The Minnesota Security Hospital in St. Peter failed to adequately supervise two mentally ill residents, resulting in a bloody killing that state officials called "an unacceptable failure" in a maltreatment report released Tuesday.
The state's investigation into the January murder of Michael F. Douglas, 41, of Mankato, by Darnell D. Whitefeather, 32, has once again exposed deep-rooted problems at the state's core facility for treating people who are mentally ill and dangerous.
The Minnesota Department of Human Services (DHS), which oversees the hospital, found that staff are reluctant to intervene when residents are violent or disruptive. The hospital that was previously faulted for resorting to punitive methods, including the use of seclusion and restraints, is now being admonished for neglect and a lack of engagement with patients.
"Some staff choose not to be involved and some even elect to spend long hours inside the office, rather than interact with patients," the inspector general's report said.
Just eight days before killing Douglas, Whitefeather assaulted another patient at the hospital, breaking the patient's nose; yet staff determined that Whitefeather did not need increased supervision. Also, on the day of the killing, Whitefeather twice asked to see a psychiatrist, but was told to wait, state investigators found.
Investigators also found that it was likely that 1½ hours passed before staff were aware that Douglas was lying on the floor, dying, in the hospital's Unit 800, a locked unit where the hospital's most dangerous patients reside. On the night of the killing, investigators found, there were seven staff members on duty, including five security counselors, serving 14 patients.
DHS Commissioner Lucinda Jesson called the findings surrounding the patient's death "deeply troubling" and vowed she was going to personally ensure a radical change in workplace culture at the treatment center. Jesson on Tuesday ordered that the "conditional status" of the security hospital's license be extended until Dec. 22, 2016, effectively keeping the hospital on probation for another two years.
"What's most troubling is the self-imposed isolation of too many of our staff — not all — who are not mixing with patients," Jesson said Tuesday. While Jesson said she has witnessed many staff who are committed, "there are far too many who are standing in the way of progress for our patients."