Nursing home employee steals resident's identity

WLKY.com had an article about the Louisville Metro Police's investigation of a nursing home employee who stole the identity of a patient, then turned around and took out nearly $100,000 in loans.  Danielle McClain faces at least a dozen counts of aggravated identity theft.  McClain was an occupational therapist at the Hurstbourne Care Center at Stony Brook.  She stole 85-year-old Jean Wright's personal information.  Wright spent six weeks at the facility after bypass surgery on her leg.

The investigation determined McClain had stolen Wright's information off her driver's license and from conversations the two had in the facility.  Records show McClain listed Wright as her grandmother on loan applications.  If convicted, McClain could face at least 20 years behind bars.

Records show McClain was convicted of forgery, theft, and criminal possession of a forged instrument in September 2000 and sentenced to 6 years in prison. Those records show she was released from prison in October 2007.  There is no explanation how she got hired at the nursing home.  It is doubtful the facility did any criminal background check.  If the facility had done an appropriate and required background check, this incident never would have happened.

Thief who stole from residents only gets 6 months

San Mateo County Times reported that a caregiver at a Menlo Park nursing home accused of stealing the checkbooks of two elderly residents in an embezzling scheme was sentenced in San Mateo County Superior Court to only six months in jail.

Ramil Panlaqui pleaded no contest to three felony counts of financial elder abuse in a deal with prosecutors that limited his punishment to two years in prison. He had been facing up to 10 years in prison on multiple felony counts, including residential burglary and elder abuse.

Panlaqui, who worked at Atherton Healthcare, stole the checkbooks of an 88-year-old resident and a 75-year-old resident and then wrote multiple checks from one victim's account to the other's before withdrawing the transferred money from the second account.  After Panlaqui's arrest, authorities found a completed check from a third victim, according to prosecutors.

In addition to his six-month prison sentence, Panlaqui was ordered by a Superior Court judge to serve three years' probation. He must also reimburse Wells Fargo and the Bank of America to replace the money stolen from the checking accounts.

 

Nursing home cited for stealing resident's cat

CLARK KAUFFMAN at DesMoinesregister.com wrote an article about a nursing home employee who stole a resident's cat.  Luckily, the cat found his way back!  The article states that the Iowa nursing home has been cited by the state for numerous problems, including the theft of a resident's pet cat.

Granger Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, located in Granger in Dallas County, was fined $7,500. Recently, investigators with the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals looked into allegations that employees at the home were attempting to get rid of an unnamed elderly resident's cat.

The woman told inspectors someone had taken her cat and put it outside, although the cat did not run away. Later, the resident alleged, someone at the home took the cat and dumped it along a gravel road. The cat allegedly found its way back to the facility.   According to state records, inspectors interviewed seven employees, all of whom expressed concern that someone at the home intended to put the cat in the facility's trash bin and kill it.

One worker allegedly told inspectors that the staff had been trying to dispose of the cat. The worker said that one night, while the resident was eating supper, she entered the resident's room, placed the cat in a box and took it home for safekeeping. The worker said she intended to keep the cat only until she felt it could be safely returned to the nursing home.

Based on that worker's statement, state officials cited the home for taking a resident's property.

The Granger home has been cited for numerous other problems in recent months. Inspectors have alleged that:

A worker stole a resident's pain medication for her own use. The worker allegedly took the resident's Imitrix, a costly drug that is prescribed for the treatment of migraine headaches. The resident's insurer had paid for the drug at a rate of $26 per tablet. The worker told inspectors she took the pills at the suggestion of the director of nursing. The director of nursing told inspectors she knew of only one instance in which the worker used the resident's medication. She acknowledged that she did not report the theft to police or to state inspectors.

• As inspectors watched, a resident who was totally dependent on employees for assistance with eating was given little or no help with breakfast. At one point, the resident motioned to workers, pointing to a cereal bowl. One worker stopped and put milk and sugar on the cereal but then walked away. Twenty minutes later, the resident reached for a worker as she passed, but the worker only paused and walked away with the resident still pointing at his or her plate. A few minutes later, the resident was wheeled out of the dining room with most of the food untouched. At lunch, workers again failed to assist the resident with eating.

• One resident was mistakenly given double the amount of prescribed insulin for diabetes treatment.

• The home was cited for failing to ensure that residents had ready access to drinking water and for inadequate infection control.

• Inspectors watched workers walk through urine while providing care for one resident.

• One resident walked out of the home and was later seen by a passer-by crawling along the shoulder of a nearby highway. The passer-by alerted workers at the home, who picked up the resident and took him to a hospital for evaluation.

The Granger home has 61 residents. Federal records indicate residents of the home receive, on average, 18 minutes of daily care from a registered nurse, which is half the average of all Iowa nursing homes.


Poliakoff & Associates, P.A., is one of South Carolina’s most respected and distinguished law firms. The Poliakoff firm began nearly 60 years ago by three attorney brothers: Matthew, J. Manning, and Bernard. With a history of believing the justice system...More...