Power Company Shut Off His Electricity — Ruining $18,000 of Life-Saving Medication ⚖️
The courtroom grew quiet as the judge read the case summary.
.
.
.

A power company had shut off a man’s electricity—
destroying $18,000 worth of life-saving medication.
The plaintiff, Daniel Reyes, was a 41-year-old man living with a rare autoimmune disorder. His medication had to be stored at a precise temperature, monitored constantly, and replaced every 30 days. Without it, his immune system would begin attacking his own organs.
Daniel depended on electricity to stay alive.
One Friday evening, without warning, the power went out.
No knock.
No call.
No final notice.
By the time Daniel realized what had happened, the refrigerator alarm was screaming. The temperature had already risen past the safe threshold. He called the power company repeatedly, explaining that he had refrigerated medication that could not be replaced quickly.
He begged.
Power wasn’t restored until three days later.
By then, every vial was ruined.
$18,000 gone.
Insurance refused to cover the loss.
His next dose was weeks away.
The power company denied responsibility.
They claimed Daniel had an “outstanding balance” of $312 and that automated systems had executed the shutoff lawfully. Their lawyer argued that customers were “responsible for protecting personal property.”
That’s when the judge leaned forward.
“Was your company aware,” the judge asked, “that this customer was medically dependent on electricity?”
The lawyer hesitated.
Records showed Daniel had filed three medical dependency forms over the past two years. Each one approved. Each one acknowledged by the utility.
Emails revealed internal notes labeling his account: Critical — No Shutoff.
Someone ignored it.
Worse still, the shutoff occurred during extreme heat, in violation of state utility regulations.
The judge’s voice sharpened.
“You didn’t just turn off electricity,” he said.
“You turned off a man’s access to survival.”
The courtroom was silent.
The judge ruled swiftly.
The power company was ordered to:
Pay full replacement costs for the medication
Cover medical monitoring expenses caused by missed doses
Compensate Daniel for emotional distress
Pay punitive damages for reckless disregard of medical safety
He also ordered the utility regulator to open an investigation.
Then the judge looked directly at Daniel.
“Mr. Reyes,” he said firmly, “electricity is not a luxury when it keeps someone alive. Your life is not an acceptable line item in a billing system.”
Gavel down.
Outside the courtroom, Daniel stood quietly, relief washing over him. The medication would be replaced. His treatment restored. His dignity affirmed.
And the message was unmistakable:
When corporations forget the human cost of their decisions,
the law remembers.
And justice does not blink.