Author Topic: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida  (Read 8718 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #15 on: May 01, 2010, 08:22:27 PM »
Quote from: "DannyB II"
Sick fucking program. No apparent oversight on the medication being given him, by anyone with a degree, I would bet my last dollar.
You'd be surprised... Let me surprise you:

  • Denis Maltez apparently arrived at Rainbow Ranch sometime in May of 2006. At the time, he was allegedly under the care of doctors at Jackson Memorial Hospital.
  • David Glatt, owner of Rainbow Ranch, changed Maltez's medical care to that of psychiatrist Dr. Steven L. Kaplan shortly thereafter "without the consent of [Denis's] mother," who, incidentally, had never relinquished her parental rights. The choice of Kaplan was probably due to his being the psychiatrist for several other of Rainbow Ranch's clients. I'm guessing there was a group discount.
  • Dr. Kaplan saw Denis Maltez all of two times over the next year: May 26, 2006, and May 21, 2007, two days before he died.
  • Kaplan prescribed and refilled: Seroquel (anti-psychotic), Zyprexa (anti-psychotic), Depakote (anti-seizure, sometimes also used as mood stabilizer), and Clonazepam (tranquilizer).
  • Maltez was hospitalized twice during this time period due to concerns of his teachers at Ruth Owens Kruse Educational Center. First on July 17, 2006, and again on August 4, 2006. Doctors at the latter hospital recommended that his dosage of one of his (four) medications be reduced.
  • Although Maltez's dosage of Depakote was, in fact, reduced, it was increased again about six months later. I guess no doctor's visit was deemed necessary for that decision.
  • Sometime the winter of 2006-2007, someone placed a call with the Florida Department of Children & Families child abuse hot line regarding Denis Maltez being overmedicated and his not receiving any medical attention for that condition when he was.

Denis Maltez's death could easily have been prevented.
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Offline Whooter

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #16 on: May 01, 2010, 08:56:17 PM »
I have shown in another thread that the employees of the state of Florida do not have the greatest track record when it comes to at-risk kids.  

Article

Also investigating Denis’s case they found:

State regulators presented a juvenile court judge with an emergency order portraying the home where he lived, 310 Northwest Dr., as a den of neglect where disabled children were over-medicated, sexually abused each other and sometimes went hungry.

All the doctors were licensed and the facility was licensed and the child still died.  Why didn’t the state of Florida catch this?  Why did the social workers turn a blind eye to this boys placement knowing the conditions there?

Could the death have been prevented?  Of course!!  In hindsight almost any death could be prevented.  His medication could have been more closely monitored and like Ursus mentioned if the child had been brushing his teeth at the time would we be blaming the tooth paste manufacturer?  Do we take into account all the lives that restraints have saved?  Do we blame the person who was restraining him at the time or listen to the results of the autopsy?



...
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #17 on: May 02, 2010, 03:53:13 PM »
Quote from: "Whooter"
I have shown in another thread that the employees of the state of Florida do not have the greatest track record when it comes to at-risk kids.
Would that be due to those particular employees? Or Florida's abysmal track record when it comes to actually funding their programs for at-risk kids, providing some oversight and ensuring accountability, and not always passing the buck?  :D
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Offline Ursus

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Group home operator in trouble before
« Reply #18 on: May 02, 2010, 04:01:52 PM »
In the case of Rainbow Ranch, there were some warning signals which some savvy oversight could have picked up, or maybe not...

This piece came out the same day as the article in the OP:

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The Miami Herald
Group home operator in trouble before

Once charged with impersonating a doctor, David Glatt now is in trouble with disability administrators who say his group homes over-medicated kids.

By CAROL MARBIN MILLER
June 25, 2007


David J. Glatt was not a doctor, though he passed himself off as one at South Florida nightclubs.

Posing as a brain surgeon, Glatt carried business cards purportedly from Jackson Memorial Hospital's Ryder Trauma Center, offered free diagnoses and dispensed medications, including mood-altering drugs.

