Florida Senate - 2008 COMMITTEE AMENDMENT
Bill No. SB 46
875112
Senate
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House
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The Committee on Health Regulation (Lawson) recommended the
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following amendment:
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Senate Amendment (with title amendment)
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Delete everything after the enacting clause
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and insert:
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Section 1. The facts stated in the preamble to this act are
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found and declared to be true.
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Section 2. For fiscal year 2008-2009, the sum of $1,200,000
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of nonrecurring General Revenue is appropriated to be paid to an
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insurance company or other financial institution admitted and
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authorized to issue annuity contracts in this state, selected by
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the guardian of Marissa Amora, to finance and purchase a
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structured settlement for the benefit of Marissa Amora, which
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shall include an annuity that must be used for the habilitative
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care of Marissa Amora over the duration of her lifetime and as
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relief for the violations of her rights and for injuries and
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damages she sustained as a result of the wrongful conduct of the
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Department of Children and Family Services.
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Section 3. The Chief Financial Officer is directed to
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execute all necessary agreements to implement the payment of this
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claim and to draw a warrant in the amount of $1,200,000 for
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fiscal year 2008-2009 in favor of the financier of the structured
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settlement to be paid from the General Revenue Fund.
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Section 4. Beginning in fiscal year 2008-2009 and for the
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next 9 fiscal years thereafter, the Department of Children and
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Family Services shall include in its annual legislative budget
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request a specific appropriation for $1,700,000 of nonrecurring
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funds for the relief of Marissa Amora in the Administrative Trust
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Fund or the General Revenue Fund for a total of $17,000,000 paid
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over 10 years.
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Section 5. This award and any subsequent awards
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appropriated up to a grand total of $18,200,000 in nonrecurring
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funds, inclusive of this award, are intended to provide the sole
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compensation for all present and future claims arising out of the
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factual situation described in the preamble to this act which
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resulted in the injury to Marissa Amora. The total amount paid
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for attorney's fees, lobbying fees, costs, and other similar
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expenses relating to this claim may not exceed 25 percent of each
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annual payment awarded pursuant to this act.
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Section 6. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law.
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================ T I T L E A M E N D M E N T ================
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And the title is amended as follows:
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Delete everything before the enacting clause
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and insert:
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A bill to be entitled
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An act for the relief of Marissa Amora; providing an
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appropriation to compensate Marissa Amora, a minor, for
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injuries she sustained as a result of the negligence of
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employees of the Department of Children and Family
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Services; requiring a specified legislative budget
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request; providing a limitation on attorney's fees,
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lobbying fees, costs, and other similar expenses relating
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to the claim; providing an effective date.relating to ;
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providing an effective date.
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WHEREAS, on November 8, 2000, Moesha Sylencieux, now known
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as Marissa Amora, who was not yet 2 years old, was brought to the
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emergency room of Bethesda Memorial Hospital in Palm Beach
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County, Florida, and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's natural mother told the hospital
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staff that Marissa Amora fell from a standing position and
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consequently could not walk, and
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WHEREAS, while she was at the hospital, Marissa Amora could
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not bear weight on her legs, and
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WHEREAS, during a 3-day admission that followed, an MRI
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showed the presence of an unexplained mass in the area of Marissa
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Amora's spine, and she was transferred to Miami Children's
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Hospital for further testing and treatment, and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora was admitted to Miami Children's
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Hospital on November 11, 2000, arriving with a working diagnosis
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of "spinal cord tumor," and during the following month she was
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fully evaluated for the tumor that was presumed to have accounted
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for her sudden inability to walk, with all test results normal,
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and
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WHEREAS, on December 4, 2000, Marissa Amora underwent a
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biopsy of the mass in the area of her spine, which indicated that
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the mass was benign, and
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WHEREAS, during Marissa Amora's approximately 1-month
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admission to Miami Children's Hospital, several incidents gave
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rise to suspicions and concerns on the part of the hospital
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nursing staff and social workers with respect to Marissa Amora's
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safety, and
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WHEREAS, the hospital staff and social workers were
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concerned about the natural mother's lack of involvement with her
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daughter and about the interactions between Marissa Amora and her
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natural mother who, over the course of Marissa Amora's
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hospitalization at Miami Children's Hospital, came to the
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hospital only four times, and who failed to visit her at other
