‘Tired of being abused:’ Watchdog report shows Choate patients forced to
handle own excrement
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[February 11, 2023]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
& MOLLY PARKER
Lee Enterprises Midwest
news@capitolnewsillinois.com
This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in
partnership with Lee Enterprises, along with Capitol News Illinois.
Newly released reports from the Illinois Department of Human Services’
watchdog office reveal shocking instances of cruelty, abuse and poor
care of patients who have mental illnesses and developmental
disabilities at a state-run facility in rural southern Illinois.
The eight reports, obtained last month under the Illinois Freedom of
Information Act, provide new evidence of an ongoing crisis at Choate
Mental Health and Developmental Center, which has been the subject of
numerous investigative articles by Lee Enterprises Midwest, Capitol News
Illinois and ProPublica.
In one report from November, the IDHS inspector general wrote that two
Choate employees who had broken a patient’s arm in October 2017 bragged
about how staff got away with abusing patients by providing scant
details on reports and blaming resulting injuries on accidental patient
falls. The staffers also boasted about intimidating and bullying other
employees to keep them from reporting abuse and bragged that they
retaliated against those who spoke up.
In another report, the inspector pointed to years of concerns about the
care provided to patients who have pica, a disorder in which people feel
compelled to swallow inedible objects such as coins and zippers.
Several nurses told an investigator that it was common practice to force
patients with pica to dig through their own excrement with gloved hands
or a spatula to determine whether objects they swallowed had passed, the
inspector general found. The investigation was triggered by a complaint
to the agency’s abuse hotline made last spring by a facility monitor who
observed a patient walk out of the bathroom with a bag of feces.
Patients questioned by investigators said they felt disgusted by the
practice and viewed it as punitive.
A clinical consultation conducted on behalf of the inspector general
found that the practice violated nursing standards and amounted to
incompetence on the part of the Choate nursing department. The facility
was cited for neglect, though the inspector general did not cite
individual nurses for misconduct because the investigation found it was
a “widely accepted procedure.” This week, an IDHS spokesperson told
reporters that the practice was “limited to the reported incident and
was stopped immediately upon discovery.”
In yet another report, the inspector general cited two nurses for
neglecting a terminally ill patient in the days before he died in July
2021. One of the nurses failed to properly manage his pain, and the
other failed to notify a physician that the patient had lost 21 pounds
in one week. These shortcomings caused him to experience pain, emotional
distress and further deterioration of his physical health, according to
the inspector general’s clinical review. Proper care “could have
provided him a higher quality of life and more time with his family,”
the report said.
These newly released reports, relating to events that occurred between
2017 and last spring, come on the heels of a series of news stories
documenting repeated failures at the Choate facility. In September,
reporters found that the IDHS inspector general had investigated more
than 1,500 reported incidents of abuse and neglect over the decade
ending in 2021, though staff have rarely faced serious consequences.
In addition to the abuse and neglect at the facility, which houses up to
270 people with disabilities, the series revealed a culture of cover-ups
at Choate, later confirmed by inspector general reports. The news
organizations uncovered workers colluding before being questioned by
investigators, obstructing investigations and lying to avoid
consequences in abuse and neglect cases. In response to that reporting,
Gov. JB Pritzker said the patient abuse at Choate was “awful” and called
for change.
IDHS has not disputed the news organizations’ findings and has
acknowledged the seriousness of concerns about the facility that date
back years. Once again this week, in response to reporters’ questions,
the agency detailed some of the steps it has taken to correct poor
conditions at Choate, including enhanced staff training on responding to
abuse and neglect allegations, campus safety assessments and a
partnership with an outside organization to provide additional clinical
support for patients who have experienced trauma.
Other findings in the new inspector general reports include mental
health technicians who neglected patients and compromised safety by
sleeping on the job or failing in other ways to provide proper
supervision. In one case from May 2019, two patients who had been left
unsupervised each accused the other of rape. In another, a patient was
discovered wandering naked outside at about 4 a.m. on a mid-December
morning in 2021 when the temperature had dipped into the 30s. And in a
third case, a staff member’s failure to provide proper supervision led
to one patient assaulting another in June 2022.
