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Family says they tried to get abuse victim out of home

Target 7 discovers state was not doing regular inspections

Family says they tried to get abuse victim out of home

Target 7 discovers state was not doing regular inspections

YOU WATCHING KOAT ACTION SEVEN NEWS. WE HAVE TOLD YOU ABOUT THE DEVELOPMENTALLY DISABLED WOMAN WHO DIED AT THE BORDER IN EL PASO FROM HORRIFIC INJURIES. WHILE POLICE SAY HER CARETAKER WAS TRYING TO GET HER MEDICAL TREATMENT IN JUAREZ TO TRY AND COVER UP HER ABUSE. WELL, TONIGHT, FOR THE FIRST TIME, THAT FAMILY OF THE WOMAN IS TALKING WITH TARGET 7 JOHN CARNELL, AND THEY TOLD HIM THEY THOUGHT SOMETHING WAS WRONG. MARY MARRERO WAS A PART OF A FEDERALLY FUNDED PROGRAM THAT ALLOWED PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES TO BE CARED FOR IN PRIVATE HOMES RATHER THAN INSTITUTIONS. TARGET 7 HAS BEEN INVESTIGATING WHY THE STATE WAS NOT DOING ROUTINE VISITS ON THESE HOMES AFTER MELROSE DEATH, THE STATE FOUND AN ADDITIONAL 30 CASES OF CONFIRMED ABUSE. AND FOR MELROSE FAMILY, THEY’RE HOPING HER DEATH WILL PREVENT OTHERS. THIS IS THE LAST PHOTOGRAPH ANASTASIO MARRERO HAS OF HIS SISTER. THAT WAS THE LAST TIME THAT WE GOT TO SPEND TIME WITH HER. THESE IMAGES ARE ALL HE HAS LEFT THERE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO LOVED MARY, A TON OF PEOPLE, BUT WHAT HAPPENED INSIDE THIS RIO RANCHO HOME ARE IMAGES HE WANTS TO FORGET. MY FIRST THOUGHT IS THE DEVIL DOES EXIST BECAUSE WHO IN THE WORLD COULD DO SOMETHING THAT THEY DID? THESE ARE SOME OF THE INJURIES THERE’S NO REASONS AT ALL WHY THEY DID WHAT THEY DID TO MY SISTER. PROSECUTORS SAY MARY MOLINA WAS BEING CARED FOR BY THIS WOMAN, ANGELITA CHACON. THE STATE PAID CHACON TO TAKE CARE OF MARY AS PART OF THE DEVELOPMENTALLY DISABLED WAIVER PROGRAM. THE GOVERNMENT PROGRAM PAYS CARETAKERS TO PROVIDE FOR PEOPLE WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES SO THEY DON’T HAVE TO STAY IN AN INSTITUTION, CHECKED PHONE MADE ABOUT $250,000 IN THREE YEARS. YOU THINK THAT GOVERNMENT IS GOING TO PROTECT YOU, TAKE CARE OF YOU. ACCORDING TO POLICE, CHACON LEFT MOLARO IN A BATHTUB FOR DAYS AND DEVELOPED THESE INJURIES. THEY PUT HER IN THIS VAN TO SNEAKER ACROSS THE BORDER TO GET MEDICAL TREATMENT BECAUSE THEY KNEW IF THEY TOOK HER TO A LOCAL HOSPITAL, THEY WOULD BE REPORTED AND THEY WOULD LOSE THEIR CONTRACT AND THEY WOULD LOSE THEIR MONEY. SHE DIED AT AN EL PASO HOSPITAL FROM A MASSIVE INFECTION. ACCORDING TO INVESTIGATORS. THERE’S NO SCARY MOVIE. THERE’S NO BOOK THAT IS MORE GRIMMER THAN THAN WHAT I READ. TARGET 7 DISCOVERED THAT THE STATE WAS NOT DOING REGULAR HOME VISITS AFTER LEARNING OF MELROSE DEATH, THEY INSPECTED 6800 PATIENTS AND FOUND 30 CASES OF CONFIRMED ABUSE. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH CABINET SECRETARY PATRICK ALLAN TOLD TARGET 7 HE’S GOING TO MAKE SURE REGULAR VISITS WILL NOW OCCUR. WHAT WE NEED TO DO AS A AS A RESULT OF OF WHAT’S COME TO LIFE IS DO A BETTER JOB AS AN AGENCY AND OVERSEEING THAT WORK, VALERO’S FAMILY TELLS TARGET 7 THERE ARE OTHER ISSUES FOR MONTHS THEY WERE TRYING TO SEE AND TALK TO MARY, BUT CHACON WOULD NOT LET THEM. THEY SAID THEY CONTACTED THE STATE TO TRY TO GET MARY OUT OF THE HOME, AND THEY SAID THAT THEY WOULD NOT GIVE MARY TO ME OR TO A FAMILY MEMBER, THAT SHE WAS HER OWN PERSON AND THAT SHE COULD GO WHEREVER SHE WANTED. AND SO I FEEL THAT THEY MADE A HUGE MISTAKE IN ALLOWING MARY TO STAY WITH ANGEL MOLARO HERSELF ALSO REACHED OUT TO ALBUQUERQUE ATTORNEY ADAM OAKEY OVER FACEBOOK STATUS, WHERE I SAID, WHAT’S GOING ON? HOW CAN I HELP YOU? DO YOU NEED HELP? SHE DIDN’T RESPOND. SO I KNOW THAT SOMETHING WAS GOING ON. I KNOW THAT THEY WERE HIDING SOMETHING. THERE’S NO OTHER REASON WHY SHE WOULD. I DIDN’T KNOW MARY. RIGHT. I DIDN’T KNOW HER PERSONALLY. OKAY. IS NOW REPRESENTING MARY’S FAMILY AND HE IS CONSIDERING FILING A CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT AGAINST THE STATE AND THE CONTRA FACTORS THEY USED. BUT WE NEED TO MAKE SURE THAT WE GET JUSTICE FOR MARY AND HER FAMILY AND TO MAKE SURE THAT THE SYSTEM CHANGES. CHACON HAS BEEN CHARGED WITH NEGLECT OF A RESIDENT CAUSING DEATH. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL ASKED THE JUDGE TO HOLD HER UNTIL TRIAL. INSTEAD, THE JUDGE RELEASED HER AND ORDERED SHE BE PLACED ON AN ANKLE MONITOR. FOR TARGET 7, I’M JOHN CARDINAL. THE STATE HAS A HOTLINE YOU CAN CALL IF YOU BELIEVE AN ADULT IS BEING SUBJECT TO ABUSE OR NEGLECT. AND THAT NUMBER
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Family says they tried to get abuse victim out of home