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times during her hospitalization even though hospital social
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workers provided her with directions and money for
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transportation, and
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WHEREAS, when Marissa Amora's natural mother did come to the
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hospital, families of other patients observed her spanking
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Marissa Amora while Marissa was in her hospital bed, and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's natural mother failed to come to
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the hospital on December 9, 2000, the day that her daughter was
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supposed to be discharged, and
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WHEREAS, with Marissa Amora waiting to be discharged, the
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social workers at the hospital appropriately called the
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Department of Children and Family Services, the call being
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designated as one for "special needs," given the mother's lack of
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ability or desire to care for her daughter and the general lack
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of bonding between mother and child, and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's case was assigned to a protective
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investigator for the Department of Children and Family Services
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in District 11, Miami-Dade County, Shirley Arias, who commenced
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her investigation by going to Miami Children's Hospital on
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Monday, December 11, 2000, at which point she began compiling a
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list of concerns and risk factors that indicated possible
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physical abuse, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Arias reviewed the hospital records
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and found that there was evidence that Marissa Amora had an
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unexplained fracture of her clavicle and that, though the mother
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had been assisted and counseled by the social workers at the
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hospital, the social workers continued to have serious concerns
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for the mother's desire and ability to care for her child, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Arias observed that Marissa Amora
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would cry when her mother walked into her hospital room and then
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would become calm when her mother would leave, and also observed
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a general lack of bonding between mother and child, and
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WHEREAS, on Monday, December 11, 2000, a meeting took place
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in the hospital between Investigator Arias, Marissa Amora's
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natural mother, and Dr. Jefry Biehler, an in-house director of
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the Child Advocacy Team who was asked to be involved at the
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request of the hospital's social workers, and
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WHEREAS, Dr. Biehler interviewed the natural mother in the
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presence of Investigator Arias and reported that he "had
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concerns" and recommended to Investigator Arias that the child
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should not be given to the mother unless a home study was
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completed to ensure that the environment in the home was safe for
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the child, and
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WHEREAS, the suggested home study was never performed by the
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department, and
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WHEREAS, instead of initiating a home study, Investigator
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Arias contacted the department's Palm Beach County District 9
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office, whereupon the matter was referred to Protective
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Investigator Evelyn Diaz Collins, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Collins failed to conduct or initiate
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a home study, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Collins instead went to the family
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home while Marissa Amora was still in the hospital, met with the
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natural mother, noting that the apartment was devoid of any baby
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items, and subsequently informed the natural mother that she
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would need to purchase a crib and that she would return the
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following week to make sure that this condition had been complied
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with, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Collins never returned to the home and
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performed no followup whatsoever, and
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WHEREAS, the requested home study was never completed, yet
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department supervisors in Miami incorrectly believed that a home
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study had been completed, and incorrectly assumed that there was
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no threat to the child, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Arias met with her supervisor, who
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advised that she should refer the case to the Department of
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Children and Family Services' legal department, whereupon
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investigator Arias consulted with the legal department on
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Wednesday, December 13, 2000, and was advised that Marissa Amora
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should not be allowed to leave Miami Children's Hospital until
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the department had completed a home study, spoken with Marissa
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Amora's natural father in New Jersey, assigned staff to the case
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from the child protection team, and conducted criminal checks of
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the appropriate parties, and
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WHEREAS, deposition and trial testimony by Investigator
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Arias revealed that she understood that the required home study,
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the contact with Marissa Amora's natural father, the assignment
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of staff to the case from the child protection team, and the
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conduct of specified criminal checks were departmental "marching
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orders" and that Marissa Amora should not have been allowed to
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leave the hospital until all of these conditions had been
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complied with, and
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WHEREAS, on December 14, 2000, Investigator Arias completed
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a departmental initial child safety assessment form, as required
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by statute, which showed that Investigator Arias and her
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supervisor concluded that physical abuse of Marissa Amora was
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suspected, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Arias testified at trial that Marissa