After he was arrested in late 2000, the Weston man agreed he would not take a job "in the medical field where prescription drugs are available" during an 18-month probation in 2001 and 2002.

Two years later, after the probation, Glatt was the owner of a small chain of group homes where disabled children received round-the-clock care -- and drugs, regulators say.

The group homes, called Rainbow Ranch, were shuttered this month after the Agency for Persons with Disabilities accused the operators of letting kids go hungry, supervising them so poorly they routinely attacked each other and medicating several of them so "irresponsibly" they trembled, slept and drooled.

An APD order said child-abuse investigators looked into a claim that one of the children, 12-year-old Denis Maltez, was so over-medicated he had to be hospitalized in January. The complaint was closed with no action against Rainbow Ranches, though it concluded there were "some indicators" the boy had been neglected, records show.

"Conditions in the homes, especially inadequate supervision, resistance to providing information, and irresponsible medication practices by the . . . management present a danger to the health, safety and welfare of the residents," regulators wrote in the June 1 order shuttering Rainbow Ranches.

The decision to shut down the homes was prompted in large part by the death of Denis on May 23. Denis, diagnosed with autism, stopped breathing shortly after a staffer restrained him in a group-home van. Dennis had accompanied other children who were getting haircuts at a Northwest Miami flea market.

DEATH UNEXPLAINED

Police say Denis' death remains unexplained.

Glatt, 37, did not reply to several messages left both on an answering machine and with a person at his home. Two lawyers involved in his case declined to discuss the group homes. "We just received the case, and it is not possible for us to comment now," said one of the lawyers, Katherine Ezell.

Glatt came to the attention of Delray Beach police in November 2000 when the father of a woman he was dating complained he was impersonating a medical doctor.

Glatt met Therese Felth -- now his wife -- at Club Iguana in Fort Lauderdale in May 2000. Felth was at the bar with her sister, Angelina, when Glatt introduced himself to the two of them as Dr. David Glatt, a neurosurgeon, according to a sworn statement by Delray Beach police drug agent Lorraine Richer.

Shortly after Therese Felth began dating Glatt, he told her sister she looked depressed, Richer wrote. In May 2000, he gave her a pill bottle with about 25 Prozac capsules.

The next month, according to Richer's report, he gave her another 100 to 200 Prozac pills.

Glatt also dispensed drugs to Therese Felth's father, Lars Felth, the statement says. Felth complained he was having trouble battling a drinking problem, and Glatt gave him several Antabuse pills, designed to discourage drinking. The pills made him "violently ill," Richer wrote.

The arrest records do not specify where Glatt got the drugs.

That fall, Lars Felth "began to have doubts" that Glatt was really a doctor, Richer wrote. A private investigator confirmed Glatt had no medical degree from the University of Miami, as he claimed. Glatt continued to insist otherwise.

Felth called police. Glatt was arrested by the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office Dec. 15, 2000. In July 2001, he pleaded guilty to charges of practicing medicine and dispensing drugs without a license. A judge withheld adjudication and sentenced him to probation.

He had a prior conviction for disturbing the peace and a prior arrest, though no conviction, for felony fraud and theft charges.

Glatt also filed for bankruptcy in 2001, records show. He discharged his debts in March 2002.

'NOT AWARE'

But state regulators knew none of that when they granted Rainbow Ranch group-home licenses in Miami-Dade. "We were not aware of his arrest when his wife and mother applied for a license," said Melanie Etters, an APD spokeswoman. "Since he is not the licensee, we would not have done a background check on him."

And such a screening would not have prevented Glatt from operating a group home, Etters added. Glatt had no felony convictions. And the felony charges to which he pleaded guilty -- impersonating a doctor and dispensing drugs without a license -- would not have disqualified him from licensure.

The first application, submitted in October 2004, is signed by David Glatt's mother, Gloria Auston. It lists Therese Glatt -- formerly Therese Felth -- as a housewife and student living in the home of Auston and her husband, Dr. Robert J. Auston. Though Therese Glatt is listed as Auston's daughter-in-law, David Glatt's name does not appear.

