Caretaker accused of biting elderly woman to death now facing murder charge

CHEROKEE VILLAGE, AR – A woman accused of biting an elderly woman to death now faces a murder charge.

Third Judicial Prosecuting Attorney Henry Boyce announced Wednesday that charges against Jennifer Lea Collins, 55, of Mammoth Spring were increased from first-degree battery to second-degree murder.

The victim’s son discovered her lying in a pool of blood at her Cherokee Village home on May 11. According to police records at that time, part of the woman’s chin had been bitten off.

“She had also been bitten on the face, hand, arm, and leg,” the report stated. “The nipple of the victim’s left breast had also been bitten off.”

The victim, who later died from her injuries, told police that Collins had bitten and beaten her.

“After carefully reviewing the evidence in this case, including a review of the autopsy and consultation with the Crime Lab Medical Examiner, I decided that the upgrade in charges was warranted,” Boyce said.

In addition to the murder charge, Boyce stated Collins also faces charges of abuse of an endangered or impaired person, resisting arrest, and disorderly conduct.

Murder in the second degree is a Class A felony. If convicted, Collins could be sentenced 6 to 30 years in prison.

UT Medical Center changes care plans for IV drug users

UT Medical Center has had issues with patients bringing illegal drugs into the hospital. So they are changing their protocol for patients who come in with IV drug use infections.

Chief Operating Officer Jerry Epps says, “It’s important for us to increase patient safety. That’s my responsibility, and the safety of our employees.”

Patients will have to sign a plan of care that outlines this new infection treatment which lasts about six to eight weeks while they administer antibiotics to kill the infection in the heart, bone or tissue. While in the hospital, the patients must wear hospital gowns instead of regular clothes, they won’t be allowed to have any visitors, and they can’t roam the hospital.

Epps said, “We’re going to keep them on the floors where their rooms are because we don’t want them going outside or to the garage where people can get them drugs.”

While in the hospital, Epps said he hopes to treat their infection and then give them resources to get clean. Epps said the facility has usually admitted five to 12 patients with IV drug related infections at any given time.

The Metro Drug Coalition said they think this is a great idea, and organization leaders hope it will lead to recovery for many addicts.

Deborah Crouse with Metro Drug Coalition said, “It would be great for other facilities to take initiative like this to help people living in addiction get back their life.”

If the patients decide they don’t want to follow this new protocol, they can refuse care and leave the hospital.

EMS crew confronted with gun, SWAT called

A call for help in the St. Joseph neighborhood has resulted in a large police presence after first responders were confronted with a gun.

Around 2:20 p.m., EMS was called to the 500 block of Lilly Ave. in the Saint Joseph neighborhood on a report of a sick person, according to Mitchell Burmeister, a spokesman for Louisville Metro Emergency Services. Burmeister said after the Metro EMS arrived at the scene, the crew heard shots and notified MetroSafe.

Major Josh Judah said that EMS was confronted by a person with a gun. The EMS workers backed out of the residence; Louisville Metro Police Department SWAT and Hostage Negotiation Teams were then called to the scene.

Judah confirmed that the armed individual surrendered and was arrested without incident; he also verified that no one was injured.

One person faces possible charges, LMPD said.

13-Year-Old Boy Jersey Shore Dies from Heroin and Fentanyl Mix

A mixture of fentanyl and heroin caused the death of a 13-year-old Middle Township boy earlier this year, according to his mother and authorities.

Vincent Weiner was found dead in bed by a grandparent in the Rio Grande section Middle Township on June 4.

His mother Jamie Lund shared the news on Facebook Saturday. The chief detective for the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office confirmed her account, according to PressofAtlanticCity.com.

The teen’s official cause of death was acute intoxication of fentanyl and heroin. More fentanyl than heroin was found in his system.

“Whoever is supplying these babies with drugs, needs to be stopped!,” Lund wrote.

Weiner was a seventh-grader at Middle Township Middle School.

