Amjad and Amer Latif admitted 14
offences after a snap inspection horrified investigators and led to a court
order to close the home, Mossley Manor, in Mossley Hill, south Liverpool.
They were called in by a woman
who took her mother out of the home just two hours after first arriving.
Inspectors from watchdog the Care
Quality Commission (CQC) gagged at the overpowering stench inside the dirty and
dangerous home, which charged a minimum of £1,000 per month to look after each
of its 43 residents, many funded by the taxpayer.
It is not known how long
residents had been forced to live in such squalor.
The brothers admitted at an
earlier hearing failing to notify authorities about the deaths of 10 residents
at the home, failing to inform the CQC of three serious incidents, failing to
provide safe care and exposing residents to "significant" risk and
harm.
Amjad, 56, who lives in a £1
million house in Bowdon, Cheshire, and Amer, 47, who lives in a £1.2 million
gated house on a tree-lined street in Woolton, south Liverpool, pleaded guilty
to 14 charges in all, between April 14 and June 2015.
The home and grounds are now on
the market for £2.7 million.
Only Amjad appeared in the dock
for sentencing at Liverpool Magistrates' Court, as a representative of the
partnership running the business.
District Judge Andrew Shaw shook
his head as Jenny Ashworth, prosecuting, outlined the catalogue of offences,
saying the home was "depressing, unhygienic and unsafe".
Before passing sentence, Judge
Shaw said he had read the "harrowing" prosecution case papers.
He said: "It was a
distressing experience and emotionally I felt both a degree of incredulity and
anger that the residents in this home were so betrayed by the individuals paid
to look after them and deriving a considerable amount for doing so.
"This was a lack-of-care
home, not a care home."
Earlier, Miss Ashworth told the
court: "The defendants received significant income from the operation of
this care home, £1,000 per month per service user.
"The defendants were
regularly on site, the two brothers had an office at the location.
"The defendants must have
seen the state of the premises and should have acted.
"The dignity of these
elderly and vulnerable service users was compromised."
Conditions only came to light as
a result of the CQC inspections in May and June 2015.
Inspectors found there was no hot
water, toilets were dirty and there was a risk of infections spreading.
There was not enough staff, they
were not trained and some who were employed had criminal convictions while
looking after elderly and vulnerable residents.
The premises were badly
maintained and unsafe, some windows did not close properly and there were fire
hazards, with residents smoking in the home, with cigarette butts and ash on
furniture and carpets.
Residents were also put to bed at
6pm as there were no activities, nothing for them to do and TVs did not work.
Inspectors also reported an
"overpowering" smell of stale urine and body odour and some
residents, some incontinent, had not been given a bath or shower for at least
four weeks.
A member of staff told
inspectors: "Some of the bedrooms are like a prison cell."
All 43 residents were rehoused by
the local authority.
It is only the fourth prosecution
by the CQC since the watchdog was given new powers to prosecute care home
owners.
Kevin Donnelly, defending, said
the brothers were educated men with professional qualifications and other
business interests.
They inherited the home from
their late father in 2002, and decided to take over running the business, an
"unwise" decision as they had no idea what running a care home
entailed, complacency set in and they failed to take sufficient interest in the
enterprise.
Mr Donnelly said the findings of
the inspectors came as a "great shock" and they were genuinely
remorseful.
"They don't intend to
operate in this sector again," he added.
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt
welcomed the prosecution but the Government is under pressure to provide more
cash as councils struggle to pay fees for residential care and homes close as
they are making losses.
Barbara Keeley MP, Labour's
shadow minister for social care and mental health, said: "There are wider
questions for the Government on just how this level of neglectful care was
allowed to develop unchecked.
"The Government must ensure
our care system does not allow standards to fall to the level found at this
care home, leaving residents exposed to harm and neglect."
The Latifs were also ordered to pay £1,509.72p in
court costs.
SOURCE: Belfast Telegraph
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