A second application, filed in March 2006, and a third application, from October 2006, likewise fail to mention David Glatt.

Nor would state corporate records have given any indication that Glatt was running the homes. Rainbow Ranch's incorporation papers, filed with the state Division of Corporations in June 2004, listed David Glatt as a vice president and treasurer, records show. In July 2004 -- three months before the first APD application -- Glatt resigned and was replaced in the two posts by his mother.

Neither Therese Glatt nor the Austons would have raised any red flags. None of the three have criminal records, according to Florida Department of Law Enforcement records. Robert Auston is a physician; records with the Florida Department of Health show he holds privileges at University Hospital and Medical Center in Tamarac. He has not been disciplined by the state Board of Medicine, records show.

MOTHER'S JOB

Gloria Auston reported on the application she was a longtime employee with HospiceCare of Southeast Florida.

Glatt's role at the homes was no secret, however.

On June 6, 2006, David and Therese Glatt sued a former employee for defamation. Glatt identified himself in lawsuit documents as part-owner and manager. APD's order suspending the group homes' licenses refers to "owner David Glatt," who is portrayed throughout as the person in charge.

Martha Quesada, Denis Maltez's mother, said David Glatt greeted her when she first visited her son's home, introducing himself as the owner.


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Offline DannyB II

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #19 on: May 02, 2010, 05:32:28 PM »
Quote from: "Ursus"
Quote from: "DannyB II"
Sick fucking program. No apparent oversight on the medication being given him, by anyone with a degree, I would bet my last dollar.
You'd be surprised... Let me surprise you:

  • Denis Maltez apparently arrived at Rainbow Ranch sometime in May of 2006. At the time, he was allegedly under the care of doctors at Jackson Memorial Hospital.
  • David Glatt, owner of Rainbow Ranch, changed Maltez's medical care to that of psychiatrist Dr. Steven L. Kaplan shortly thereafter "without the consent of [Denis's] mother," who, incidentally, had never relinquished her parental rights. The choice of Kaplan was probably due to his being the psychiatrist for several other of Rainbow Ranch's clients. I'm guessing there was a group discount.
  • Dr. Kaplan saw Denis Maltez all of two times over the next year: May 26, 2006, and May 21, 2007, two days before he died.
  • Kaplan prescribed and refilled: Seroquel (anti-psychotic), Zyprexa (anti-psychotic), Depakote (anti-seizure, sometimes also used as mood stabilizer), and Clonazepam (tranquilizer).
  • Maltez was hospitalized twice during this time period due to concerns of his teachers at Ruth Owens Kruse Educational Center. First on July 17, 2006, and again on August 4, 2006. Doctors at the latter hospital recommended that his dosage of one of his (four) medications be reduced.
  • Although Maltez's dosage of Depakote was, in fact, reduced, it was increased again about six months later. I guess no doctor's visit was deemed necessary for that decision.
  • Sometime the winter of 2006-2007, someone placed a call with the Florida Department of Children & Families child abuse hot line regarding Denis Maltez being overmedicated and his not receiving any medical attention for that condition when he was.

Denis Maltez's death could easily have been prevented.



 :shamrock:  :shamrock:

Ursus, I am I board with you on this one, no arguing from me. I was just saying that yes, doctors are prescribing the medication and they may be around initially to do diagnostic testing but I will bet my last dollar again that they are not checking every day to see the effects, because if they were, would they in good conscious continue the course of treatment to kill.

Danny
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Offline Whooter

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #20 on: May 02, 2010, 05:45:41 PM »
I wouldn’t be too hard on the doctors or staff.  Like Ursus pointed out, many of these places are underfunded and the people are just stretched to their limit.  Especially in this economy.  If they paid these people a little more or funded better for follow-up then deaths like these may be avoided.



...
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Offline DannyB II

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #21 on: May 02, 2010, 06:07:18 PM »
Quote from: "Whooter"
I wouldn’t be too hard on the doctors or staff.  Like Ursus pointed out, many of these places are underfunded and the people are just stretched to their limit.  Especially in this economy.  If they paid these people a little more or funded better for follow-up then deaths like these may be avoided.



