VA Report Cites ‘Serious, Pervasive And Deep-Rooted’ Failures At Clarksburg Medical Center As Mays Is Sentenced To 7 Life Terms

A report was released Tuesday outlining a long list of failures at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg, West Virginia that led to the deaths of at least seven men.

The report, from the U.S. Department of Veteran’s Affairs Office of Inspector General, was released on the same day 46-year-old Reta Mays was sentenced to seven consecutive life terms plus 20 years for the killings of the veterans, states that Mays bears the ultimate responsibility for the murders — but also notes missteps by leaders of the facility.

“The OIG found that the facility had serious, pervasive, and deep-rooted clinical and administrative failures that contributed to Ms. Mays’s criminal actions not being identified and stopped earlier,” the report states. “The failures occurred in virtually all the critical functions and areas required to promote patient safety and prevent avoidable adverse events at the facility.”

As she accepted a plea deal in July, Mays admitted to seven counts of second-degree murder and one count of assault with intent to murder the veterans. She unnecessarily administered insulin to the men, causing sudden hypoglycemic events that ultimately led to their deaths.

Investigators with the Office of Inspector General concluded in the report that there were deficiencies in the hiring of Mays, the evaluation of her performance, the management and security of medication, clinical evaluations of the at-the-time unexplained hypoglycemic events, the reporting and response to the events, as well as the response and corrective actions taken by leadership of the facility.

At a news conference following Mays’ sentencing, VA Inspector General Michael Missal pointed out that the former nursing assistant won an award for her work, but should not have — noting one of the many missed opportunities to identify the issues that came up over the course of her tenure at the facility.

“She actually received a Secretary’s Award for Excellence in 2017,” Missal said. “As part of receiving that award, they were required to go back to make sure that her background check had been done. They checked it had, when it actually hadn’t.”

West Virginia’s two U.S. Senators — Democrat Joe Manchin and Republican Shelley Moore Capito — both made comments Tuesday to news media about the report’s findings.

“I just think there’s just an absolute lack of accountability — or total lack of accountability — of the Clarksburg VA. There’s no other way to put it,” said Manchin, a member of the Senate’s Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, during a Tuesday conference call with reporters. “The people that have been in charge there should no longer be in the VA system, as far as I’m concerned, with the total disrespect they had for the well-being [and] welfare of our veterans. And I think that shows up loud and clear in the OIG’s report.”

Manchin noted that he was unable to disclose many details about the VA hospital until the investigation had concluded.

“The shackles are off and I can guarantee you we’re going after them hard, very hard,” he said.

In a statement released Tuesday, Capito also expressed concern over the report, which she described as “devastating.”

“The failures at the Clarksburg VAMC outlined within this report are absolutely unacceptable,” Capito said. “The findings show a collapse of administrative and clinical responsibility that has led to unimaginable consequences, which makes it clear that updated policy and procedure is desperately needed.”

Capito said she is committed to seeing to it that the recommendations included in the report are implemented and that leaders at the VA are held accountable for the failures that took place.

“Our veterans in West Virginia deserve the highest level of care possible, but they also need to be able to trust that they will be safe and protected under the care at our VAMC facilities,” she added.

According to the report, the OIG made recommendations across various departments and functions of the facility in question and the agency at large, aimed to enhance patient safety — including medical chart audits, checks and balances within pharmacy quality assurance processes and quality management reviews.

Wesley Walls, a spokesman for the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center, issued a statement expressing a need to rebuild the trust of veterans seeking care at the facility.

“While this matter involving an isolated employee does not represent the quality health care tens of thousands of North Central West Virginia Veterans have come to expect from our facility, it has prompted a number of improvements that will strengthen our continuity of care and prevent similar issues from happening in the future,” Walls said.

Walls said recommendations are currently being implemented and will be complete by March 2022.

Reta Mays, Guilty Of Murdering Veterans Hospitalized In West Virginia, Gets Seven Life Sentences Plus 20 Years

Updated Tuesday, May 11, 2021 at 2:00 p.m.

A former nursing assistant who admitted to murdering veterans at a Clarksburg, West Virginia hospital will spend the rest of her natural life behind bars.

Reta Mays, 46 of Reyondsville, West Virginia, was handed seven life sentences plus 20 years during a sentencing hearing on Tuesday.

Mays admitted in July to seven counts of second-degree murder and one count of assault with intent to murder veterans seeking care at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center. According to prosecutors, Mays unnecessarily injected veterans with insulin, causing sudden hypoglycemic events that ultimately led to the deaths.

