At first, Bill and Kristi Anderson felt numb after learning that their 19-year-old son was found frozen to death in southeast Minneapolis the morning after celebrating the end of his first semester of college.
But later, when they brought themselves to view photos of the scene and review reports from paramedics, their questions began to pile up.
Now the Andersons are suing those first responders for negligence, alleging that they failed to deliver appropriate care for Jake in the moments after he was first found along the Mississippi River, still clad in the Santa cap he wore to an ugly sweater party in December 2013. They say they want justice for their son, but also to send a message about emergency protocol in freezing weather — specifically, that it's possible to save lives that may appear lost after hours in the cold.
"We assumed everything was done to save him when they found him," Kristi Anderson said in an interview Monday. "When they come and tell you at 2 in the afternoon that your son is dead, you're presupposing that they have taken every measure to save him."
In a federal lawsuit filed last week, Bill and Kristi Anderson allege emergency workers failed to follow protocols that would have called for immediately removing Jake from the cold to an emergency room to try to revive him. Their suit cites several cases where young men or women survived exposure to subzero temperatures for up to 12 hours, despite having no pulse and appearing to be dead.
The couple gathered on Monday with their two other children — Emily, 24, and Luke, 17 — in the downtown Minneapolis office of attorney Robert Hopper. Hopper's office offers a view of the spot where Jake was found — face down, slumped over a metal rail "in a severe hypothermic state" in a remote area near the 10th Avenue Bridge the morning after he was seen leaving a college party about 11:15 p.m. Hopper said Anderson was probably exposed to zero degree temperatures from about 2 a.m. until he was found about six to seven hours later.
According to the lawsuit, Minneapolis fire officials failed to recognize Anderson as a hypothermia victim and declared him dead at 8:57 a.m. after assessing his body for no more than 90 seconds. A Minneapolis fire incident report cited in the lawsuit said Anderson had "no pulse and no breathing and was frozen, indicating obvious death."
But Minneapolis fire "standard operating procedure," the complaint says, stipulates that patients must be "cold in a warm environment" or have signs of "obvious mortal trauma" before being considered deceased.