Fair
70°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Hidden suffering, hidden death:

State agency won't investigate after 53 deaths of those in its care

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 9)

Amy Lipham, Ruby's niece, said she made several of the calls to the hotline.

"It's all just a joke," she said, "When I called the hotline I expected them to do something, but they didn't. They never talked to me. They never did anything."

A taciturn man with deep convictions, Reed said he showed up at the house one day and said to his sister's husband: "Get out. The marriage is over."

Kenneth Drew said he left because he felt he had little choice. During an interview in a West Frankfort barber shop's parking lot near his rented room, Drew said he never harmed Ruby and, like her, was disabled. He said he is a diabetic and lives on $505 per month disability.

Reed received the order of protection and later successfully petitioned a judge to place his sister in a nursing home.

"Ken Drew forces himself upon Ruby Drew, even tho (sic) she says, 'No, no, no,'" Reed wrote in the court application for the protection order. Reed said he personally observed Kenneth Drew physically and verbally abusing his sister.

Standing in the doorway of his rural Franklin County trailer, Reed said the police and OIG did nothing, despite his repeated calls for help.

"What law is there but rich man's law?" he said. "You can't get justice if you are a poor man."

'No evidence of neglect'

In a majority of the death cases, emergency responders and health-care providers knew that a disabled person was likely in trouble, according to OIG hotline summaries. Some tried to help; few thought of calling the OIG until it was too late.

Chief Dave Dato, of the Wauconda Fire Department in Lake County, said his men responded dozens of times in two years to the ramshackle home of 46-year-old Gerald Gottschalk. He said they always found him ill and covered with feces. Plastic buckets of human waste were seen throughout the house. Firefighters reported the house should have been condemned. They believed Gottschalk was mentally impaired.

A log of emergency 911 calls supplied by Dato showed that when firefighters showed up at Gottschalk's residence, he would complain of ailments that included abdominal pain, swollen legs and being unable to stand. However, after medical treatment, he was always returned to the same house.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all