2 BLACK "WOMEN": 2 former caregivers charged after 87-year-old [MEXICAN] man abused at Texas City nursing home

Arheel's Uncle

Senior Reporter

2 former caregivers charged after 87-year-old man abused at Texas City nursing home​


ByChaz Miller
KTRK logo

Friday, October 7, 2022



2 ex-caregivers charged after 87-year-old abused at nursing home


Lisa Jo Cooper, 61, and Kecia Danielle Johnson, 57,
are charged with injury to the elderly after the abuse was caught on camera at a Texas City facility.

TEXAS CITY, Texas (KTRK) -- Two former nursing home workers in Texas City have been charged after a grandfather was seen on video being abused, allegedly by those women.

The 87-year-old victim is named Cornelio Salinas, and is still in the hospital recovering from his injuries.

Lisa Jo Cooper, 61, and Kecia Danielle Johnson, 57, are charged with injury to the elderly, a second-degree felony in Texas.

Cooper and Johnson turned themselves into the Galveston County Jail on Thursday evening.

Both women were given bonds of $100,000 each, and Cooper is no longer listed as in-custody at the Galveston County Jail.


PREVIOUS STORY: Texas City PD launches investigation into nursing home at center of elderly abuse video

On Monday, the grandfather's family spoke exclusively to ABC13.

The man's grandson, Lisandro Solis, says his family was relieved to hear of the charges.

"I'm in a group text with my sister, my mom, and my uncles," Solis said. "I told them, 'We did it.'"

He credited a camera they installed in his room with being the reason why justice was ultimately served.


"I strongly recommend you put a camera (in your loved one's room)," Solis said.

The alleged incident happened Sunday evening at about 5 p.m. at Solidago Health and Rehabilitation in the 1700 block of North Logan.

The man's granddaughter, who wished to remain anonymous due to fear of retaliation, said the facility called her family to tell them the 87-year-old had fallen out of bed.

That's not what she saw when she looked at the video from a camera her family had installed in his room.

She said he actually slipped out of his bed and was then abused by two workers at the facility.


"I was furious for a second. I had time to cool off, and I was just speechless," she said. "I know it does happen, but I didn't think it would happen to my grandfather."

She added that the family had that camera installed in his room due to previous incidents with the staff at Solidago Health and Rehabilitation.

The name of the facility was previously The Resort at Texas City, but administrators told Eyewitness News it's been known as Solidago Health and Rehabilitation for the last year.

They sent ABC13 the following statement in response to the charges:

"We appreciate local authorities review and action surrounding the troubling incident that occurred on Sunday, October 2. Solidago Health and Rehabilitation continues to enforce strict policies prohibiting patient abuse and prompt action is always taken to ensure our residents are safe. Any violations of the abuse policy are reported to authorities for appropriate action such as in this case.


In parallel to the external investigation, we launched an internal investigation, and the employees were immediately suspended. At the conclusion of the internal investigation, the employees involved in the incident were terminated as a result of violating the company's policies.

We will continue to review our systems and approaches to identify new opportunities to strengthen existing measures to safeguard the health and safety of our residents."
 
We will continue to review our systems and approaches to identify new opportunities to strengthen existing measures to safeguard the health and safety of our residents."
I got an idea, DON'T HIRE MEAN, LAZY, EVIL, DEGENERATE, VIOLENT 300 POUND BLACKS.
 

Fired nursing home workers arrested after resident hit, kicked - KHOU.com

Oct 7, 2022
TEXAS CITY, Texas — Two women have been arrested and charged after a Texas City nursing home resident was seen on video being hit, kicked and dragged.

Texas City Police launched an investigation after video of the 87-year-old man surfaced. They said Lisa Jo Cooper, 61, and Kecia Danielle Johnson, 57, turned themselves in Thursday night and were charged with abuse of the elderly. Their bonds are set at $100,000 each.

We're not showing the workers faces because Texas City Police have not yet confirmed the employees in the video are in fact the two women charged.

Solidago Health and Rehabilitation said two women have been fired for "violating the company's policies" following an internal investigation.

Lizandro Solis said his grandfather, Cornelio Salinas, has been telling his family about the abuse at the nursing home for years.

RELATED: Texas City nursing home fires employees after video shows elderly resident being hit, kicked and dragged

RELATED: Video shows 87-year-old resident being hit, kicked and dragged in Texas City nursing home

The family never had proof until Sunday when a surveillance camera caught two employees hitting and kicking Salinas who was on the floor. They were then seen dragging him back to his bed before one of the employees closed the curtain, hiding everything that happened after that.

We got a phone call that our grandpa was going to the hospital because he supposedly fell out the bed," Solis said. “We saw the bruising around his eyes and he was in a neck brace so we went back on the ring camera, and we saw what happened."

Solis said they installed a camera outside Salinas' room about a year or two ago. They cried after watching the video.

"We were angry. We wanted to go do something, but what can you do?" Solis said.

The family wants the facility to be shut down.

“We don’t even know how long that has been happening, or if anybody else is going through it," Solis said.

As of Monday, Salinas was still in the hospital. His family said they are working on finding him a new home.

The Texas Department of Health and Human Services is also investigating. They released the following statement:

"HHSC is aware of the allegations involving this nursing facility and we are actively investigating to determine compliance with all relevant health and safety rules. Once our regulatory investigation work is complete, the final report for the investigation will be available to request through our open records process."
 
I thought this was a new story, based on October article's post dates.

Original was posted in August/'22
 
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