An emaciated autistic man dies and nobody has answers
ASPartOfMe
Veteran
Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 35,976
Location: Long Island, New York
Her son, Raul Olguin, loved to eat.
“With me, he always wanted to eat,” she said in Spanish. “With me, always.”
Raul had the intellect of a toddler. He was severely autistic and needed constant supervision. He lived with his mother for most of his life – except for his final 71 days, when he was placed with a caregiver in a Garland home.
By the time the 24-year-old died in April 2019, an autopsy showed he weighed 85 pounds. The pathologist found that he was malnourished and that lack of food contributed to his death.
A two-year WFAA investigation into Raul’s case found his caregiver – licensed by the state – had a federal criminal conviction and should never have been looking after him or any other disabled people. The caregiver managed to make it through a loophole in Texas’ criminal background check process. Yet, another loophole allowed her to continue taking care of vulnerable individuals while under investigation for neglect, WFAA found.
In late January 2019, Raul was removed from his mother’s care. She’d been accused of neglect. Records show an investigation soon cleared her, but not before he was placed in the Garland home of Sharita Brandon.
“Mom never got to see a healthy Raul after that point,” Ortiz said.
Brandon was a caretaker working as a contractor for Paso a Paso, a company paid by the state of Texas to find and help supervise foster homes for the intellectually disabled.
Records show Paso a Paso officials periodically checked on Raul at Brandon’s home. They noted that he was losing weight, according to state records obtained by WFAA.
“The caregiver [Brandon] would say he won't eat, but when we witnessed him eating, he would gobble up his food like he had not eaten,” Paso a Paso’s program manager told state investigators looking into Raul’s death. “He inhaled his food. Raul was grabbing at the sandwich of other clients.”
The program manager told investigators that Raul “did have weight issues while under his mother's care. … but he was never under 100 pounds, and he always had an appetite.”
A Paso a Paso nurse described similar concerns. Records show she visited the house on March 25, 2019. Brandon told her that Raul would not eat his breakfast. She said she asked Brandon to bring it back out.
“A bowl of oatmeal (warmed up) was brought…,” according to an investigation into Raul’s death. "And he ate it all,” records show.
In her interview with state investigators, Brandon reported that “Raul had bad eating habits.”
“I could not get him to eat,” Brandon told state investigators. “Raul would eat, but not like he should.” She said she notified Paso a Paso that Raul was not eating and blamed the company for not giving her the support she needed.
Raul’s mother, Maria Covarrubias, provided WFAA her text messages with Sharita Brandon.
Over and over, Covarrubias asked about Raul’s well-being. In the texts, Brandon never gave a hint she was having issue with Raul eating. In fact, her texts gave the opposite impression.
Records show Brandon took Raul to a medical clinic three times in the days before he died. He was seen by two different nurse practitioners. Neither noted weight loss as an issue.
On his final visit, April 8, 2019, the nurse practitioner described him as “well nourished.”
Two days after that doctor visit, Paso a Paso officials removed Raul from Brandon’s home.
On the way to the home of his new caretaker, Raul ate “chicken strips, fries and a burger,” according to state records.
His new caregiver told state investigators that, when Raul arrived at his home on the evening of April 10, he “looked very emaciated, malnourished and his bones were visible,” state records show.
The new caretaker told investigators Raul “ate everything he fed him.”
The next day, Raul collapsed in the front yard of the Dallas home. He was “vomiting black material,” according to Dallas County Medical Examiner records.
Paramedics rushed Raul to Methodist Dallas Medical Center. He was dead on arrival. Hospital records show staff checked “yes” on his paperwork that they suspected he had been neglected.
An autopsy found the main cause of death was aspiration pneumonia. It also said that malnutrition contributed to his death. “As it is uncertain to what extent his malnutrition contributed to his death, the manner of death will be classified as undetermined,” the autopsy report states.
The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services investigated Raul’s death. The agency completed its investigation two years after Raul died.
The final result? “Inconclusive.”
“It could not be determined if there was a negligent act or omission,” the report stated.
Investigators cited several factors in their decision:
A day hab staff member told investigators that Brandon sent Raul to their facility with food.
A Paso a Paso staff member had seen Brandon feed Raul during their visits to her home.
Medical clinic staff had described Raul as “well nourished” when Brandon brought him for check-ups.
Gonzalez with Paso a Paso said he is unsure whether Raul was neglected, but said his company did all it could.
“To say whether I think he was neglected or abused, that is a very fine line,” he said. “I cannot really say. That’s why it involved Adult Protective Services, and let them determine that based on whatever facts they obtain.”
He said when his staff noticed Raul’s weight loss, they acted. “When we started noticing the weight loss, our nurses and coordinator conducted unannounced visits to see what they would find. They never found anything out of the ordinary,” he said.
He said doctors who saw Raul never sounded an alarm. “There was a lot of conflicting information on some of the doctor’s notes. We would see weight loss, but then on their summary, they would say ‘he’s doing great,’ ‘he’s looks great.’ He’s losing weight but he’s looking great?”
“It was one of those cases, unfortunately, they fall through the cracks,” he said. “By the time you want to do something, it’s too late.”
Clay Boatright, a disability rights advocate and father of twin daughters with severe autism, said Raul’s death is an avoidable tragedy.
For someone to deteriorate, and to ultimately die, in a way that people can't draw conclusion, or where there's confusion, makes absolutely no sense,” he said. “It's not like he was isolated for days and someone found him days later. People saw him every single day.”
WFAA’s investigation also found that Brandon should never have been working with people like Raul.
In 2004, while living in Arkansas, she pleaded guilty to stealing money from a federal program that provided funds to the state to pay for day care for “children whose parents were receiving welfare and returning to work or school,” according to court records.
Documents in the criminal case say Brandon was a state contract worker who contacted day care providers and “solicited them to participate in submitting fraudulent vouchers” to the state. A federal judge ordered her and several accomplices to pay back more than $880,000.
Four years later, Brandon had paid $817.05, court records show. A judge revoked her supervised release after finding she violated the conditions of her release.
He sentenced her to one year and one day in prison.
Brandon later moved to Texas.
Records show that in 2016, a child care business ran a fingerprint background check on her, as required by state law. That search found her federal conviction.
But background checks done by companies taking care of intellectually disabled individuals did not. That’s because those companies were only required to check her name in the Texas Department of Public Safety’s database, which contains only convictions in Texas state courts.
Both Borel and Boatright said the root cause of the problem is a system that is drastically underfunded. Texas typically ranks near the bottom of states in funding the system that’s supposed to help protect the intellectually and physically disabled.
WFAA also found that for more than six months after Raul’s death – while the state investigated whether abuse or neglect was involved – Brandon continued to take care of another disabled man.
She was able to do so because there is no way under state law to prevent a caretaker under investigation for serious misconduct from taking care of the disabled.
Under current law, state regulators also have no authority to suspend a caretaker found to have abused, neglected or exploited their intellectually disabled client while they appeal that finding. (We highlighted this problem in a past story.) Two Dallas area lawmakers – State Rep. Jeff Leach (R-Plano), and Sen. Royce West (D-Dallas) – have filed bills during the last two legislative sessions attempting to give the state the power to do so. None have became law.
_________________
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
Given that the so-called carer had a history of stealing money...did they pocket the money meant to feed the victim?
To be honest this was my thoughts exactly, from the title, "seems like someone was making off like a bandit", at the expense of a poor gentleman's life it seems.
yes i reported someone like that person but , i did not realize what was going on, the caregiver person kept with the same story . Eventually Soc.Services was called bavk to this man s residence where the homeowner was keeping him under the guise of being his caregiver .When they returned 6 months later . the elderly gentleman . Who had been put in custody of this homeowner
whom was not licensedand had no idea of how to care for another human being . The homeowner just wanted him SSI check. The elderly man named Doc . Was said to have fallen in the shower
but the broken skin on this mans head was on the top of his head . Soc Services just had the coroner office come and take the body away . No investigation . Calif. Soc Services for the ill or mentally ill or elderly . is a misnomer They do not really service people in a human way i feel .
_________________
Diagnosed hfa
Loves velcro,
Similar Topics | |
---|---|
New Here - 15 yr old misdiagnosed & finally some answers |
15 Sep 2024, 7:36 am |
The Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh dies at 84 |
01 Nov 2024, 9:30 am |
Liam Payne of One Direction, dies after hotel fall |
01 Nov 2024, 9:31 am |
The real Alice of Arlo Guthrie’s 'Alice’s Restaurant' dies |
25 Nov 2024, 7:30 pm |