‘You can’t be alive. You’re dead!’: ID mix-up led family to remove the wrong man from life support, lawsuit says

Michael Beehler mistaken identity

Clockwise from left: Michael Beehler (KGW/YouTube), PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center in Vancouver, Washington (Google Maps), Beehler’s mistaken death notice (KGW/YouTube).

Two families are suing a Washington state hospital after one family removed a loved one from life support — only to later find out that the man who died was actually their loved one’s roommate.

The bizarre case of mistaken identity occurred in August 2021 at PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center in Vancouver, Washington, according to the lawsuit obtained by Law&Crime. Weeks earlier, on Aug. 8, 2021, 69-year-old David Wells choked on a piece of steak while eating at the group home where he lived. His roommate, Michael Beehler, called 911, and paramedics rushed Wells to the hospital where he was declared brain-dead and put on life support.

But the hospital identified Wells incorrectly, and he was put into the hospital’s system instead under Beehler’s name.

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“PeaceHealth called Plaintiff Beehler’s sister, Plaintiff Debbie Danielson, and forced her to make a life-or-death decision to keep her brother on or take him off life support,” said the lawsuit, filed last month in Clark County Superior Court. “Plaintiff Danielson made the difficult choice to terminate life support for Mr. Wells, believing him to be her brother.”

Danielson spent the next few days alerting other family members of her brother’s death and planning a funeral. There was even a death notice in the local newspaper saying Beehler had died at the age of 60.

But a few days later she made a “shocking discovery,” the lawsuit says: her brother was still very much alive — and on the other end of a phone call.

“I said, ‘You can’t be alive. You’re dead!”” Danielson told Portland, Oregon, NBC affiliate KGW, which first reported about the incident last year.

Authorities retrieved the body from the funeral home and confirmed it to be Wells. The revelation stunned Beehler’s family. And while they were relieved Beehler was still alive, they felt guilty.

“We made life-ending decisions for a person we don’t even know,” Danielson’s husband, Gary Danielson, told KGW.

Thinking back on it, however, Greg Danielson he thought it was odd when the funeral home didn’t require them to identify Beehler’s “body.”

“When we went to the funeral director, I was like, ‘Don’t we need to identify him?’ ‘No, we’ll just take it from here,’” he told the outlet.

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