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(Illustration by ProPublica. Source
Images: Whitney Curtis for ProPublica and Illinois Department of
Human Services Office of the Inspector General case summary)
Further, an incident in November 2021 extended beyond neglect. A
mental health technician was found to have also mentally abused and
retaliated against a patient who wet himself after the tech rejected
his request to use the bathroom. The worker made the man mop up the
mess and tossed his personal letters in the bucket of dirty water,
according to the inspector’s report. When questioned by an
investigator, one of the patients who witnessed the incident and
corroborated the account began to cry and said he “was tired of
being abused.”
“Unwritten Rule” to Cover Up Abuse
A patient abuse case from 2017 reflected a broad range of problems
that have been documented at Choate. It revealed how some employees
hide abuse and obstruct investigations, retaliate against those who
speak up and indoctrinate new employees into the cover-up culture.
Their actions, the inspector general wrote in his November 2022
report, reflect “a brazenness and sense of impunity amongst certain
Choate staff that must be combatted.”
The case involved two mental health technicians who fractured a
patient’s shoulder in October 2017 but failed to report it. Nearly
five months later, someone called the agency’s abuse hotline and
said they had overheard the technicians — Cody Barger and Jonathan
Lingle — bragging about breaking a patient’s arm and coordinating
their stories to say the patient had fallen in the shower.
That call led the Illinois State Police to investigate. One person
told them that he had been interested in working at Choate but had
confided to Barger that he was not confident he could handle the
residents. He said Barger told him it was easy “to get around
stuff,” for instance by claiming the patients had injured
themselves.
Another worker told police that Lingle had instructed him to
disregard most of what he would learn in training, saying that he
should fill out injury reports with minimal details and abide by the
“unwritten rule” that staff cover for each other.
But in this case, the staff culture of complicity went even further.
Months later, a security officer at the facility told Barger who had
called in the complaint against him. Two days after that, he showed
up at his then-fiancee’s house, yelling at her for reporting him,
knocking her down and daring her to kill herself before shooting an
AR-15-style rifle twice into the air, according to police records.
The woman’s young son called 911. The security officer who disclosed
the identity of the person who reported Barger to the inspector
general’s office was initially charged with felony official
misconduct, but her case was dismissed; she received more than
$65,000 in back pay.
Barger and Lingle were fired from Choate in 2018 for unrelated
misconduct. Both men were criminally charged in the injury case, not
with battery, but with obstruction. They each pleaded guilty and
received probation. Both men agreed not to seek employment in a
health care setting. In the administrative review, the inspector
general ruled that claims that both men had physically abused the
patient were substantiated. Attempts to reach Barger and Lingle by
phone, via Facebook messages and through their attorneys were not
successful.
The case prompted Peter Neumer, the IDHS inspector general, to issue
recommendations to combat Choate’s “cover-up culture,” including
subjecting employees to consequences for retaliatory threats or
behavior. He also reiterated his repeated request for Choate to
install cameras.
The IDHS spokesperson said the agency protects employees who report
misconduct, and that “instances of retaliatory threats or behavior
are investigated and administrative actions taken as appropriate.”
She said that IDHS is in the process of installing cameras at
outdoor locations across the campus and in some interior public
spaces.
More broadly, the troubles at Choate have led to calls for reform
from advocacy organizations, the IDHS inspector general and the
governor. Last month, Pritzker renewed demands that Choate clean up
its act or face closure.
“We obviously want to make sure that we’re keeping everybody safe in
these facilities,” Pritzker said at an unrelated news conference in
January. “And if we can’t — and I’ve said this before — then we
shouldn’t have that facility open.”
Stacey Aschemann, a vice president with Equip for Equality, a legal
advocacy organization that has been appointed to monitor troubled
state facilities including Choate, said the most recent reports of
misconduct were “very disturbing and at times chilling to read.”
Staffers’ actions, she said, were inhumane, set individuals back in
their treatment and, in some cases, caused lasting harm.
“The large number of staff involved in these multiple substantiated
OIG reports reveals a concerning trend indicative of a culture
problem at the facility,” she said.
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