...

 :shamrock:  :shamrock:

Oh, I am not. I am just saying whooter that back in 1975 they were acting like they were underfunded at Elan and in 2007 they are still doing the same thing, they are underfunded because they stuff more kids in these programs then they can handle financially and professionally.

Danny
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Offline Ursus

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passing the buck in Florida
« Reply #22 on: May 02, 2010, 09:25:03 PM »
Quote from: "DannyB II"
Oh, I am not. I am just saying whooter that back in 1975 they were acting like they were underfunded at Elan and in 2007 they are still doing the same thing, they are underfunded because they stuff more kids in these programs then they can handle financially and professionally.
Perhaps they are underfunded 'cuz the funds simply aren't there.

Rainbow Ranch, for whatever reason, apparently didn't receive some badly needed oversight, despite some shady particulars...

Or maybe they did receive that oversight, but one agency after another ... kept passing the buck!
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Offline John Whooter Reuben

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #23 on: May 02, 2010, 10:15:53 PM »
Quote from: "Whooter"
I wouldn’t be too hard on the doctors or staff.  Like Ursus pointed out, many of these places are underfunded and the people are just stretched to their limit.  Especially in this economy.  If they paid these people a little more or funded better for follow-up then deaths like these may be avoided.



...

Never have we seen pure, ignorant evil so singularly personified as it is in Whooter.   We will hold doctors and staff accountable.  Is it "underfunding" or public awareness of shoddy shitholes like Rainbow Ranch?  Money isn't an issue for people like Whooter and I, so why is the well drying up?  If Rainbow Ranch couldn't provide basic medical care for the kids in their charge they should have taken the clue and boarded the hellhole up.   "First of all, do no harm".  They were negligent, and like other programs in financial trouble they cut corners on the kids and invite tragedy.

Whooter, Aspen's financial disclosures noted that programs like Rainbow Ranch making such horrible headlines will be detrimental to AEG's business.  Sorry for your pain, chief.  Can I piss in your wounds?
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Offline Whooter

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #24 on: May 03, 2010, 07:02:29 AM »
Quote from: "John Whooter Reuben"
Never have we seen pure, ignorant evil so singularly personified as it is in Whooter. We will hold doctors and staff accountable. Is it "underfunding" or public awareness of shoddy shitholes like Rainbow Ranch?  Money isn't an issue for people like Whooter and I, so why is the well drying up?

I would have to think it is underfunding.  Even if there were public awareness the place would still be open.


Quote
If Rainbow Ranch couldn't provide basic medical care for the kids in their charge they should have taken the clue and boarded the hellhole up. "First of all, do no harm".

I think if you spoke to the people at Rainbow Ranch they would tell you they were doing a good job.  Why should they shut themselves down if they feel they are adding value?
Quote
They were negligent, and like other programs in financial trouble they cut corners on the kids and invite tragedy.

Every business does what it needs to do to survive.  If any of us were running the place we would do the same thing, which is trying to do the best for the kids and keep applying for more funding or try to weather the bad economy until it turns around.

Quote
Whooter, Aspen's financial disclosures noted that programs like Rainbow Ranch making such horrible headlines will be detrimental to AEG's business. Sorry for your pain, chief. Can I piss in your wounds?

Dont be so blue, actually with this news people tend to find the funding thru relatives or second mortgages to get their kids out of the state run/funded programs and into the more successful and safer private places like Aspen.  So from a purely business perspective bad news for the public facilities is good news for the private run places.  Aspen will probably have a better quarter because of it.



...
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
« Reply #25 on: May 03, 2010, 11:40:23 AM »
Quote from: "Whooter"
Quote from: "John Whooter Reuben"
Never have we seen pure, ignorant evil so singularly personified as it is in Whooter. We will hold doctors and staff accountable. Is it "underfunding" or public awareness of shoddy shitholes like Rainbow Ranch?  Money isn't an issue for people like Whooter and I, so why is the well drying up?
I would have to think it is underfunding.  Even if there were public awareness the place would still be open.
Lol. Did you read the above article from June 2007, Whooter?