During a Tuesday sentencing hearing, Judge Thomas Kleeh heard from family members of victims, attorneys for both the prosecution and the defense, and Mays herself.

Prosecutors said more than 30 family members of victims joined the hearing in the courtroom and others joined through a video conference set up by the court. Some victims’ families offered gut-wrenching statements to the court — both in person and through prepared video.

Many expressed being unable to forgive Mays, including Robert Edge Jr., the son of 82-year-old Navy veteran Robert Edge, who submitted a video message to the court.

“You murdered my father without cause or reason,” Edge said in the video. “As you hear my words, I want them to play in your mind over and over and over again till the day you die. And by dying — I mean by any means possible — including taking your life with your own hands.”

Melanie Proctor, the daughter of 82-year-old Army veteran Felix McDemott, spoke in the courtroom.

“You took some of the greatest men of their time — our loved ones, our veterans — and you preyed on them when they were at their weakest,” Proctor said. “For that, you are a coward. If you have any morals at all, you will give the other families the peace of mind of knowing the truth of what happened to their loved ones. May God forgive you, as I never will.”

Mays worked the overnight shift at the hospital, often unsupervised, from 2015 to 2018. While speaking briefly during Tuesday’s hearing, she offered no explanation for committing the killings.

“There’s no words I can say that would offer any comfort. I can only say I’m sorry for the pain I caused the families and my family,” Mays said as she wept. “I don’t ask for forgiveness, because I don’t think I can forgive anyone for doing what I did.”

Jay McCamic, defense attorney for Mays, outlined a long history of mental illness and trauma that she suffered during her own time in the military while serving in Iraq in 2003 and 2004.

McCamic said Mays suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and military sexual trauma that occurred during her time served, and asked the court to sentence her to 30 years.

“Many, many people ask why, why did Reta do this?” McCamic said to the court. “Most people want to have a nice, linear story applied to the conspiracy, a unified motive of why someone would set upon the idea of taking the life of others and go forth with that idea. Unfortunately, why is not a question that can be answered here. Reta doesn’t know why. Her family doesn’t know why.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jarod Douglas read the names of Mays’ victims — who also included Robert Lee Kozul Sr., 89; Archie D. Edgell, 84; William Holloway, 96; George Nelson Shaw Sr., 81; Raymond Golden, 88; and Russell R. Posey Sr., 92 — as he addressed the court.

“They are what today is all about,” Douglas said. “Judgment day has come.”

He called her actions “predatory and planned, not reactionary.”

“These men were not in need of mercy by the defendant. In the end it wasn’t the defendant’s call to make,” Douglas said.

While handing down the sentences, Kleeh acknowledged Mays’ mental health struggles throughout her life, but noted that the murders were calculated and intentional. He noted that over the course of the killings — which took place from 2017 to 2018 — Mays conducted internet searches on female serial killers and watched the Netflix series Nurses Who Kill.

Kleeh told Mays she was “not special” despite her mental health diagnosis and other struggles she had endured.

“Several times your counsel made the point that you shouldn’t be considered a monster,” Kleeh told her. “Respectfully, I disagree with that. You are the worst kind. You’re the monster that no one sees coming.”

10th Settlement Reached In West Virginia VA Hospital Deaths

The federal government agreed to a 10th settlement for suspicious deaths at a West Virginia veterans hospital where a former nursing assistant admitted to intentionally giving seven patients unprescribed insulin injections.

A court filing shows the family of Charles Dean will receive $625,000, according to The Exponent Telegram. He died in 2017 at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg.

Dean’s family and attorneys said the death was “due to injuries he suffered when he was wrongfully injected with insulin due to multiple system failures by the employees and administration” at the hospital.

Fired staffer Reta Mays, 46, is expected to be sentenced next week on seven counts of second-degree murder and one charge for assault with intent to commit murder, according to the newspaper. She was not charged in Dean’s death.

Former U.S. attorney Bill Powell said there were about 20 suspicious deaths at the medical center during the time Mays worked there, but charges were only brought in cases where the government thought it had sufficient evidence.

Mays, of Reynoldsville, pleaded guilty in July to killing the seven patients with fatal doses of insulin while she worked overnight shifts at the northern West Virginia hospital between 2017 and 2018. She faces life sentences for each killing.

The VA is the government’s second-largest department, responsible for 9 million military veterans. The agency’s former director was fired in 2018 in the wake of a bruising ethics scandal and a mounting rebellion within the agency, and the doctor who then-President Donald Trump nominated to replace him had to withdraw his nomination amid accusations of misconduct.

