‘That’s What Hospice Is’: Florida County Official Tells Friend He “Killed’ Grandfather With Prescription Drug Cocktail
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A county official in Florida admitted to “helping” his 90-year-old grandfather by administering a lethal mix of prescription drugs while the elderly man was under home hospice care earlier this year.

Christopher Balter, 35, stepped down from his role as Indian River County’s Planning and Development Services director following his August 3 arrest for dispensing a controlled substance and committing forgery, as reported by WFTV.

The arrest affidavit for Balter revealed that authorities were alerted to the accusations on February 3, two days post the passing of his grandfather, Gilbert Balter. Investigators got wind of the situation through Balter’s friend, Kristen Rutherford, who shared that Balter had informed their group chat about his grandfather’s death and later confessed to her in a phone call that he had “killed” him with his prescribed medications, including Ambien.

Balter further mentioned to her that his grandfather’s imminent cremation would ensure “no evidence would be found of this ever happening.” He described his grandfather as being in a “vegetative” condition, immobile and non-communicative for the last four days.

Rutherford expressed feeling “distraught” over the revelations and was uncertain about her next steps, as she was particularly “terrified of Chris Balter’s connections with the city” of Palm Bay. After contacting investigators, she consented to a “controlled phone call” with Balter, conducted on speakerphone in the presence of law enforcement.

Affidavit for Arrest Warrant by kc wildmoon

The affidavit transcript of that conversation shows Rutherford expressing that she was “freaking out” over their earlier discussion regarding his grandfather.

“Ok, people do that all the time to help people out,” he told her. “That is what hospice is. They load them full of f****** pain meds and ease their way out.”

When Rutherford told him she was still freaked out about it, Balter told her she was “thinking about yourself in this which is very selfish.”

“You called me and aid ‘I killed him’ while you were at a restaurant,” Rutherford says, referring to Balter’s telling her that he was having sushi out after his grandfather’s death.

“I didn’t kill him,” Balter replied. “I helped him out.”

Balter further claimed that his grandfather asked him to do, saying “he didn’t want to be spitting up and spuing on himself like he was.”

The conversation continued for some time, with Balter ultimately telling Rutherford that he “will sleep gladly at night” over what he did.

When investigators contacted the hospice company that provided care for the elder Balter, they learned that he had been a patient since January 6 and that his grandson was his emergency contact. The elder Balter’s son and daughter-in-law were his primary caretakers and legal representative. Gilbert Balter had a full care team assigned to his case — and that two days before his death he was alert, not in a “vegetative” state as his grandson said.

But on the day before his death, he was described as “nonverbal and sleeping, as he was on the morning of his death.

As investigators looked into the case, they paused the planned cremation of the elder Balter’s body. A subsequent autopsy found levels of Balter’s usual prescriptions in his body, along with Ambien — which was his grandson’s prescription and not his.

Further investigation uncovered a quit claim deed submitted to the court by Chris Balter, transferring his grandfather’s property to him. The document was filed on the day the grandfather was admitted to hospice. Kristen Rutherford’s signature was on the document as a witness, but she told investigators that Chris Balter had asked her to notarize the document, already signed by Gilbert Balter, and that she had refused. She denied signing as a witness and said that while she knew the notary who documented the signature, she had not had any contact with her in several years.

Toxicology tests and an autopsy were unable to determine with certainty that the drug cocktail Balter fed his grandfather resulted in his death, so he was charged only with delivering a controlled substance.

Balter posted bond and was released from jail, WFTV said.

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