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Family spent a year looking for daughter after hospital said she checked herself out — but she was dead the whole time: lawsuit

Pictured: Jessie Peterson Jessie Petersonâs family spent a year searching for her after they were told that she had checked herself out of a California hospital against medical advice â before they learned that she had been dead all along. The 31-year-old died in the care of Mercy San Juan medical center in Sacramento in April 2023. The hospital shipped her body to a storage facility and did not inform her mother and sisters. The family only learned her fate the following April after months of trying to find her, according to a civil lawsuit against the hospital. In the lawsuit, filed earlier this month, the family described the hospitalâs conduct as âmalicious and outrageousâ and accused the facility of negligence, the negligent handling of a corpse and negligent infliction of emotional distress. âMercy San Juan hospital failed in its most fundamental duty to notify Jessieâs family of her death,â the lawsuit states. âMercy San Juan stored Jessie in an off-site warehouse morgue and she was left to decompose for nearly a year while her family relentlessly inquired about her whereabouts.â Peterson, whom her family described in the lawsuit as âloving and energeticâ, had type 1 diabetes. She was experiencing a diabetic episode when she was admitted to Mercy San Juan on 6 April 2023. Her mother, Ginger Congi, stated that Peterson had called her two days later asking for a ride because she would be leaving the hospital, according to the lawsuit.

Jessie Peterson, 31, died at the Mercy San Juan Medical Center, just outside Sacramento, in April last year after admitting herself for treatment for her long-diagnosed Type 1 diabetes, according to a negligence suit filed this month.

Her grief-stricken relatives, however, claim the hospital failed to inform them about her death and instead quickly shipped her body off to its storage facility, where she would lie forgotten in a freezer for months.

They only recently learned of Peterson’s fate after spending a painstaking year reporting her missing to cops, posting flyers, calling friends and canvassing the area she frequented in a bid to track her down, court papers charge.

“Mercy San Juan stored Jessie in an off-site warehouse morgue and she was left to decompose for nearly a year while her family relentlessly inquired about her whereabouts,” the lawsuit states.

By that time, Peterson’s body was “so decomposed that an open casket funeral was not feasible” and her fingerprints couldn’t be obtained for any keepsakes, the lawsuit says.

Her remains were also “so discolored that her tattoos could not be identified,” stated the lawsuit seeking $5 million in damages.

According to the suit, Peterson had checked herself into the hospital on April 6, 2023, after experiencing a flare-up tied to her diabetes — a condition she was diagnosed with at 10 and was regularly treated for.

She called her mom, Ginger Congi, two days later and asked to be picked up, according to the suit.

But when the mother arrived at the hospital, she was allegedly informed that Peterson’s medical records showed she’d checked herself out against medical advice on April 8.

Peterson’s mom and two sisters “relentlessly” began searching for their missing relative over the next few months, the suit says.

Then, more than a year after her family was led to believe she had vanished, a Sacramento County sheriff’s detective reached out on April 12 to inform them that her body had been located in one of Mercy San Juan’s off-site storage facilities, according to court docs.

Peterson’s death certificate — which wasn’t signed until April this year, when her body was located — lists that she died from “cardiopulmonary arrest” at age 31, the suit states.

Her loved ones claim they weren’t able to do an autopsy to rule out any alleged medical malpractice because it took a year to be informed of her death.

Peterson’s death certificate — which wasn’t signed until April this year, when her body was located — lists that she died from “cardiopulmonary arrest” at age 31, the suit states.

“Defendants’ failure to issue a timely certificate of death, failure to notify Jessie’s next of kin, failure to allow an autopsy, and mishandling of Jessie’s remains [was] negligent, careless, and heartless,” the lawsuit states.

“While a patient that doesn’t survive may be just another lifeless body to Mercy San Juan hospital, Jessie was a family member, daughter, and sister, all of whom deserved the dignity and respect Mercy San Juan grossly failed to provide.”

Her family is seeking more than $5 million in damages.

The Post reached out to Dignity Health, which operates Mercy San Juan, but didn’t hear back immediately.

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