    The group homes, called Rainbow Ranch, were shuttered this month after the Agency for Persons with Disabilities accused the operators of letting kids go hungry, supervising them so poorly they routinely attacked each other and medicating several of them so "irresponsibly" they trembled, slept and drooled. ...

    ...The decision to shut down the homes was prompted in large part by the death of Denis on May 23. Denis, diagnosed with autism, stopped breathing shortly after a staffer restrained him in a group-home van. Dennis had accompanied other children who were getting haircuts at a Northwest Miami flea market.
    [/list]

    Quote from: "Whooter"
    Quote from: "John Whooter Reuben"
    If Rainbow Ranch couldn't provide basic medical care for the kids in their charge they should have taken the clue and boarded the hellhole up. "First of all, do no harm".
    I think if you spoke to the people at Rainbow Ranch they would tell you they were doing a good job.  Why should they shut themselves down if they feel they are adding value?
    They were adding value alright ... to their own wallets !!

    Quote from: "Whooter"
    Quote from: "John Whooter Reuben"
    They were negligent, and like other programs in financial trouble they cut corners on the kids and invite tragedy.
    Every business does what it needs to do to survive.  If any of us were running the place we would do the same thing, which is trying to do the best for the kids and keep applying for more funding or try to weather the bad economy until it turns around.
    David Glatt was hardly the kind of person who should be involved in the behavioral health industry. Again from the above article:

      Posing as a brain surgeon, Glatt carried business cards purportedly from Jackson Memorial Hospital's Ryder Trauma Center, offered free diagnoses and dispensed medications, including mood-altering drugs.

      After he was arrested in late 2000, the Weston man agreed he would not take a job "in the medical field where prescription drugs are available" during an 18-month probation in 2001 and 2002.

      Two years later, after the probation, Glatt was the owner of a small chain of group homes where disabled children received round-the-clock care -- and drugs, regulators say.
      [/list]

      Quote from: "Whooter"
      Quote from: "John Whooter Reuben"
      Whooter, Aspen's financial disclosures noted that programs like Rainbow Ranch making such horrible headlines will be detrimental to AEG's business. Sorry for your pain, chief. Can I piss in your wounds?
      Dont be so blue, actually with this news people tend to find the funding thru relatives or second mortgages to get their kids out of the state run/funded programs and into the more successful and safer private places like Aspen.  So from a purely business perspective bad news for the public facilities is good news for the private run places.  Aspen will probably have a better quarter because of it.
      Unfortunately, I'm afraid Whooter is probably completely correct with regard to this last part...
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      Offline Whooter

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      Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
      « Reply #26 on: May 03, 2010, 12:07:36 PM »
      If these children were not in the program then they would have been at the mercy of state employees.  Here is what they would have faced:

      … an investigation into the 2007 death of a neglected Jacksonville newborn revealed that his caseworker had falsified records in four other cases.

      During the past two years, more than 70 Florida child-welfare workers have been caught falsifying records -- lying about their on-the-job efforts to protect children, according to state and county records reviewed by the Orlando Sentinel.  (These just the workers who were caught! Imagine how much more abuse is going on>)

      As a consequence, the Florida Department of Children and Families temporarily lost track of at least six children, sometimes for months. Fourteen children were left in unsafe homes, the Sentinel found in a review of agency records.

      Despite passage of a state law intended to punish cheaters, dishonest caseworkers remain a persistent problem in Florida's system to protect at-risk children:

      •The day after a caseworker reported that she had inspected a foster home in Wildwood, police found its four foster children living in tents in the yard. The house had no running water, no food and no clean clothes.

      •After a Hardee County social worker lied about making home visits, one child wound up living with an uncle awaiting trial on child-rape charges.

      •Two children in Hernando County lived, for a time, with a grandfather who had been arrested two years earlier and accused of physically abusing his own child
      .