Target 7 discovers state was not doing regular inspections

Photos are all Anastacio Melero has left of his sister.“That was the last time that we got to spend time with her in person,” he said while showing a photo taken from his mother’s funeral. “There are a lot of people who loved Mary. A ton of people.”But the photos contained in court records are hard for him to talk about. It shows massive infections, holes in limbs, rashes, and bed sore all over his sister’s body.“My first thought is that the devil does exist because who in the world could do something that they did,” Melero asked. “Here is just no, there's no reasons at all why they did what they did to my sister.”Mary Melero, who was autistic, was being cared for in a Rio Rancho home for three years. Police say her caretaker, Angelita Chacon, had put her in a van and drove her to the border in an attempt to get medical treatment in Juarez. “They knew if they took her to a local hospital, they would be reported, and they would lose their contract, and they would lose their money,” Attorney General Raul Torrez said.But when Chacon got to the border, they were stopped by Mexican authorities and turned away. Border Protection agents then found Melero lying down on the floor in the back of a van.She was taken to an El Paso Hospital, where she died from a massive infection.As a result of her death, the state ordered 6,800 inspections of people who take part in the Developmentally Disabled Waiver Program. The program uses federal funds to pay people to take care of people with developmental disabilities inside homes rather than institutions. Chacon made about $250,000 over three years from the program.The inspections found 30 cases of confirmed abuse, and they have referred eight cases over to the Attorney General’s Office for possible prosecution.The state uses third-party contractors to run the program. But Target 7 discovered the state was never doing regular home visits.Department of Health cabinet secretary Patrick Allen told Target 7 he is going to make sure regular visits will now occur.“What we need to do as a result of what's come to light is do a better job as an agency in overseeing that work,” Allen said.But the Melero family knew something was wrong for a while. They said Chacon would not let them visit or talk to their sister over the phone.They said they contacted the state to try to get Mary out of the house. “They said that they would not give Mary to me or to a family member and that she was her own person and that she could go wherever she wanted,” Anastacio Melero said. “And so, I feel that they made a huge mistake in allowing Mary to stay with (Chacon).”Mary Melero herself also reached out to Albuquerque attorney Adam Oakey over Facebook prior to her death.“I said, ‘what's going on? How can I help you? You need help’,” Oakey said, “She didn't respond. So, I know that something was going on. I know that they were hiding something. There's no other reason why she (would reach out) I didn't know Mary, right. I didn't know her personally."Oakey is now representing the Melero family, and he is considering filing a class action lawsuit against the state and the contractors they used.“We need to make sure that we get justice for Mary and her family and to make sure that the system changes,” Oakey said. Chacon has been charged with neglect of a resident causing death. The attorney general asked a judge to hold her until trial. Instead, the judge released her and ordered she be placed on an ankle monitor.

