, it's cold outside, but at the same time, there are no chimneys in the neighborhood,” he said.

Stojanik saw the dark smoke fuming from the roof and became concerned.

“I started yelling at him, call 911, call 911 right now,” he said.

Stojanik bolted towards the house where people nearby told him there was a woman in the house.

“As soon as they said that, I just went into action. I went to her front door, and I just started breaking the front door open, but she was right behind the front door, and she had collapsed,” he said.

Stojanik had to push his way into the house to rescue the woman who he says was unresponsive.

“I was afraid that it was too late, but thankfully, she is 92 years old, and I guess she is very healthy. She is just fine,” he said.

Soon after Stojanik pulled his neighbor out of the house, firefighters arrived and transported her to the hospital.

“The last words I said to her were, hey, did you mow your grass? She said, no, no, not today. So, she is very alive and well, but I am thankful that I was here at my house working rather than somewhere else, because it would be a different story,” he said.

Other than a bad cough from breathing in smoke, Stojanik says he was checked out by paramedics and is fine. According to MFRD, the fire remains under investigation.

“We undergo a lot of training to go inside. When you have a neighbor that does something like this it is nothing short of heroic. We really are thankful that people can spring into action like that,” said Jeff Haller, MFRD Public Information Officer.

Full Article & Source:
Heroic Mobile man enters burning house to save elderly neighbor

Colorado deputy saves elderly man from a propane leak in his home gas leak


By Aspen Andrews

TELLER COUNTY, Colo. (KKTV) - A Teller County deputy was at his home preparing for his shift when the Teller County Dispatch Center contacted him about a 9-1-1 call on Nov. 30.

The sheriff’s office said, on the other end of that 9-1-1 call, a man was moaning into the phone unable to form words. Deputy Colton Sherraden was called in to help. Sherraden clocked in and raced to the home of the 9-1-1 caller.

When Sherraden arrived, he heard someone moaning inside and could smell propane from outside the window. The sheriff’s office said entered the home to find an elderly man on the floor unable to speak.

Quickly, the deputy opened windows and doors to create airflow and cross breeze through the propane-soaked home. The sheriff’s office said he quickly found the source of the propane and shut it off before it could injure him or the elderly man anymore.

“In doing so, he eliminated the risks to the elderly man, himself, and the additional arriving first responders,” the sheriff’s office said. “Deputy Sherraden’s proximity, quick thinking, and decisive actions at great risk to himself were all factors in saving the life of one of our fellow Teller County residents.”

Full Article & Source:
Colorado deputy saves elderly man from a propane leak in his home
gas leak

Detroit Lakes Man Charged With Beating Elderly Male In Wheelchair Unconscious

DETROIT LAKES, MN (iNewZ.TV) A Detroit Lakes, Minnesota man is facing criminal charges for allegedly beating an elderly man who was in a wheelchair unconscious.

Source:
Detroit Lakes Man Charged With Beating Elderly Male In Wheelchair Unconscious