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FOREVER LEFT
8th March 2007, 00:02
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-du...ack=1&cset=true (http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-dumping9feb09,1,395568.story?ctrack=1&cset=true)


By Andrew Blankstein and Richard Winton, Times Staff Writers

February 9, 2007


A paraplegic man wearing a soiled hospital gown and a broken colostomy bag was found crawling in a gutter in skid row in Los Angeles on Thursday after allegedly being dumped in the street by a Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center van, police said.

The incident, witnessed by more than two dozen people, was described by police as a particularly outrageous case of "homeless dumping" that has plagued the downtown area.

"I can't think of anything colder than that," said LAPD Det. Russ Long, who called the case the most egregious of its kind that he has seen in his career. "There was no mission around, no services. It's the worst area of skid row."

Los Angeles Police Department detectives said they connected the van to Hollywood Presbyterian after witnesses wrote down a phone number on the van and took down its license-plate number.

They are questioning officials from the hospital, which the LAPD had accused in an earlier dumping case that is now under investigation.

Witnesses shouted at the female driver of the van, "Where's his wheelchair, where's his walker?"

Gary Lett, an employee at Gladys Park, near where the incident occurred, said the woman driving the van didn't reply, but proceeded to apply makeup and perfume before driving off.

"She didn't make any attempt to help him," Lett said. "He was in bad shape. He was incoherent."

Kaylor Shemberger, executive vice president for Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center, said, "Obviously we are very concerned about the information that has been presented to us. We are continuing to investigate the incident. If some of the facts are correct, it is clearly not in line with our policy of handling these types of patients."

When the hospital was previously accused of dumping in 2005, a top executive said the facility takes discharged patients to Los Angeles Mission at their request.

The case comes three months after the L.A. city attorney's office filed the first indictment for homeless dumping against Kaiser Permanente. The charges stem from an incident earlier last year when a 63-year-old patient from Kaiser Permanente's Bellflower medical center was videotaped as she stepped from a taxi in gown and socks and then wandered the streets of skid row.

Los Angeles officials have accused more than a dozen hospitals, as well as some outside law enforcement agencies, of dumping patients and criminals on downtown's troubled skid row. The city attorney's office said it was considering filing charges against several other medical facilities.

Police describe the homeless people who congregate around Gladys Park, in the heart of skid row, as a tough crowd who have seen much and say little.

But there was no shortage of people willing to describe what they saw about 10:45 a.m. Thursday morning, when the white hospital van pulled up several feet from the curb.

"They were lining up to give their story," Long said. "They were collectively appalled. We were as shocked as the homeless folks."

Witnesses told police that the man propped himself up in the door of the van. He then hurled himself from the vehicle, tumbling to the street. He pulled himself along, dragging a bag of his belongings in his clenched teeth.

Police said several people began shouting at the driver, who in addition to applying makeup was more concerned that the seats of the van had been soiled, investigators said.

LAPD Officers Eric de la Cruz and Pernell Taylor said they arrived to find the man being carried out of the street on a chair that had been retrieved from the nearby park offices.

De la Cruz later asked the victim if he had wanted to be dropped off at the location.

"He said he had nowhere else to go, and the hospital staff told him he could no longer stay there," De la Cruz said of the man, who is being treated at County-USC Medical Center.

The LAPD has accused several hospitals of dumping patients on skid row over the last two years, including Kaiser's West Los Angeles hospital, Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center and Los Angeles Metropolitan Medical Center.

Officials at those hospitals have denied dumping patients, but some said they had taken homeless patients to skid row service providers.

In 2005, at attorney for Hollywood Presbyterian denied that the hospital had dumped patients, but he said skid row service providers offered treatment and care for some patients who had nowhere else to go.

City officials are trying to crack down on crime and blight in the district, which has the largest concentration of homeless people in the western United States. In recent months, a police crackdown has resulted in more than 1,000 arrests and a drop in crime.

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Ander
8th March 2007, 00:08
...Wow.