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Amora should never have been allowed to go home, that sending
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Marissa Amora home was wrong, and that she should have voiced her
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objection to her supervisors, and
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WHEREAS, Investigator Arias' immediate supervisor, Robert
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Boyak, testified under oath that the case should have been
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assigned to the child protection team before Marissa Amora was
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allowed to leave the hospital, but that no such referral to the
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child protection team was completed, and
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WHEREAS, on December 14, 2000, Investigator Arias began
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contacting Marissa Amora's natural mother for the purpose of
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having Marissa Amora picked up from the hospital, despite the
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fact that a home study had not been completed, the case had not
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been assigned to the child protection team, and Marissa Amora's
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natural father had not been consulted, all of which had been
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advisements of the Department of Children and Family Services'
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legal department on December 13, 2000, and
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WHEREAS, the department's log written by Investigator Arias
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reflects numerous contacts prior to discharge from the hospital
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from the social workers at Miami Children's Hospital challenging
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the department's decision to allow Marissa Amora to go home with
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her natural mother, and
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WHEREAS, calls placed by the hospital's social workers to
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the department's Palm Beach County district office, to the Miami-
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Dade district office, and to supervisors in the chain of command
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at the department were either not returned or, when calls were
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returned to social workers, they were given false assurances that
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the department's investigation had revealed that there was no
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danger to Marissa Amora, and
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WHEREAS, on December 15, 2000, Marissa Amora cried while she
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was being taken from Miami Children's Hospital by her natural
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mother, and the department was repeatedly told that hospital
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social workers were very dissatisfied with the decision to allow
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the child to go home with her natural mother and that hospital
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nurses were willing to adopt Marissa Amora, and
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WHEREAS, on January 11, 2001, Marissa Amora was again
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admitted to the hospital's pediatric intensive care unit for
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treatment for massive brain injuries, leg fractures, arm
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fractures, and multiple other injuries that the chief of
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pediatric intensive care opined were likely due to being swung by
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her arms and legs and smashed into a wall or the floor, and
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WHEREAS, the child protection team in Palm Beach County, as
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well as hospital physicians in Boca Raton and Delray Beach,
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determined that Marissa Amora's problems, dating back to the
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admission to Bethesda Memorial Hospital on November 8, 2000, and
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the life-threatening trauma with severe brain damage sustained on
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January 11, 2001, were due to injuries caused by physical abuse,
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and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora remained in the hospital for several
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months while undergoing a series of operations, including brain
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surgery to relieve pressure from massive bleeding in her brain, a
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tracheotomy to establish and maintain her ability to breathe, and
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abdominal surgery to allow for nutrition to pass directly into
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her stomach due to an inability to eat, and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora has since required subsequent
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additional surgical procedures to address many of the chronic
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problems caused by her severe brain injury, and continues to
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require tube feedings because she is unable to eat food by mouth,
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and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora will require a high level of care
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throughout the remainder of her life, and
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WHEREAS, employees of the Miami-Dade County and Palm Beach
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County offices of the Department of Children and Family Services
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admitted to making critical errors with regard to this case and
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admitted that department procedures were not followed, and
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WHEREAS, as a result of the negligence of the employees of
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the Department of Children and Family Services, Marissa Amora has
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suffered permanent and profound brain damage and will require
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total care for the remainder of her life, and
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WHEREAS, at trial the jury determined Marissa Amora's total
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past and future economic losses to be $21,070,000, and her past
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and future noneconomic damages, which include disability, loss of
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enjoyment of life, bodily injury, physical and mental pain and
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suffering, and disfigurement, to be $13,750,000, and
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WHEREAS, the life care plan for Marissa Amora, as devised by
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former District 11 Administrator and Certified Life Care Planner
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for the former Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services
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of the State of Florida, Lawrence Forman, M.Ed., has a present
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value cost of $23,116,052.50, and
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WHEREAS, the department's own experts, Sharon Griffin,
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M.Ed., Habilitationist, and Bernard F. Pettingill, Jr., Ph.D.,
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Economist, developed a life care plan for Marissa Amora, at an
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estimated cost of $19,767,867, some of which the state contended
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could be borne by Medicaid or Med-waiver, and
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WHEREAS, Marissa Amora's past medical care and expenses,
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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.