Sensitive Contributions
Cornyn’s top donor from the embattled nursing home industry is Sensitive
Care, Inc. ($13,000).1
Its bedpan hit the fan in 1997, as the Texas Legislature strengthened state
nursing home oversight and the attorney general campaign got under way.
The company paid $1.4 million in June 1997 to settle a lawsuit over 94-year-old
Inez Hagans, who waited two days for treatment after breaking her neck
in a Sensitive Care facility.2
Four months later a jury hit Sensitive Care with $250 million in punitive
damages for letting 80-year-old Woodrow Bryan Sellers starve to death after
he got a mouth infection.3
Then-Attorney General Dan Morales also sued Sensitive Care in 1997, charging
it with failing to protect three female residents from sexual abuse by
a male resident who had a history of sexually inappropriate behavior. The
case was closed in 1998 with the company charged with $10,000 in penalties
and $5,500 in attorney fees.
How Sensitive Care would have fared under Cornyn is unknown because
the Feds cracked down on the company as Cornyn took office in January 1999.
Accusing Sensitive Care of fraudulent Medicare billings, the federal government
froze its Medicare payments. This forced the Texas Department of Human
Services to takeover Sensitive Care’s 13 nursing homes.
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1 All but $2,500 of this money flowed before Cornyn took
office.
2 “Bedford Nursing Home Agrees To Pay $1.4 Million,”
Fort
Worth Star Telegram, June 3, 1998.
3 “Underfed Man’s Relatives Win $250 Million Jury Award,”
Associated Press, October 17, 1998. |