A wrongful death action filed in 2011 — about two weeks after the first two suits — alleges that a woman, who was quadriplegic, died in 2008 while a staff member attempted to move her. The staff member sat the woman on the edge of the bed without restraint or support and then walked away. The woman then fell from the bed onto the floor. She died of her injuries nine days later, the suit says.

A jury later found that the nursing home company was negligent in the woman’s care but did not find that the damages should be paid to the woman’s estate.

A fourth suit, filed in June 2011, says a resident died after falling while riding in a company van and becoming brain-dead when nursing home staff failed to properly care for her.

A 73-year-old woman was admitted to the nursing home for rehabilitation in 2009 after she fell at home. When she was released from the Wyoming Medical Center on Oct. 8 of that year, she was able to move on her own, was fully cognizant and had no concussion symptoms, the suit states. The nursing home sent an assistant janitor to pick her up from the hospital and drive her to the facility, but the janitor failed to fully secure the woman’s wheelchair in the back of the van. The nursing home had certified the janitor to transport patients, but he had never done so before.