Sunday, December 22, 2024

Bond set at $100K for Billings landlord charged with assault, elder abuse


By: Q2 News

BILLINGS - Bond was set Friday at $100,000 for John Anthony Skauge, a Billings landlord who faces felony charges of aggravated assault and exploitation of older person with developmental disabilities.

Skauge, 81, appeared in Yellowstone County District Court by video from the county jail for arraignment on the charges. He pleaded not guilty.

Skauge is the owner of the Colonial Apartments on the Billings South Side that city officials have taken legal action against that could lead to the property being condemned and demolished. The property has a long history as the source of frequent police responses.

A trial date in the civil case brought against Skauge by the City of Billings is currently scheduled for late January. It is unclear how the new criminal case could affect the civil case.

The criminal charges allege that on Aug. 10 Skauge pushed a 64-year-old woman down some stairs in a residence on Radcliffe Drive, breaking her hip. Prosecutors allege Skauge left the woman alone and did not seek medical attention. The woman's daughter said she became concerned when her mother did not respond to text messages and found her in the chair severely injured where she had been sitting for 10 to 12 hours.

The woman suffered severe and permanent injuries, prosecutors said, and has been cared for in a rehabilitation facility since the incident. 

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Bond set at $100K for Billings landlord charged with assault, elder abuse

Woman charged in Union County for allegedly stealing from seniors


By WBTV Web Staff

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (WBTV) - A woman was arrested in Union County this week in connection with the exploitation of an elderly adult in the Indian Trail area.

The Union County Sheriff’s Office said Hattie Sturdivant, 50, befriended the victim while she was working at an assisted living facility in Mecklenburg County and unlawfully accessed his finances.

Over a four-month period, deputies said she moved and spent more than $200,000 from the victim’s bank accounts.

The investigation also uncovered two more victims in Union County, deputies said. Evidence shows that Sturdivant used similar tactics to manipulate and financially exploit these people, gaining trust to access their resources.

Sturdivant faces multiple charges, including exploitation of an elder, obtaining property by false pretenses and financial transaction card fraud. She is currently being held in the Union County Jail on a $1 million bond.

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Woman charged in Union County for allegedly stealing from seniors

Colonial Heights nursing home cited by VDH for deficiencies, then found compliant days before abuse complaint


By: Melissa Hipolit

COLONIAL HEIGHTS, Va. — Four days before Colonial Heights Police received a complaint about possible elder abuse and neglect at Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, the Virginia Department of Health found the facility was in full compliance after finding several deficiencies during an inspection in early August.

The VDH inspector found staff at the facility failed to administer scheduled medications, lacked necessary supplies, and failed to provide incontenience care to a resident which caused them to get a severe rash on their buttocks.

The inspection report is dated Aug. 6, 2024 and details what an inspector found over several days in late July and early August after receiving nine complaints about the facility.

That’s just two months before Colonial Heights Police received a complaint of possible elder abuse and neglect from Adult Protective Services regarding a 74-year-old resident at the facility who prosecutors said died from Sepsis from wounds on her back and in her genital area.

Prosecutors said the woman was left in her bed for days in her own urine and feces, and her wounds from the poor care were so bad APS originally thought she might have been a victim of sexual assault.

The inspector reviewed the records of 23 out of 178 residents during the unannounced inspection.

They found one resident had a severe yeast rash on their buttocks.

The inspector said the staff failed to provide incontinence care to meet the needs of the resident and noted the facility’s nurses made no documentation of the rash prior to, or even after, a Nurse Practioner pointed it out to them.

The NP wrote in her notes “Patient has had this in the past…will be worse if she continues to lay in waste for hours. Instructed patient to advocate for herself by talking to the Director of Nursing regarding how long she is laying in waste.”

The inspector also noted staff:

  • Failed to give a diabetes medication to one resident three Saturdays in a row
  • Did not have self-catheterization supplies available to a resident so he was uncomfortable after not being able to empty his urine since the morning prior
  • Failed to consult with a resident’s doctor and resident staff representative and failed to implement its abuse policy after the resident, who was classified as having severe cognitive impairment, was found engaging in sexual activity with another resident on two occasions. According to policy, any suspected or witnessed incidents of patient on patient abuse or exploitation brought to the attention of the administration will result in an internal investigation and reporting to the state survey agency. Failure by an employee to report any witnessed incident or mistreatment, abuse, neglect, theft or exploitation or reasonable suspected crime against a patient will result in corrective action.

The facility needed to correct the deficiencies found by the inspector by Sept. 18.
We asked VDH if they went back to check if the facility made the changes and a spokesperson said they conducted an “off-site” revisit on Oct. 1 to ensure compliance.

That was just four days prior to the APS complaint to police about the potential elder abuse and neglect at the facility.

The VDH spokeswoman said not all revisits are conducted on-site, and the severity of the citations determine if an on-site revisit is required.

We asked her what an “off-site revisit” entails and received the following information:

“An off-site revisit is a desk review of a health care provider’s plan of correction that includes examining credible evidence supplied by the provider. VDH carries out this review off-site.”

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Colonial Heights nursing home cited by VDH for deficiencies, then found compliant days before abuse complaint