Florida Senate - 2008 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT

Bill No. SB 46

875112

CHAMBER ACTION

Senate

.

.

.

.

.

House



1

The Committee on Health Regulation (Lawson) recommended the

2

following amendment:

3

4

     Senate Amendment (with title amendment)

5

     Delete everything after the enacting clause

6

and insert:

7

     Section 1. The facts stated in the preamble to this act are

8

found and declared to be true.

9

     Section 2. For fiscal year 2008-2009, the sum of $1,200,000

10

of nonrecurring General Revenue is appropriated to be paid to an

11

insurance company or other financial institution admitted and

12

authorized to issue annuity contracts in this state, selected by

13

the guardian of Marissa Amora, to finance and purchase a

14

structured settlement for the benefit of Marissa Amora, which

15

shall include an annuity that must be used for the habilitative

16

care of Marissa Amora over the duration of her lifetime and as

17

relief for the violations of her rights and for injuries and

18

damages she sustained as a result of the wrongful conduct of the

19

Department of Children and Family Services.

20

     Section 3. The Chief Financial Officer is directed to

21

execute all necessary agreements to implement the payment of this

22

claim and to draw a warrant in the amount of $1,200,000 for

23

fiscal year 2008-2009 in favor of the financier of the structured

24

settlement to be paid from the General Revenue Fund.

25

     Section 4. Beginning in fiscal year 2008-2009 and for the

26

next 9 fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Children and

27

Family Services shall include in its annual legislative budget

28

request a specific appropriation for $1,700,000 of nonrecurring

29

funds for the relief of Marissa Amora in the Administrative Trust

30

Fund or the General Revenue Fund for a total of $17,000,000 paid

31

over 10 years.

32

     Section 5. This award and any subsequent awards

33

appropriated up to a grand total of $18,200,000 in nonrecurring

34

funds, inclusive of this award, are intended to provide the sole

35

compensation for all present and future claims arising out of the

36

factual situation described in the preamble to this act which

37

resulted in the injury to Marissa Amora. The total amount paid

38

for attorney's fees, lobbying fees, costs, and other similar

39

expenses relating to this claim may not exceed 25 percent of each

40

annual payment awarded pursuant to this act.

41

     Section 6.  This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.

42

43

================ T I T L E  A M E N D M E N T ================

44

And the title is amended as follows:

45

     Delete everything before the enacting clause

46

and insert:

47

A bill to be entitled

48

An act for the relief of Marissa Amora; providing an

49

appropriation to compensate Marissa Amora, a minor, for

50

injuries she sustained as a result of the negligence of

51

employees of the Department of Children and Family

52

Services; requiring a specified legislative budget

53

request; providing a limitation on attorney's fees,

54

lobbying fees, costs, and other similar expenses relating

55

to the claim; providing an effective date.relating to ;

56

providing an effective date.

57

58

     WHEREAS, on November 8, 2000, Moesha Sylencieux, now known

59

as Marissa Amora, who was not yet 2 years old, was brought to the

60

emergency room of Bethesda Memorial Hospital in Palm Beach

61

County, Florida, and

62

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's natural mother told the hospital

63

staff that Marissa Amora fell from a standing position and

64

consequently could not walk, and

65

     WHEREAS, while she was at the hospital, Marissa Amora could

66

not bear weight on her legs, and

67

     WHEREAS, during a 3-day admission that followed, an MRI

68

showed the presence of an unexplained mass in the area of Marissa

69

Amora's spine, and she was transferred to Miami Children's

70

Hospital for further testing and treatment, and

71

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora was admitted to Miami Children's

72

Hospital on November 11, 2000, arriving with a working diagnosis

73

of "spinal cord tumor," and during the following month she was

74

fully evaluated for the tumor that was presumed to have accounted

75

for her sudden inability to walk, with all test results normal,

76

and

77

     WHEREAS, on December 4, 2000, Marissa Amora underwent a

78

biopsy of the mass in the area of her spine, which indicated that

79

the mass was benign, and

80

     WHEREAS, during Marissa Amora's approximately 1-month

81

admission to Miami Children's Hospital, several incidents gave

82

rise to suspicions and concerns on the part of the hospital

83

nursing staff and social workers with respect to Marissa Amora's

84

safety, and

85

     WHEREAS, the hospital staff and social workers were

86

concerned about the natural mother's lack of involvement with her

87

daughter and about the interactions between Marissa Amora and her

88

natural mother who, over the course of Marissa Amora's

89

hospitalization at Miami Children's Hospital, came to the

90

hospital only four times, and who failed to visit her at other

91

times during her hospitalization even though hospital social

92

workers provided her with directions and money for

93

transportation, and

94

     WHEREAS, when Marissa Amora's natural mother did come to the

95

hospital, families of other patients observed her spanking

96

Marissa Amora while Marissa was in her hospital bed, and

97

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's natural mother failed to come to

