HerzMariae
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Retired nurse arrested trying to 'rescue' mother, 97, from care home | COVID-19 A retired nurse was arrested by police after attempting to “rescue” her 97-year-old mother from a care home so she could …More
Retired nurse arrested trying to 'rescue' mother, 97, from care home | COVID-19
A retired nurse was arrested by police after attempting to “rescue” her 97-year-old mother from a care home so she could be looked after by her family. Ylenia Angelis, 73, wheeled her elderly mother out of her care home on an impulse after hugging her for the first time in nine months. But police pursued Ms Angelis to a local garden centre where officers arrested her on suspicion of assault, before driving her mother back to the facility. Distressing footage posted on social media showed Ms Angelis’ mother Tina Thornborough, a retired seamstress suffering from advanced dementia, looking confused as her daughter was placed in the back of a squad car on Tuesday afternoon . Subscribe to The Telegraph on YouTube ► youtube.com/…annel/UCPgLNge0xqQHWM5B5EFH9Cg Get the latest headlines: telegraph.co.uk Telegraph.co.uk and youtube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily …More
Ultraviolet
Tragic, tragic... and unsurprising in the UK or in American states with a similar socialiized outlook. The smart approach is to first contact an attorney (aka a "solicitor" in the UK). Care home officials reply to an ordinary person's demands with typical contempt. That changes dramatically when those same demands are accompanied by threats of lawsuits. It becomes a financial equation. It's cheaper …More
Tragic, tragic... and unsurprising in the UK or in American states with a similar socialiized outlook. The smart approach is to first contact an attorney (aka a "solicitor" in the UK). Care home officials reply to an ordinary person's demands with typical contempt. That changes dramatically when those same demands are accompanied by threats of lawsuits. It becomes a financial equation. It's cheaper to dispose of the elderly resident than retain them and incur potentially staggering legal expenses as a result.

It's simply safer, easier, and cheaper to let a resident go rather than risk a wrongful-death suit should the elderly resident die before being released and "emotional distress" / pain and suffering suits caused by refusing to release the elderly resident to their own family who fear (rightly) for their relative's health and safety.
Tesa
If you are perfectly healthy, stop letting scared little idiots try and blame you for spreading an illness you do not have. The only people responsible for this Lockdown are the millions of people who are also healthy but obeyed unscientific rules without question.
malemp
POOR OLD WOMAN not even can die with her daughter and grand child police lost any common sense
Roberto 55
UK police hunting for innocent people, but moslem rapist are OK.
Shame on you UK police.
Louis IX
They’ll probably put her down when they get her back in lock up.
Louis IX
Nazis