Bluffton care home death lawsuit heads to jury trial

Summary

A jury will hear claims that a Bluffton memory care facility failed to prevent a resident with dementia from leaving before his death.

Why this matters

The case will test how a jury applies staffing and safety responsibilities at a memory care facility when a resident with a known wandering risk leaves unnoticed. It also highlights the legal and operational standards families may expect from assisted living providers.

A Beaufort County jury is expected to begin hearing a wrongful death lawsuit Monday over the 2023 disappearance and death of a 79-year-old resident of The Palmettos of Bluffton.

The suit, filed in 2024 by the family of Jack Tribble, names the assisted living facility and its parent company, National Healthcare Corporation, which operates the Bluffton home and more than 100 other facilities nationwide.

According to court filings, Tribble, who had Lewy body dementia and a history of wandering, left the memory care unit on the evening of Aug. 23, 2023, by following a contracting employee through a keypad-locked door. The lawsuit alleges staff gave contractors the door code, at least two employees saw Tribble outside but did not stop him, and staff did not realize for about three hours that he was missing.

Tribble’s body was found Sept. 6, 2023, in a swampy area less than a half-mile from the facility near the intersection of S.C. 170 and Bluffton Parkway, police said. A coroner’s report found he had died two days earlier. An autopsy cited acute bronchopneumonia caused by environmental exposure, according to court filings.

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