      These places need to take a page from the some of the better and more successful privately run programs.  The new IBM program will probably go a long way in relieving the load from some of these case works and making better choice and placements for these kids.



      ...
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      Offline DannyB II

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      Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
      « Reply #27 on: May 03, 2010, 05:42:48 PM »
      :shamrock:  :shamrock:

      As you folks have been saying whether it is state or private they are killing our children, or at the very least crippling are kids physically, mentally and emotionally. The states are understaffed and underfunded due to politics and the private programs are the same but due to greed.
       I would find it very hard to accept that Whooter or anyone else here is compliant to the atrocities happening there, I find it very distressing to know the avenues to genuine treatment for these kids is limited as advertised here.
      Where are the resources to help these children, I have looked???????????????????

      Danny
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      Offline Pile of Dead Kids

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      Re: Restraint Death at Rainbow Ranch, Florida
      « Reply #28 on: May 03, 2010, 11:36:15 PM »
      Remember, Florida was the place that let the original Straight, Inc. happen. It's not like Idaho and Utah where they just get out of the way and let the abusive psychopaths do their thing. The authorities in Florida actively participate. How do you think Martin Anderson died?
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      ...Sergey Blashchishen, James Shirey, Faith Finley, Katherine Rice, Ashlie Bunch, Brendan Blum, Caleb Jensen, Alex Cullinane, Rocco Magliozzi, Elisa Santry, Dillon Peak, Natalynndria Slim, Lenny Ortega, Angellika Arndt, Joey Aletriz, Martin Anderson, James White, Christening Garcia, Kasey Warner, Shirley Arciszewski, Linda Harris, Travis Parker, Omega Leach, Denis Maltez, Kevin Christie, Karlye Newman, Richard DeMaar, Alexis Richie, Shanice Nibbs, Levi Snyder, Natasha Newman, Gracie James, Michael Owens, Carlton Thomas, Taylor Mangham, Carnez Boone, Benjamin Lolley, Jessica Bradford's unnamed baby, Anthony Parker, Dysheka Streeter, Corey Foster, Joseph Winters, Bruce Staeger, Kenneth Barkley, Khalil Todd, Alec Lansing, Cristian Cuellar-Gonzales, Janaia Barnhart, a DRA victim who never even showed up in the news, and yet another unnamed girl at Summit School...

      Offline Ursus

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      Man charged after posing as doctor, prescribing drugs
      « Reply #29 on: May 04, 2010, 12:46:06 AM »
      Here are a coupla articles pertinent to David Glatt's past, which potentially give some indication as to what kind of priorities may have been in place ... as far as running Rainbow Ranch is concerned:

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      Boca Raton News
      Man charged after posing as doctor, prescribing drugs
      THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
      Dec 20, 2000


      FORT LAUDERDALE — A man who told his girlfriend he was a doctor has been charged with prescribing drugs without a license to her sister and father, who become seriously ill because of the medication, police said.

      David Glatt, 31, is charged with two counts of practicing medicine and giving prescription drugs without a license and one count of culpable negligence for allegedly injuring Therese Felth's father, Lars. He was released on bond following his Friday arrest. Angelina Felth told investigators that Glatt approached her and her sister, Therese, at Club Iguana in Fort Lauderdale in May and claimed to be a neurosurgeon. Therese Filth began dating Glatt and later moved in with him.

      Lars Felth told police Glatt gave him a business card saying he was a neurosurgeon at the Ryder Trauma Center in Miami. Authorities say his name wasn't on the staff list, but that the hospital was getting e-mails addressed to "Dr. David Glatt."

      Police said Glatt gave Angelina Felth more than 200 Prozac pills, saying they were sleeping pills. They noted that the pills were amitriptyline, a prescription drug used to treat patients with depression.

      Lars Felth became suspicious of Glatt after he gave him antibuse pills and became violently ill. Antibuse is a prescription drug for alcoholics that triggers vomiting, hyperventilation and vertigo if patients taking it drink alcohol.


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