In a rare criminal action against a senior care facility, the state's top prosecutor has filed dozens of criminal charges against the staff and former owner of a northern Minnesota senior home where residents were allegedly beaten, robbed and denied vital medical care.
The assisted-living facility, Chappy's Golden Shores of Hill City, Minn., had its license revoked early this year after an investigation by the Minnesota Department of Health found multiple violations of state care regulations. Local and state authorities expanded their probe following allegations that a 58-year-old resident with dementia died from brain injuries after being severely beaten by caregivers at the facility.
On Monday, Attorney General Keith Ellison's office took the unusual step of filing more than 70 criminal counts against the former owner, managers and staff of the senior home, following a far-reaching probe that included a review of more than 1 million pages of evidence.
The charges include manslaughter, racketeering, theft, operating without a license and multiple counts of criminal neglect of vulnerable adults. Chappy's former owner, Theresa Olson, was arrested Tuesday and faces 25 charges, including one count of manslaughter for her role in the death of a resident.
"Every Minnesotan deserves to live with dignity and respect. This does not exclude the sick and the vulnerable — it includes everyone," Ellison said in a statement.
Nearly a year ago, state health regulators uncovered what appeared to be alarming levels of violence — including physical, sexual and verbal abuse — at Chappy's, and repeated cover-up efforts by facility administrators. Details of the abuse spurred such outrage that senior advocates repeatedly cited them as they lobbied for broader licensing legislation that passed the Legislature this spring.
The Health Department's swift action to shut down Chappy's, and the far-reaching scope of the criminal charges, appear to signal a tougher stance against elder abuse by state officials, who had come under criticism for insufficient efforts to protect vulnerable adults in senior care facilities.
Ellison's action this week is believed to be the first time in Minnesota that someone has been charged with manslaughter in connection with a death at an assisted-living facility, officials said. A Star Tribune investigation two years ago found that county prosecutors rarely charge senior care owners or their staff with criminal wrongdoing, even when residents are victims of criminal behavior such as assault, rape or robbery.