98

the hospital on December 9, 2000, the day that her daughter was

99

supposed to be discharged, and

100

     WHEREAS, with Marissa Amora waiting to be discharged, the

101

social workers at the hospital appropriately called the

102

Department of Children and Family Services, the call being

103

designated as one for "special needs," given the mother's lack of

104

ability or desire to care for her daughter and the general lack

105

of bonding between mother and child, and

106

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's case was assigned to a protective

107

investigator for the Department of Children and Family Services

108

in District 11, Miami-Dade County, Shirley Arias, who commenced

109

her investigation by going to Miami Children's Hospital on

110

Monday, December 11, 2000, at which point she began compiling a

111

list of concerns and risk factors that indicated possible

112

physical abuse, and

113

     WHEREAS, Investigator Arias reviewed the hospital records

114

and found that there was evidence that Marissa Amora had an

115

unexplained fracture of her clavicle and that, though the mother

116

had been assisted and counseled by the social workers at the

117

hospital, the social workers continued to have serious concerns

118

for the mother's desire and ability to care for her child, and

119

     WHEREAS, Investigator Arias observed that Marissa Amora

120

would cry when her mother walked into her hospital room and then

121

would become calm when her mother would leave, and also observed

122

a general lack of bonding between mother and child, and

123

     WHEREAS, on Monday, December 11, 2000, a meeting took place

124

in the hospital between Investigator Arias, Marissa Amora's

125

natural mother, and Dr. Jefry Biehler, an in-house director of

126

the Child Advocacy Team who was asked to be involved at the

127

request of the hospital's social workers, and

128

     WHEREAS, Dr. Biehler interviewed the natural mother in the

129

presence of Investigator Arias and reported that he "had

130

concerns" and recommended to Investigator Arias that the child

131

should not be given to the mother unless a home study was

132

completed to ensure that the environment in the home was safe for

133

the child, and

134

     WHEREAS, the suggested home study was never performed by the

135

department, and

136

     WHEREAS, instead of initiating a home study, Investigator

137

Arias contacted the department's Palm Beach County District 9

138

office, whereupon the matter was referred to Protective

139

Investigator Evelyn Diaz Collins, and

140

     WHEREAS, Investigator Collins failed to conduct or initiate

141

a home study, and

142

     WHEREAS, Investigator Collins instead went to the family

143

home while Marissa Amora was still in the hospital, met with the

144

natural mother, noting that the apartment was devoid of any baby

145

items, and subsequently informed the natural mother that she

146

would need to purchase a crib and that she would return the

147

following week to make sure that this condition had been complied

148

with, and

149

     WHEREAS, Investigator Collins never returned to the home and

150

performed no followup whatsoever, and

151

     WHEREAS, the requested home study was never completed, yet

152

department supervisors in Miami incorrectly believed that a home

153

study had been completed, and incorrectly assumed that there was

154

no threat to the child, and

155

     WHEREAS, Investigator Arias met with her supervisor, who

156

advised that she should refer the case to the Department of

157

Children and Family Services' legal department, whereupon

158

investigator Arias consulted with the legal department on

159

Wednesday, December 13, 2000, and was advised that Marissa Amora

160

should not be allowed to leave Miami Children's Hospital until

161

the department had completed a home study, spoken with Marissa

162

Amora's natural father in New Jersey, assigned staff to the case

163

from the child protection team, and conducted criminal checks of

164

the appropriate parties, and

165

     WHEREAS, deposition and trial testimony by Investigator

166

Arias revealed that she understood that the required home study,

167

the contact with Marissa Amora's natural father, the assignment

168

of staff to the case from the child protection team, and the

169

conduct of specified criminal checks were departmental "marching

170

orders" and that Marissa Amora should not have been allowed to

171

leave the hospital until all of these conditions had been

172

complied with, and

173

     WHEREAS, on December 14, 2000, Investigator Arias completed

174

a departmental initial child safety assessment form, as required

175

by statute, which showed that Investigator Arias and her

176

supervisor concluded that physical abuse of Marissa Amora was

177

suspected, and

178

     WHEREAS, Investigator Arias testified at trial that Marissa

179

Amora should never have been allowed to go home, that sending

180

Marissa Amora home was wrong, and that she should have voiced her

181

objection to her supervisors, and

182

     WHEREAS, Investigator Arias' immediate supervisor, Robert

183

Boyak, testified under oath that the case should have been

184

