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Robert Foley's Death Row Hip Replacement Debated Among Kentucky Prison Officials

By BRETT BARROUQUERE 05/17/12 05:22 PM ET AP

Robert Foley
Robert Foley is considered the most prolific killer on Kentucky's death row after being convicted of six murders. Now, he needs a hip replacement, leading to heated debate among prison officials, hospitals, and surgeons about how to balance the needs of inmate care with the need for security and $56,000 price tag on the procedure.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A condemned killer's fight to receive surgery for agonizing hip pain pushed Kentucky officials into an uncomfortable debate over security, politics and even the possibility of inviting scorn from Fox News pundits.

Emails and memos obtained by The Associated Press show corrections officials struggling for a year to reconcile their duty to provide medical care with the political ramifications of spending tens of thousands of dollars for surgery on a man they plan to execute. A key problem would turn out to be security issues that led several hospitals to balk at treating inmate Robert Foley, who still hasn't had the surgery.

"Hip replacement for an inmate who has exhausted all appeals and will soon be executed?" Kentucky State Penitentiary warden Phil Parker wrote in an email on Nov. 22, 2010. "I can see this making Fox News on a slow news day, maybe even on a busy news day. In fact, I bet (Fox News host Bill O'Reilly) would love to put this in his `Pinheads' commentary. Just a thought to consider before it goes too much further."

Prison officials also made contingency plans to call off the surgery if Gov. Steve Beshear set an execution date, and they considered whether to consult with him about the procedure.

"I think it is that important and all this may have political consequences," Parker wrote a year before Beshear's re-election. Ultimately, Beshear's spokeswoman said he wasn't contacted about it.

Foley, 55, was convicted of killing six people in eastern Kentucky in 1989 and 1991, making him the most prolific killer on the state's death row. His status as an extremely dangerous prisoner was a key factor in the state's difficulty finding a surgeon and hospital, according to the documents obtained through a public records request and a lawsuit filed by Foley.

Foley still hasn't had the surgery, with Parker lamenting in an email they had no options after an exhaustive search.

State officials deny that politics played a role, and there's no evidence in the documents that political considerations prevented the surgery.

A spokeswoman for the Kentucky Justice Cabinet – which oversees corrections and law enforcement – declined to comment because of the pending lawsuit.

Foley's attorney, Jamesa Drake, said the state needs a way to care for condemned inmates, even those with complex needs. Foley, who has been on death row since 1993, is unable to get around without help because he's at risk of a dangerous fall, Drake said.

"If you're on death row, it's just like anybody else," Drake said. "If you need a new hip, you need a new hip. It hurts."

The Department of Corrections acknowledged his degenerative hip in a response to the lawsuit, but also said he has been receiving adequate care. The federal lawsuit filed in March is pending.

Corrections Department attorney Brenn Combs wrote to Drake that the Department of Corrections couldn't enter into a legal agreement about the hip surgery because it would impose requirements exceeding "our legal duty regarding inmate health care."

"The Department is not interested in doing that and, like me, nobody else here can see a way that it would help inmate Foley," Combs said in a Nov. 14 email.

It's not unusual for inmates to receive treatment outside of prison, and Foley has twice left death row for other surgical procedures.

Foley first complained to prison officials about the persistent pain in his right hip in September 2010, saying his leg sometimes "gives out on him," according to the lawsuit.

Foley initially didn't want the surgery and tried to fashion his own hip brace out of "flip flops and other everyday items." Foley said the brace helped with the pain in an affidavit signed in February, but prison officials confiscated it.

After Foley agreed to the surgery, officials searched for a doctor to perform the $56,000 operation. At the time, Foley was under a death warrant signed by Beshear.

"If and when an order is received to execute Foley, I will contact (then-prison medical director Dr. Scott Haas) to try to stop all medical procedures related to his hip replacement," Parker wrote.

No execution date was set, and a judge later halted lethal injections as the state weighs execution procedures. It's not clear when executions could resume.

While looking for a hospital, corrections officials increased Foley's pain medication and looked into the logistics of moving him.

But prison nurse Chanin Hiland wrote in a September 2010 email to Haas that orthopedists in Paducah, Madisonville and Murray had been contacted, and "none of them want any part of this."

"The farther we have to go, the more security will have to be sent with him; although, it is obvious he will not be running anywhere soon," Hiland wrote. Foley's hepatitis C infection was a further risk factor.

In November of that year, Parker and Haas asked Corrections Commissioner LaDonna Thompson for advice on security. Parker also wrote Hass about his concerns about publicity and whether he could be safety housed outside the prison system.

The difficulty in finding a surgeon illustrates the "gray area" between the law's requirement of treatment for inmates and a hospital's ability to turn down those patients, said Rebecca Walker, an associate professor of social medicine at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.

"Everyone would probably agree he ought to get his care somewhere. It's a collective responsibility," Walker said in a phone interview. "Who does it is the question."

After finding a doctor to perform the surgery, Foley and corrections officials thought they had found a hospital when Frankfort Regional Medical Center initially agreed. Corrections officials and the hospital set the surgery for Feb. 28, 2011 and conducted preoperative testing.

During a meeting between corrections officials and hospital staff on Feb. 22, 2011, hospital CEO Chip Peal said he hadn't been aware the surgery was scheduled for less than a week later. A memo by Parker summarized security measures and noted that Peal needed others' approval.

Peal returned to the meeting after 30 minutes and said the surgery was off.

"CEO Peal stated that they never had a patient at the hospital that required security and that he felt this was too high a profile person to be the first," Parker wrote.

At that point, corrections officials were left with few options.

