Jamie Johnston, 30, Jenny Logan, 50, and Letticia Martinez, 27, employees of Cappella Assisted Living and Memory in Grand Junction, Colorado, were charged with negligent death of an at risk person and criminally negligent homicide, both felonies.
Johnston and Martinez were also charged with a misdemeanor for allegedly forging patient records, according to court documents describing the charges.
National Weather Service data shows that the high temperature in Grand Junction that day was 102 degrees Fahrenheit (38.9 Celsius).
The court documents detailing the evidence gathered against the workers have been sealed.
Place could walk and did so frequently in a routine that was familiar to caregivers, but was supposed to be checked on every hour because she was at risk of falling, her daughter, Donna Golden, told The Daily Sentinel in Grand Junction.
“What it boils down to, as the caregivers that day and probably on other days, none of them were doing their job. Not a one of them checked her,” she said.
Cappella Assisted Living and Memory said in a statement that it reported the circumstances surrounding Place’s death to regulators and conducted an internal investigation which led to the dismissal of two of the workers. The third worker was placed on “investigatory leave,” the statement said.
“We are very saddened by the passing of this beloved resident, and we continue to send our sincerest sympathy to this resident’s family and friends,” the statement said.
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