assigned to the child protection team before Marissa Amora was

185

allowed to leave the hospital, but that no such referral to the

186

child protection team was completed, and

187

     WHEREAS, on December 14, 2000, Investigator Arias began

188

contacting Marissa Amora's natural mother for the purpose of

189

having Marissa Amora picked up from the hospital, despite the

190

fact that a home study had not been completed, the case had not

191

been assigned to the child protection team, and Marissa Amora's

192

natural father had not been consulted, all of which had been

193

advisements of the Department of Children and Family Services'

194

legal department on December 13, 2000, and

195

     WHEREAS, the department's log written by Investigator Arias

196

reflects numerous contacts prior to discharge from the hospital

197

from the social workers at Miami Children's Hospital challenging

198

the department's decision to allow Marissa Amora to go home with

199

her natural mother, and

200

     WHEREAS, calls placed by the hospital's social workers to

201

the department's Palm Beach County district office, to the Miami-

202

Dade district office, and to supervisors in the chain of command

203

at the department were either not returned or, when calls were

204

returned to social workers, they were given false assurances that

205

the department's investigation had revealed that there was no

206

danger to Marissa Amora, and

207

     WHEREAS, on December 15, 2000, Marissa Amora cried while she

208

was being taken from Miami Children's Hospital by her natural

209

mother, and the department was repeatedly told that hospital

210

social workers were very dissatisfied with the decision to allow

211

the child to go home with her natural mother and that hospital

212

nurses were willing to adopt Marissa Amora, and

213

     WHEREAS, on January 11, 2001, Marissa Amora was again

214

admitted to the hospital's pediatric intensive care unit for

215

treatment for massive brain injuries, leg fractures, arm

216

fractures, and multiple other injuries that the chief of

217

pediatric intensive care opined were likely due to being swung by

218

her arms and legs and smashed into a wall or the floor, and

219

     WHEREAS, the child protection team in Palm Beach County, as

220

well as hospital physicians in Boca Raton and Delray Beach,

221

determined that Marissa Amora's problems, dating back to the

222

admission to Bethesda Memorial Hospital on November 8, 2000, and

223

the life-threatening trauma with severe brain damage sustained on

224

January 11, 2001, were due to injuries caused by physical abuse,

225

and

226

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora remained in the hospital for several

227

months while undergoing a series of operations, including brain

228

surgery to relieve pressure from massive bleeding in her brain, a

229

tracheotomy to establish and maintain her ability to breathe, and

230

abdominal surgery to allow for nutrition to pass directly into

231

her stomach due to an inability to eat, and

232

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora has since required subsequent

233

additional surgical procedures to address many of the chronic

234

problems caused by her severe brain injury, and continues to

235

require tube feedings because she is unable to eat food by mouth,

236

and

237

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora will require a high level of care

238

throughout the remainder of her life, and

239

     WHEREAS, employees of the Miami-Dade County and Palm Beach

240

County offices of the Department of Children and Family Services

241

admitted to making critical errors with regard to this case and

242

admitted that department procedures were not followed, and

243

     WHEREAS, as a result of the negligence of the employees of

244

the Department of Children and Family Services, Marissa Amora has

245

suffered permanent and profound brain damage and will require

246

total care for the remainder of her life, and

247

     WHEREAS, at trial the jury determined Marissa Amora's total

248

past and future economic losses to be $21,070,000, and her past

249

and future noneconomic damages, which include disability, loss of

250

enjoyment of life, bodily injury, physical and mental pain and

251

suffering, and disfigurement, to be $13,750,000, and

252

     WHEREAS, the life care plan for Marissa Amora, as devised by

253

former District 11 Administrator and Certified Life Care Planner

254

for the former Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services

255

of the State of Florida, Lawrence Forman, M.Ed., has a present

256

value cost of $23,116,052.50, and

257

     WHEREAS, the department's own experts, Sharon Griffin,

258

M.Ed., Habilitationist, and Bernard F. Pettingill, Jr., Ph.D.,

259

Economist, developed a life care plan for Marissa Amora, at an

260

estimated cost of $19,767,867, some of which the state contended

261

could be borne by Medicaid or Med-waiver, and

262

     WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's past medical care and expenses,

263

including liens, amount to $458,719.89, NOW, THEREFORE,

4/24/2008  2:05:00 PM     HR.HR.08625

CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions.