Communication failure: Judge unaware state changed rules to help Bob Dean patients get claims
State officials did a solid last spring for a large majority of the 843 former patients of
The
But word of the relief apparently never made it from the LDH to the judge and attorneys who are working to distribute the money to those former patients from a class-action settlement.
"Why in the name of goodness am I just now getting this?" he asked. "What's frustrating to me is obviously that this is something we want to know and need to know in dealing with the Dean matter, and nobody until yesterday" mentioned it.
Even so, Knight described the news as "a godsend. I'm going to tell you that I'm delighted."
Just this month,
Knight said he "could have been a little more generous" on those initial payments, which are going out this week to 420-plus patients who filed claims under the settlement, two years after the state shut down Dean's homes, dispersing those residents. About 150 of the 843 patients who endured the evacuation to an ill-equipped Independence warehouse have since died.
Knight said Thursday that he didn't know who started the effort to change the rules for Dean's patients, or why nobody told him.
Attorney
"We're surprised but grateful," Massey said.
State pursued change in spring
Correspondence shows the LDH requested the change in late March, and that the national
It was all news to the people cutting the checks.
The settlement that Mentz approved last year in court came in expedited fashion, though some attorneys for residents who suffered serious medical issues as a result argued that that speed came at the expense of a fulsome accounting of Dean's assets and ability to cough up any of his own wealth.
Dean's lawyers and those leading the class action against him argued that it was all tied to his shuttered and seized nursing-home empire, and that his assets were tapped. Speed was paramount given the rapidly dying class, they argued. But the process has carried on much longer than those attorneys had publicly anticipated 10 months ago, when they projected possible holiday payouts.
Warehouse led to deaths, arrests, lawsuits
Dean was off-site as his residents struggled through the hurricane evacuation and crowded into a remote warehouse in Tangipahoa Parish without enough bathrooms and spotty air conditioning. The warehouse partially flooded during the storm, and state inspectors reported seeing elderly people begging for help while staff ignored their pleas. Dean bickered with authorities in a series of raging text messages.
He refused state officials' requests to improve conditions, and they eventually intervened to rescue his residents from the warehouse, sending them to hospitals and nursing homes across the state. More than 50 were hospitalized, and several died. Five of their deaths were deemed "storm-related."
Residents began suing Dean shortly afterward. He was arrested last year on charges of cruelty to persons with infirmities, Medicaid fraud and obstruction of justice. And the
His attorneys say Dean suffers from dementia, and he's avoided sworn testimony since the ordeal began. Dean pleaded not guilty in the criminal case and is awaiting trial.
Settlement money being divvied up
Knight said the waiver from asset limits that was approved specifically for Dean's former patients doesn't clear up the potential that some who weren't on Medicaid still could face "clawback problems" with their insurers.
"But it darned sure helps," he said of the rule change. "It eliminates some pressure I have about putting too much money in people's hands."
He also pointed to other, positive recent steps in getting money to Dean's former patients.
Knight said he's received
He also said that a legal fight with one of Dean's insurance companies over an additional
As it stands, the pot of settlement money hovers around
Knight said his primary goal is to prevent the funds slated for Dean's former residents from being returned to the state or diverted to charity.
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