Anyone with information about Weiner’s death is asked to call Lt. Steve Vivirana at the prosecutor’s office at 609-465-1135, or call Middle Township police at 609-465-8700.

SUV carrying grill blows up when woman lights cigarette

ORLANDO, Fla. – A propane tank being hauled in an SUV exploded Sunday afternoon when a passenger lit a cigarette while the vehicle was in front of the entrance to the Central Florida Fairgrounds, Orlando police said.

The Orlando Police Department said a driver and a passenger were driving a Kia Sorento with a barbecue grill inside.

Police said the grill, which was turned on, had a propane tank attached that was open and connected.

The passenger in the front seat lit a cigarette, police said, and that’s when the explosion happened.

Police said the vehicle was severely damaged, and the driver and passenger were taken to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries and burns.

Three nurses treated with Narcan for opioid exposure at Massillon hospital

MASSILLON, Ohio – Three nurses at Affinity Medical Center who helped treat an overdose patient were overcome by secondary exposure.

Massillon police said they believe the substance was fentanyl.

“They were cleaning up the room and started to feel sick. And then that left them waking up in a hospital bed,” Detective Shaun Dadisman said.

Investigators said the nurses had to be treated with Narcan, the drug used to revive those who overdose on heroin or fentanyl.

“It shuts down your breathing. It shuts down your system so you get to the point where you’re not breathing on your own. And you need that boost and that Narcan is what takes that away so it helps you to recover quickly,” Dadisman said.

The problems with fentanyl and other opioids have become so profound that law enforcement and medical personnel are now forced to come up with new policies and protocols to handle these cases.

“I was actually stuck by a needle from an individual on a heroin overdose, so I had to run through all of the testing myself,” Dadisman said.

He said the grip opioids now have on a growing segment of society has created a huge risk for those whose job it is to save lives.

“I think there will be continued changes — gloves, masks. And the problem with our first responders, police officers and our nurses and stuff, is you don’t know immediately what you’re dealing with,” Dadisman said. “After the fact you may know, but it may be too late.”

In East Liverpool this summer, a police officer almost died from an accidental overdose while responding to a drug call. Officer Chris Green said he was wearing gloves and a mask as he searched a suspect’s car. He ended up with a white substance on his shirt and was revived with multiple doses of Narcan.

Angry paramedic kicks pregnant nurse in the stomach

A paramedic was caught on camera kicking a pregnant nurse in the stomach at a hospital in the city of Valparaiso on the coast of central Chile.

Daily Mail reported that the incident was captured on security cameras at the hospital. The paramedic and a pregnant nurse were involved in a heated argument. In the video, the paramedic grabs the nurse by the hair, slams her head against a door and then kicks her in the stomach.

The confrontation, according to the report, lasted for three minutes. Security guards arrived on scene and restrained the paramedic.

The paramedic has been suspended and will likely face criminal charges. The relationship between the paramedic and nurse is not known.

Nurse reportedly got $25k after corrections officer allegedly assaulted her at work

A former nurse with the Burlington County Department of Corrections settled a suit for $25,000 with the department and her former employer after an officer allegedly assaulted her at work, court documents show.

Adria Rodriguez sued the Burlington County Corrections Department and contractor Corizon of New Jersey, LLC. in 2014, alleging that an officer had inappropriately touched her, and that her employers had failed to properly handle the incident, a suit and settlement documents obtained by open government advocate John Paff, who runs the blog NJ Civil Settlements, show.

Sometime after Rodriguez’s employment began in 2010, Officer Markey Hayes allegedly approached Rodriguez from behind at the County Correctional Center where she worked, picked her up and put her back down before grinding his pelvis into her. She told him to stop, the suit states.

Later, in March of 2012, Hayes approached Rodriguez again and she put her hands up, telling him she did not want to be touched, according to her claim.

Hayes then allegedly put his hands in her hair and brushed his pelvis against her hip.

Rodriguez then filed complaints to both the police and the Burlington County Detention Center, the suit states.

But after, retaliation against her followed. She was allegedly told she was “no longer trusted as a nurse” and experienced harassment from other officers, who said things like, “yo babe, I’m taking my clothes off for you, can you see me?”

