
Staff stole $41K from residents at Laval centre for mentally disabled people, investigation finds
CBC
An internal investigation by Laval's health authority found that employees at a residence for people with intellectual disabilities stole money out of residents' bank accounts throughout almost an entire year.
According to Radio-Canada, the CISSS de Laval found staff at the Résidence Louise-Vachon withdrew a total of $41,000 from residents' accounts between April 2022 and March 2023, without invoices or other supporting documents.
In general, employees can access residents' accounts for day-to-day expenses under certain conditions.
"We found that money had been withdrawn from the trust accounts of some 20 residents, without proof of purchase," said CISSS de Laval spokesperson Marie-Ève Despatie-Gagnon.
She said all residents will be reimbursed in full.
Despatie-Gagnon said none of the employees involved are still employed by the CISSS de Laval.
"We are assessing whether legal action will be taken against the individuals concerned," she said.
Radio-Canada did not learn how many employees were involved in the thefts.
This latest incident adds to the pattern of mistreatment and abuse at the Laval centre, recently highlighted by a group of consultants.
In August, a report found staff at the Résidence Louise-Vachon injured residents during interventions, screamed at them and failed to properly communicate with their families.
They issued a list of 154 recommendations, most of which were targeted toward administrators, to improve the situation at the residence, which has been ongoing for years.
In 2019, three staff members were charged with assaulting residents. They were later acquitted, but after an internal investigation, the CISSS de Laval fired nine employees.
In response to the latest investigation, Patrick Martin-Ménard, a lawyer, says he's alarmed to see yet another wave of misconduct at the centre.
"It's appalling to realize that four years later, we find ourselves not only with situations of systemic abuse, but now we're talking about financial abuse as well," said Martin-Ménard, who has filed a request for a class-action lawsuit on behalf of residents and their families for acts allegedly committed at the centre between 2012 and 2019.

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