Sentencing Delayed For Fired VA Nursing Assistant Who Killed 7

Sentencing has been delayed for a former staffer at a veterans hospital in West Virginia who pleaded guilty to intentionally killing seven patients with fatal doses of insulin.

A federal judge on Friday granted a motion by attorneys for Reta Mays to push back her sentencing. It now will be held May 11-12. It had been scheduled for Feb. 18-19.

Prosecutors had opposed the request as unreasonable.

Mays, a former nursing assistant at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg, was charged with seven counts of second-degree murder and one count of assault with the intent to commit murder of an eighth person. She admitted in July to purposely killing the veterans, injecting them with unprescribed insulin while she worked overnight shifts at the hospital in northern West Virginia between 2017 and 2018.

She faces life sentences in each death.

Defense attorneys said the coronavirus pandemic has limited travel and the ability to meet with Mays in jail. In addition, the defense said it needs to obtain Mays’ records from the federal government and secure an expert on post-traumatic stress disorder prior to sentencing.

West Virginia Congressional Delegation Applauds VA Health Care Facility Transparency Bill

Congress has finished work on a bill that would provide greater transparency at veterans hospitals across the nation. The legislation came after a string of murders at a West Virginia veterans medical facility.

On Monday, the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously passed The Improving Safety and Security for Veterans Act of 2019. The legislation will require the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to submit detailed reports on patient safety and quality of care at VA Medical Centers.

The bill, which passed the Senate in December 2019, now heads to the president for a signature. The measure was introduced in the Senate by Democrat Joe Manchin and Republican Shelley Moore Capito.

The two senators from West Virginia issued statements Tuesday in a joint news release from Manchin’s office.

“We have faced issues of transparency surrounding the murder of at least seven veterans at the Clarksburg VAMC, resulting in a lack of confidence in the VA,” Manchin said in statement. “I can’t imagine having a loved one murdered while in the VA’s care and after almost two years still not knowing the full picture.”

Former nursing assistant Reta Mays pleaded guilty in June to seven counts of murder that stretched over the course of years. She admitted to injecting veterans with unneeded insulin at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg.

“The horrifying murders at the Clarksburg VAMC were a gruesome wakeup call underscoring the need for a more thorough look at security systems and procedures across the VAMC system,” Capito said. “This bill is a step forward to help ensure our veterans are protected and safely cared for while in VA hands.”

The three other members of West Virginia’s congressional delegation — Reps. David McKinley, Alex Mooney and Carol Miller — also issued statements Tuesday on the passage of the bill as part of the news release from Manchin’s office.

“We cannot begin to understand the grief and anger of the families whose loved ones were killed at the Clarksburg VA,” McKinley said.

When federal prosecutors struck a plea deal with Mays over the killings, they said that the former nursing assistant had betrayed the trust of the veterans and their families.

“Those who served our nation in the military deserve not only our utmost respect, but also our continued care once they leave military service,” Mooney said. “The murder of at least seven veterans at the Clarksburg VA should never be allowed to happen again.”

The Improving Safety and Security for Veterans Act of 2019 will also force the VA to submit a detailed report and a timeline of events surrounding the deaths at the Clarksburg facility once criminal investigations are complete.

“As an original cosponsor of this legislation, I am glad that Congress was able to come together to bring necessary change and oversight of our VA Medical Centers in order to ensure that our veterans have confidence in the quality of health care they deserve,” Miller said.

Mays, who will be sentenced in February, has yet to explain her motive for the killings.

Sentencing Set For Former Nursing Assistant Who Pleaded Guilty To Murdering Veterans at Clarksburg Hospital

A sentencing date has been set for a woman who pleaded guilty in July of murdering at least seven men at a veteran’s hospital in Clarksburg.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Kleeh has set sentencing for Reta Mays for Feb. 18 and 19.

Mays, a former nursing assistant at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center, pleaded guilty to murdering the veterans by injecting them with unneeded insulin.

Mays faces consecutive life sentences for the second-degree murder charges plus 20 years for an another charge of assault with intent to murder — stemming from the death of another veteran.

In a status conference held Friday in Wheeling, attorneys for Mays said they are still working to locate mental health records and requested sentencing be delayed until March. Her defense said those records relate to mental health treatment that took place during Mays’ military service in Iraq.

Federal prosecutors said they had been in touch with the defense and expressed surprise over the request for a delay. They noted they had obtained some of Mays’ mental health records through her attorneys in discovery.

Intermediate proceedings in the case are scheduled for Nov. 18.

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