This is one of the most disgusting and fucked up things I have ever heard of. I actually feel sick.

RedAnarchist
8th March 2007, 00:13
That is seriously cold. Very, very cold. How one human (the van driver) can feel such little empathy for another is beyond me.

Kropotkin Has a Posse
8th March 2007, 00:44
Fuck their fucking private health care.

Comrade_Scott
8th March 2007, 01:24
the fact that the LAPD feels bad for this guy says it all....
so cappies this is your wonderfull beacon of capitalism? sick fucks the lot of you that hospital should be sutdown or the directors beten in public. and as for the van drivers they all should be tourterd in the most painfull way. mabey graftin off some skin minutely? but this sick shit sould be stoped!

Janus
8th March 2007, 01:48
This pretty much shows the consequences of the deinstitutionalization of mental healthcare in the US. Those who don't have the benefit of local community help simply end up as homeless people.

Floyce White
9th March 2007, 05:43
Every night I see plenty of homeless people on crutches and in wheelchairs sleeping on the streets in downtown San Diego. Right when Bush got elected, some social workers from a private agency came around and organized the disabled homeless for pickup a few nights later. They disappeared from the streets for a year or two. Probably to shelters--I don't really know. Then they reappeared here and there. Now it's like it was before.

San Diego Transit put big pipes across the top of bus benches to deter homeless from sleeping there. It looks almost as if they were trying to divide the benches into nice little one-person seat spaces. Homeless people just put up with it and fall asleep from exhaustion anyway. The bus benches often attract handicapped homeless because it's easier to get up from a bench than from the ground, and because some of them have half-shelters against the little wind and rain we sometimes get.

I always get angry about the furniture retailer Jerome's. They run these nice friendly TV ads about how it's a family company--as if that makes any difference. Jerome's has several warehouses in the part of Downtown near City College and the police station--an area where many homeless people sleep. Jerome's has sprinklers atop its outer walls that spray water around the sides of its warehouses onto the sidewalks below. No homeless people try to sleep there.

At the start of the Iraq War, some youth tried to have round-the-clock protests with sleep-ins at the Federal Building. The Feds waited until 3am and then turned the sprinklers on them. The youth gave up after a few nights. I felt sorry for them, but they should have known better. Apartments all over Southern California run their sprinklers every night to keep homeless people from sleeping there.

LA has uncounted tens of thousands of homeless in West LA--far more than in Skid Row just east of Downtown. The misery is appalling. And it's not as easy for tourists to see as in San Francisco, where so much is crammed into a little space.

I really don't know where they get this "land of milk and honey" stuff. That's nowhere around here.

BTW Janus, I understand what you're saying, but that's kind of misleading. Tens and hundreds of thousands of able-bodied men and women are homeless due to lack of jobs, low wages, and very high rent. The reason homeless people appear to be mentally ill is because after 100 or so days of fatigue, people come down with the physical sickness called "chronic fatigue syndrome."

Janus
10th March 2007, 00:41
Tens and hundreds of thousands of able-bodied men and women are homeless due to lack of jobs, low wages, and very high rent
Yeah, I'm aware of that. If you can't pay the rent then you are officially homeless until you can find another residence.


The reason homeless people appear to be mentally ill is because after 100 or so days of fatigue, people come down with the physical sickness called "chronic fatigue syndrome."
I suppose I was talking about the high preponderance of diagnosed mentally ill people within the homeless community in general; those who really need help.

Tekun
10th March 2007, 13:37
Sadly, this is nothing new
This happens quite frequently here in LA
Kaiser is quite notorious for its employees having done this many times in the past
Sadly, this is what happens when insurance rates and medical coverage as a whole is made unaffordable to the working class
Sad to say, my parents due to financial troubles will have to change to Kaiser pretty soon

Most of the homeless populatio here in LA suffer from psychological problems, and as such would not be out in the streets if the government made health coverage and housing affordable to all