After suffering a hostile work environment, Rodriguez’s claim said she experienced difficulty eating and sleeping, and eventually quit her job later that year.

The parties entered into mediation in April, and came to the $25,000 agreement in May.

Burlington County was responsible for $10,000 of the settlement amount, the documents show. The settlement is not an admission of guilt from Corizon or the county.

Pennsylvania Supreme Court Rules that Only Physicians – Not Their Staff – Can Obtain Informed Consent

A recent Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision will have a major impact on how physicians across the Commonwealth obtain informed consent from their patients. In Shinal v. Toms, 2017 WL 2655387 (Pa. June 20, 2017), the 4-3 Court ruled that only physicians, not members of their staff, may obtain informed consent from patients before performing medical procedures.

The plaintiff in this case sued her physician for medical malpractice after a brain surgery went wrong resulting in a stroke, brain injury, and partial blindness. Before the procedure, the physician’s assistant provided the plaintiff with information about the procedure and obtained a signed informed consent form. However, the plaintiff claimed she was never informed of the risks associated with the surgery, and, if she had known, she would have chosen a less-risky approach.

During trial, the judge instructed the members of the jury that, in determining whether the physician obtained the plaintiff’s informed consent, it could consider relevant information communicated by the physician’s assistant to the patient. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the physician, and the plaintiff appealed.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court reversed and held that the duty to obtain informed consent from a patient belonged solely to a physician who was performing the treatment and was non-delegable. In doing so, the Court explained that “a physician cannot rely upon a subordinate to disclose the information required to obtain informed consent. Without direct dialogue and a two-way exchange between the physician and patient, the physician cannot be confident that the patient comprehends the risks, benefits, likelihood of success, and alternatives.”

The Court’s decision is limited to the major medical procedures enumerated in the MCARE Act, which requires physicians to obtain informed consent when performing major medical procedures such as surgery, radiation, a blood transfusion, inserting a surgical device, and administering an experimental medication or device. 40 P.S. § 1303.504. The Court did not extend its ruling to require physicians, and not staff members, to obtain informed consent for routine or nonsurgical treatments.

This decision is now binding law across the Commonwealth, meaning that physicians who rely on their staff to obtain informed consent from patients for major medical procedures will need to change their practice so that patients are consenting to the physician who is performing the surgery.

Critics to this decision claim that this will place an unnecessary burden on already overworked physicians. As the three justices who dissented from the majority noted, this “decision will have a far-reaching, negative impact on the manner in which physicians serve their patients. For fear of legal liability, physicians now must be involved with every aspect of informing their patients’ consent, thus delaying seriously ill patients access to physicians and the critical services that they provide.”

Off-duty nurse helped Hamlin teen after serious crash

A nurse who stopped to help after a serious crash on the Lake Ontario State Parkway is now sharing her story.

Ayanna Herrold, 17, of Hamlin is in critical condition with a traumatic brain injury after her car went off the road and crashed into trees Tuesday.

Michelle DiMartino says she was heading to work later than usual that day.

“I was going down the parkway, east, and I heard a big boom and I didn’t see anything,” DiMartino said. “Proceeded down a little farther, and seen a bit plume of smoke.”

DiMartino pulled over and rushed to help. Two other women joined her.

“I tried to flag someone down to help,” she said. “I saw this young girl in the car.”

The registered nurse of five years said if it weren’t for her training and the help of others, it could have been a different outcome for the victim.

“I’m not a trauma nurse,” she said. “I’m just thankful I knew enough of what to do. It’s not me alone. It’s the people around me that helped. Nothing about that morning was average for me. It was all different. I never leave at that time. I think I was just meant to be there to help out,” she said.

The family said they are grateful for the women who stopped to help, the first responders and the medical team at Strong. They are asking for the community’s prayers in Herrold’s recovery.

“It’s traumatizing,” DiMartino said. “My thought are with the family.”

The cause of the crash is under investigation.