Tag: wrongful death lawsuit

  • Chris Cornell’s Family Sues His Doctor Over Singer’s Suicide

    Chris Cornell’s Family Sues His Doctor Over Singer’s Suicide

    Vicky Cornell believes the doctor negligently prescribed her husband mood-altering drugs.

    Chris Cornell shocked the rock world when he suddenly took his own life in May last year. Now his wife, Vicky Cornell, and their children are suing the doctor who prescribed Chris a slew of prescription drugs that Vicky believes led him to his death.

    People obtained the lawsuit against Dr. Robert Koblin, which accuses him of “negligently and repeatedly [prescribing] mind-altering drugs and controlled substances,” including lorazepam and oxycodone.

    Koblin is accused of failing to consider Chris’ history of drug abuse and not properly following up on how the medications he prescribed were affecting Chris, the suit alleges. The drugs “clouded [Cornell’s] judgment and caused him to engage in dangerous, impulsive behaviors that he was unable to control, which cost him his life.”

    Chris was found dead at age 52, just hours after finishing a live performance with his band Audioslave. He had long struggled with substance abuse.

    “I went from being a daily drug user at 13 to having bad drug experiences and quitting drugs by the time I was 14,” he told Rolling Stone in a 1994 interview.

    At the time of his death, the late Soundgarden frontman had seven different drugs in his system, and although none of them were the actual cause of his death, Vicky believes an excess of anxiety drugs drove him to suicide.

    “Approximately a year before he died, he was prescribed a benzodiazepine to help him sleep,” she said. “He had torn his shoulder. The pain in the shoulder was waking him up at night and it was keeping him up.”

    There was no way he was suicidal, a family source believes. In the two weeks before his death, he delayed travel plans twice in order to avoid inclement weather. He even opted to drive a rental car for seven and a half hours instead of flying.

    “Clearly someone who was so hesitant and fearful to fly in these situations valued their life,” the source said. “These are not indications of someone with no regard to their well-being.”

    Following his death, Vicky said she found it hard not to blame herself. And, despite her husband being in a rock band, Chris was not another case of a hard rocker’s lifestyle catching up to him.

    “My husband was the furthest thing from a rock star junkie. He just wasn’t,” she said. “He was the best husband, the greatest father. I lost my soulmate and the love of my life.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • County Pays Millions Over Teen’s Heroin Withdrawal Death In Jail

    County Pays Millions Over Teen’s Heroin Withdrawal Death In Jail

    “Anyone who looked at her would have known that she was very sick and that she needed attention,” said the family’s lawyer.

    A Pennsylvania county has agreed to pay nearly $5 million as part of a settlement in the case of a teenager who died in jail after guards ignored her worsening medical condition during four brutal days of heroin withdrawal. 

    Despite the costly payout, it’s not clear whether the Lebanon County Correctional Facility death will lead to any policy change—but attorneys say it sends a message that even small lock-ups need to take care of inmates who are physically dependent on drugs.

    “The days of viewing people addicted to drugs as junkies unworthy of sympathy and care, are long past,” Jonathan Feinberg, a civil rights attorney representing the family, told the Associated Press. “It’s a very short chain of events that leads to death.”

    When 18-year-old Victoria Herr was arrested in March 2015, she had a 10-bag-a-day heroin habit. She’d been picked up when police looking for her boyfriend found drugs in their apartment. It was her first time in jail, and she warned staff about the amount of drugs she’d been doing and told her cellmate she was worried about how bad the withdrawal would be. 

    For four days, the teen was vomiting and had diarrhea. But the jail only gave her Ensure, water and adult diapers. She couldn’t keep down any liquids and became severely dehydrated. The day before she collapsed, Herr begged for lemonade during a phone call home to her mother.

    “Anyone who looked at her would have known that she was very sick and that she needed attention,” Feinberg said. “There was a complete disregard for her needs, which can only be tied back to the fact that she was addicted to drugs.”

    On March 31—four days after her arrest—she collapsed in the jail and was rushed to the hospital. She went into cardiac arrest, according to the Lebanon Daily News, but lingered for days on a ventilator before finally dying on April 5.

    The fatality, her lawyers said, could have been prevented if jailers had simply taken her to the hospital sooner for intravenous fluids. 

    Although opioid withdrawal does not always lead to death, it can be fatal in cases of severe dehydration. That possibility has prompted some jails to begin offering medications—like buprenorphine—to ease withdrawal, and sometimes continue use for long-term treatment.

    Despite the hefty size of the agreed-upon payout in Herr’s case, an attorney for the jailers stressed that no one actually copped to doing anything wrong as any part of the settlement.

    “The case was resolved amicably,” the attorney, Hugh O’Neill, told the Associated Press. He declined to say whether the county had changed any policies since the teen’s death. The county administrator, Jamie Wolgemuth, issued a statement to the local news highlighting the fact that state police and the Lehigh County Coroner did not send the case to prosecutors for “further inquiry.”

    Regardless, lawyers for Herr’s family framed the settlement as a win for correctional accountability.

    “It’s certainly one of the largest settlements in at least the last 10 years involving the death of a prisoner in civil rights litigation,” Feinberg told the Lebanon paper. “When there are breakdowns in the way a prison is run, and when those breakdowns cause harm like the unimaginable harm that was caused to Tori Herr, this suit shows that prisons and staff will be held accountable.”

    View the original article at thefix.com