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From: Greegor on 9 Mar 2010 20:01 http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20100210_Witness_tells_of_false_reports_in_Kelly_death.html Witness tells of false reports in Kelly death By Nathan Gorenstein Inquirer Staff Writer Posted on Wed, Feb. 10, 2010 Within hours of Danieal Kelly's death, officials at the social services company responsible for the 14-year-old girl's safety were rushing to produce backdated paperwork in an effort that apparently included forging the signature of the teen's mother on a form, according to testimony yesterday in federal court. Written on the day of Kelly's death, Aug. 4, 2006, the document was an "encounter" form recording a home visit that had in fact occurred months earlier. Kelly suffered from cerebral palsy and lived in a West Philadelphia household with seven siblings. She died, covered in bedsores, of starvation. Her family was under the supervision of the city's Department of Human Services, which subcontracted the work to now- defunct MultiEthnic Behavioral Health Inc. After Kelly's death, nine MultiEthnic employees were charged with billing the city for services they never provided to her and other children, and with fabricating and destroying subpoenaed documents. Five have pleaded guilty, and four are on trial in U.S. District Court. Yesterday, Christiana Nimpson, a former MultiEthnic caseworker, said she filled out the encounter form on the day of Kelly's death at the request of agency cofounder Mickal Kamuvaka - and that she left the "recipient signature" line blank. Officials were rushing to complete required paperwork for the family's file, which DHS was demanding. Nimpson said that after she completed the form, either Kamuvaka or Solomon Manamela, another supervisor, asked her also to sign the name of Kelly's mother, Andrea. Both supervisors are among the four on trial. Nimpson said she refused, testifying, "I thought it wasn't right." Under questioning from Assistant U.S. Attorney Bea Witzleben, Nimpson said she could not recall which of the supervisors made the request. The form - bearing the signature Andrea Kelly - was entered into evidence. Defense attorneys did not challenge Nimpson's testimony, and exactly how the form came to be signed, and who signed it, was not answered. Nimpson also said that on 10 occasions, Kamuvaka asked her to go through other caseworkers' files and fabricate missing reports. She said Manamela asked her to do the same thing five times in her four years with the agency. Previous witnesses had testified that MultiEthnic managers worried that incomplete files would threaten the agency's contract with DHS. To generate data for the forms, Nimpson said, she sometimes called families that were supposed to have been visited by other caseworkers. She also sometimes fabricated her own "progress notes" because she did not have time to make the required visits, she said. Nimpson said she was paid about $28,000 a year, and, like other caseworkers who have testified, said she worked two or three jobs. Nimpson said she did visit the Kelly household in late May or early June to teach Andrea Kelly parenting skills and was accompanied by the family's caseworker, Julius Juma Murray. Nimpson said she spoke to the mother on the porch and waited outside while Murray entered the home. Andrea Kelly later received a 30-year prison sentence for her role in her daughter's death. http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20100303_Two_Danieal_Kelly_Caseworkers_Guilty_of_fraud.html Four Danieal Kelly social-service workers found guilty By Nathan Gorenstein INQUIRER STAFF WRITER Posted on Wed, Mar. 3, 2010 Two administrators and two caseworkers from a city-funded social service agency were convicted today of health care fraud and conspiracy charges stemming from the death of Danieal Kelly, the 14- year-old with cerebral palsy who died of bedsores and malnutrition at her mother's apartment. While the verdicts ended a month-long federal trial, they are not the final legal acts stemming from the West Philadelphia girl's death in August 2006 and the ensuing investigations into the agency, MultiEthnic Behavioral Health Inc., and the city's Department of Human Services. Mickal Kamuvaka, 60, a MultiEthnic co-founder who served as day-to-day manager, had no reaction as the verdict was read and declined comment afterward. She still faces a city charge of involuntary manslaughter, as does Julius Juma Murray, 52, the caseworker assigned to the Kelly family and who was also convicted today. Murray also faces trial on federal immigration charges. An overhaul of the city's Department of Human Services that started after the disclosure of treatment failures in Kelly's death is also continuing. DHS used federal funds to have MultiEthnic provide in-home care for the teen and other at-risk children. The U.S. District Court jury of seven men and five women also convicted Solomon Manamela, 52, another agency co-founder, and caseworker Mariam Coulibaly, 42. Coulibaly was acquitted on three of 20 charges, and Murray was acquitted on three of 19 charges. The four face sentences ranging from three to more than seven years. According to court testimony, the federal investigation started after William McDonald, a criminal investigator from the Department of Health and Human Services, read a lengthy article in The Inquirer about Danieal's death. The fallout from that incident, and other failings earlier reported by The Inquirer, prompted then-Mayor John Street to fire the commissioner and top deputy of DHS. Mayor Nutter later discharged other employees and installed a child advocate, Anne Marie Ambrose, as DHS commissioner. Murray had claimed, and agency records said, that he had visited the West Philadelphia home on July 24th 2006, less than two weeks before Danieal died Aug. 4. But prosecution witnesses testified that the odor from Kelly's massive bedsores - the odor of decaying flesh - would have been impossible to miss. The jury found that the defendants fabricated paperwork for home visits that never happened, and when a federal investigation started, tossed out or shredded documents sought by the government. "Danieal Kelly starved, and to put it bluntly, rotted to death in her bed," Assistant U.S. Attorney Bea Witzleben said after the verdict. Deliberations extended over parts of two days. From July 2000 through December 2006, the city paid MultiEthnic some $3.7 million for services it was supposed to have provided to more than 500 families over that time period. Some of those services were delivered, as defense witnesses testified. "We've never alleged they provided no services at all," said Witzleben, who prosecuted the case with Assistant U.S. Attorney Vineet Gauri. Rather, she said, agency workers encountered some cases "that were very difficult to work with . . . and they chose not to do so." Andrea Kelly, the teen's mother, was caring for eight of nine children in the first floor of a rowhouse in the Mantua neighborhood. She pleaded guilty in state court to third-degree murder and child endangerment, and was sentenced to up to 40 years in state prison. Today, Ambrose said DHS, which has 1,800 employees and 100,000 children receiving varying degrees of care, has overhauled the in-home services program, established new oversight policies, and is setting up a program to expand checks on families receiving care from private contractors. "We've tried to really create a culture of responsibility," she said. The head of a non-profit agency that offers legal representation to children in DHS said the agency still has issues to resolve - including how complex cases like Danieal's are managed - but agreed there have been extensive improvements. Frank P. Cervine, executive director of the Support Center for Child Advocates, said that the circumstances of Danieal's death were an aberration, but that the agency's failure to adequately oversee private contractors was not unusual. He said that shortcoming has been improved under Ambrose. "I feel much more confident," he said. Testimony from coworkers described Kamuvaka and Manamela as frequently failing to provide training and supervision to agency workers. Kamuvaka, in particular, was said to have condoned the creation of false records. Her attorney, William Cannon, said Kamuvaka "was very disappointed" by the verdict and repeated his courtroom defense that she and other managers were the victims of their own staff, "social workers who did her in" by faking reports and not providing services. Paul J. Hetznecker, Manamela's attorney, said his client was "scammed" by his own employees, though he conceded there was "significant" mismanagement. "But that doesn't take away from the dedication Solomon Manamela has had" to social work, Hetznecker said. Kamuvaka holds a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania, and like Manamela has had a career in social work. Manamela and Coulibaly also declined comment. Murray is being held on the federal immigration charges. |