"After over a year of exhaustive search for a surgeon and hospital, this was our last hope," Parker wrote to Thompson and Deputy Commissioner Jim Erwin on Feb. 23, 2011. "I expect future legal action in this matter, however, we know of no other options at this time."

___

Follow Associated Press reporter Brett Barrouquere on Twitter: http://twitter.com/BBarrouquereAP

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A condemned killer's fight to receive surgery for agonizing hip pain pushed Kentucky officials into an uncomfortable debate over security, politics and even the possibility of ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A condemned killer's fight to receive surgery for agonizing hip pain pushed Kentucky officials into an uncomfortable debate over security, politics and even the possibility of ...
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05:48 PM on 06/05/2012
Let his relatives take up money for it if not OH WELL.
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08:29 PM on 05/23/2012
Should have the surgery and sue the county for pain and suffering for delaying his well being...........
01:53 PM on 05/19/2012
Ouch! These comments are harsh.
12:52 PM on 05/19/2012
The absurdity is that the hip replacement surgery would cost $56,000.
lurkinman
Clear thinking is best served non-partisan
12:41 PM on 05/19/2012
He can't get around? Get him a wheelchair. Problem solved.
12:28 PM on 05/19/2012
Replace it with an
IED.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Amanda Matthews
11:56 AM on 05/19/2012
SNIP
Foley, 55, was convicted of killing six people in eastern Kentucky in 1989 and 1991, making him the most prolific killer on the state's death row. His status as an extremely dangerous prisoner was a key factor in the state's difficulty finding a surgeon and hospital, according to the documents obtained through a public records request and a lawsuit filed by Foley.
SNIP

I don't know about hip surgery but I do know that this just might be a perfect illustration of Karma.

You wanna be 'merciful'? The guys in prison. Give him all the drugs he needs to stay physically pain free.

But put pictures of all his victims where he can't avoid seeing them. Don't let him forget why he's going to die.
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silsez
Wait for it...
11:26 AM on 05/19/2012
Move up this monster's execution date. Problem solved.
unique
Animal lover forever
05:36 PM on 05/20/2012
FANNED...............

I thought the same thing as I read this story.
May 25,2012 would be an excellent to put
him out of this world for good. These inmates
have nothing to do all day but think of how they
can screw the people. He has caused the good
people of Kentucky enough money. Get rid of him
the sooner the better. I agree with lurkinmen get
him a wheelchair.
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SimpleOne
Keep your theology out of my biology
09:30 PM on 05/18/2012
He can talk to god about getting a new hip.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sylvabugg2
I have gone to find myself.....
06:54 PM on 05/18/2012
Are they frickin' serious? They actually have to debate this? The man is scheduled to die and they are considering wasting all that money on a hip replacement only to turn around and kill him? Amazing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Squiriferous
Annoying everybody on Huffington Post since 2011
04:52 PM on 05/18/2012
I'll replace his hip for free. With an old car battery, sure, but beggars can't be choosers.
04:04 PM on 05/18/2012
He has the right to be treated. He's still human. If it's medically warranted, he should have whatever treatment he needs, as should anyone in custody. That's how the prison system works; that's what we agreed on in the U.S. Incarcerated individuals are sentenced to serving time in prison and losing certain freedoms, not to being neglected medically, not at any time. Besides that, it was treating medical providers who determined that this guy should have surgery; it isn't some scam to simply use up tax dollars or something he's electing to do because he expects to get some sick thrill from it. And I say this as the daughter of a retired physician's assistant who worked for years at a maximum security penitentiary and treated people who'd committed crimes as heinous as this guy's. The worst offenders in terms of requesting expensive and unnecessary treatment weren't the sociopaths who kept collections of human remains in mother-of-pearl boxes; they were, in my mother's experience, the drug lords.
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sylvabugg2
I have gone to find myself.....
06:57 PM on 05/18/2012
If it were up to me, murderers, baby rapers and molesters would have no rights, none. They would get what they needed to continue to breathe until their execution, that's it. Also appeals would be limited to three within a given time period. No more 20+ years of appeals. That is an affront and and injustice to the victims.
04:45 PM on 06/24/2012
I get what you're saying,and,if this guy was in prison for fraud,or DUI(without killing anyone),and he had the chance for parole,I'd say let him have the surgery....but he senselessly killed 6 people(and who knows,if he wasn't caught,it could have been many more!)....plus,on top of that,he IS on death row....I'd rather spend 56K on surgery for a prisoner if I knew he was going to get treatment(psychologist,psychiatrist,social worker,meds,etc) to change his ways,and eventually be set free,but why spend 56K on a prisoner already on death row? it's a waste of money!......what prisons NEED to do is put that 56K towards improving security in prison,AND creating more efficient Rehabilitation programs...not everyone can change,but for some people who committed fraud and other minor things,or even for people who killed in self defence,they need much more intense and involved rehab programs....and after anyone goes through a rehab program,they should mandatorily be tested to check for improvement.My ex spent 2 1/2 yrs in prison...when he got out he had to attend AA and anger management for 1 year....but after that,no one evaluated him or anything...he went right back to drinking/gambling the exact day his probation was over....that was SO wrong! in my eyes,he needed much more rehab and supervision.
03:55 PM on 05/18/2012
In my opinion, he doesn't deserve anything. He threw away his rights to be treated fairly and with respect when he murdered 6 people. I believe that one member from each of the six families should be allowed to beat him to death. That way they can have a little closure while saving the taxpayers money.
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Ed Baker
All Hail Big Mother
02:51 PM on 05/18/2012
If it hurts really bad, let's do the humane thing - execute him right away.
02:12 PM on 05/18/2012
Expedite the execution, I know it may seem cruel but it isn't going to stop and 56k is a lot to drop on someone who isn't going to need it once their gone.