October 2011 Archives

October 19, 2011

Three Workers at Senior Living Facilty Arrested, Charged with Assault

Three employees at a Havertown, PA senior living facility were arrested recently and charged with assault and harassment stemming from their treatment of a 79 year old resident of the home. Evidence of the alleged abuse came to light after the resident's daughter placed a "nanny cam" in her room. The resident had previously complained to her daughter that staff at the facility were abusing her.

In addition to the criminal charges faced by the three workers, the family has sued the facility for negligence. In the suit, the family alleges that the facility was understaffed, the existing staff was improperly trained, and that the facility violated regulations for the proper maintenance of a senior living facility.

Website Resource: Delco couple sue senior living facility after alleged abuse caught on tape

Philadelphia Inquirer, John P. Martin, October 13, 2011

October 5, 2011

Panel Declares Nursing Home Worker's Apology Should Have Been Suppressed

In a decision released yesterday, a New York appellate panel ruled that the lower court should have suppressed a nursing home worker's apology to police after sexually assaulting a Queens nursing home resident. According to the panel, the apology occurred in the midst of an interrogation, and thus the officer conducting the interview should have Mirandized the defendant, informing him of his right not to speak and to request an attorney.

The defendant was convicted in 2009 of a first-degree criminal sex act and endangering the welfare of an incompetent person after sexually assaulting a 64 year old female nursing home resident at Cliffside Nursing Home in Queens. The conviction carries up to a 10 year prison sentence.

At a hearing before the initial trial, the court denied defense counsel's motion to supress the apology, finding that it was not the product of an interrogation. The appellate panel concluded that the court ruled incorrectly; in fact, the defendant could have reasonably inferred that the interview had begun based upon the detective's words an actions in the interview room. Statements by the detective during the interview about eyewitnesses to the sexual assault led the defendant to apologize.

Despite the panel's ruling that the apology should have been suppressed, the conviction of the defendant was upheld. The panel ruled it "harmless error," stating that given the overwhelming evidence against the defendant, specifically the witness to the assault, he would have been convicted notwithstanding the absence of the apology. Counsel for the defense plans to appeal this aspect of the ruling, citing a violation of his client's constitutional rights.

Website Resource: New York Law Journal, People v. Tavares-Nunez, Andrew Keshner, October 4, 2011