Photos are all Anastacio Melero has left of his sister.

“That was the last time that we got to spend time with her in person,” he said while showing a photo taken from his mother’s funeral. “There are a lot of people who loved Mary. A ton of people.”

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But the photos contained in court records are hard for him to talk about. It shows massive infections, holes in limbs, rashes, and bed sore all over his sister’s body.

“My first thought is that the devil does exist because who in the world could do something that they did,” Melero asked. “Here is just no, there's no reasons at all why they did what they did to my sister.”

Mary Melero, who was autistic, was being cared for in a Rio Rancho home for three years. Police say her caretaker, Angelita Chacon, had put her in a van and drove her to the border in an attempt to get medical treatment in Juarez.

“They knew if they took her to a local hospital, they would be reported, and they would lose their contract, and they would lose their money,” Attorney General Raul Torrez said.

But when Chacon got to the border, they were stopped by Mexican authorities and turned away. Border Protection agents then found Melero lying down on the floor in the back of a van.

She was taken to an El Paso Hospital, where she died from a massive infection.

As a result of her death, the state ordered 6,800 inspections of people who take part in the Developmentally Disabled Waiver Program. The program uses federal funds to pay people to take care of people with developmental disabilities inside homes rather than institutions.

Chacon made about $250,000 over three years from the program.

The inspections found 30 cases of confirmed abuse, and they have referred eight cases over to the Attorney General’s Office for possible prosecution.

The state uses third-party contractors to run the program. But Target 7 discovered the state was never doing regular home visits.

Department of Health cabinet secretary Patrick Allen told Target 7 he is going to make sure regular visits will now occur.

“What we need to do as a result of what's come to light is do a better job as an agency in overseeing that work,” Allen said.

But the Melero family knew something was wrong for a while. They said Chacon would not let them visit or talk to their sister over the phone.

They said they contacted the state to try to get Mary out of the house.

“They said that they would not give Mary to me or to a family member and that she was her own person and that she could go wherever she wanted,” Anastacio Melero said. “And so, I feel that they made a huge mistake in allowing Mary to stay with (Chacon).”

Mary Melero herself also reached out to Albuquerque attorney Adam Oakey over Facebook prior to her death.

“I said, ‘what's going on? How can I help you? You need help’,” Oakey said, “She didn't respond. So, I know that something was going on. I know that they were hiding something. There's no other reason why she (would reach out) I didn't know Mary, right. I didn't know her personally."

Oakey is now representing the Melero family, and he is considering filing a class action lawsuit against the state and the contractors they used.

“We need to make sure that we get justice for Mary and her family and to make sure that the system changes,” Oakey said.

Chacon has been charged with neglect of a resident causing death. The attorney general asked a judge to hold her until trial. Instead, the judge released her and ordered she be placed on an ankle monitor.