Tag: Accused

  • Trial Of Doctor Accused Of Poisoning 30 Patients Begins In France

    Trial Of Doctor Accused Of Poisoning 30 Patients Begins In France

    A French doctor accused of intentionally poisoning 30 child and adult patients, 12 of whom died, went on trial Monday, saying before the hearing he was not responsible for the “distress” of his alleged victims and their families.

    Frederic Pechier, 53, worked as an anaesthetist at two clinics in the eastern city of Besancon when patients went into cardiac arrest in suspicious circumstances between 2008 to 2017. Twelve could not be resuscitated.

    He is accused of triggering heart attacks in patients so he could show off his resuscitation skills and discredit co-workers.

    Pechier’s youngest alleged victim, a four-year-old identified as Teddy, survived two cardiac arrests during a routine tonsil operation in 2016. The doctor’s oldest alleged victim was 89.

    The trial caps an eight-year investigation that stunned the medical community. Pechier has denied the charges.

    Pechier was greeted on his arrival at the court by several relatives, including one who shouted: “Come on, Fredo.”

    “It’s necessary to lay all the cards on the table,” Pechier told broadcaster RTL earlier Monday, adding that he had “strong arguments” in his defence.

    Asked about the suffering of the families who will attend the trial, set to last until December, Pechier replied: “I understand it completely, but on the other hand, I am not responsible for their distress.”

    Pechier, a father of three, faces life imprisonment if convicted. He is not currently in custody but under judicial supervision, an alternative to pre-trial detention.

    Pechier has not practised medicine since 2017, even though in 2023, he was authorised to work provided he does not come into contact with patients.

    “I’ve been waiting for this for 17 years,” said Amandine Iehlen, whose 53-year-old father died of cardiac arrest during kidney surgery in 2008.

    An autopsy revealed an overdose of lidocaine, a local anaesthetic.

    Prosecutor Etienne Manteaux has said the case is “unprecedented in French legal history”.

    An investigation was opened in 2017 after suspicious cardiac arrests during operations on patients considered low-risk.

    Pechier is suspected of tampering with his colleagues’ paracetamol bags or anaesthesia pouches to create operating room emergencies where he could intervene to show off his resuscitating talents.

    “What he is accused of is poisoning healthy patients in order to harm colleagues with whom he was in conflict,” Manteaux said.

    “Frederic Pechier was the first responder when cardiac arrest occurred,” he added. “He always had a solution.”

    Pechier has blamed “medical errors” by his colleagues for most of the poisonings.

    Some colleagues described Pechier as a “star anaesthetist”, while others said he came across as arrogant and manipulative.

    One co-worker claimed Pechier was “certain he was the best” and liked to “think of himself as Zorro”.

    Over the course of the inquiry, investigators examined more than 70 reports of “serious adverse events”, medical jargon for unexpected complications or deaths among patients.

    The cases of 30 patients who suffered cardiac arrest during surgery at the Saint-Vincent Clinic and the Franche-Comte Polyclinic made it to trial.

    He has criticised the investigation. “What happened to the other cases? They were not retained because Pechier was not involved in them,” he said.

    His defence team will argue for acquittal.

    “It’s very easy to accuse people, it’s harder to prove things,” one of his lawyers, Randall Schwerdorffer, told reporters.

    More than 150 civil parties will be represented at the trial.

    For the first two weeks, the court will examine Pechier’s most recent cases, those that aroused the investigators’ suspicions and led to the anaesthetist being placed under investigation in 2017.

    Afterwards each of the poisonings attributed to the doctor will be examined.

    “It’s going to be a legal marathon, but we’re ready,” Stephane Giuranna, a lawyer for several civil parties, told AFP.

    “All roads lead to Pechier.”



    ‘I just want people to listen for once,’ Frederic Pechier said in an interview


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  • No Jail for Texas Mom Accused of Medical Child Abuse in Munchausen by Proxy Case

    No Jail for Texas Mom Accused of Medical Child Abuse in Munchausen by Proxy Case

    A Texas mom accused of medical child abuse in an alleged Munchausen by proxy case will face no jail time after a grand jury determined she was not faking the conditions her child has.

    Jessica Gasser had been facing charges of injury to a child and medical child abuse until her child was able to be “independently and repeatedly” diagnosed by doctors with gastroparesis and hypoglycemia, according to a press release obtained by Law&Crime.

    In what officials had claimed was a case of Munchausen by proxy, investigators in Tarrant County, Texas, alleged that Gasser had medical professionals perform “unnecessary medical procedures,” Fox 4 reported at the time of her arrest in July 2023.



    The allegations came after months of investigation following doctors’ concerns about Gasser taking her then-3-year-old child to multiple medical facilities in different states. According to court documents obtained by the outlet at the time, she allegedly told a doctor her daughter did not have gastroparesis despite listing it on a different form.

    However, Gasser’s attorneys say that the allegations arose after officials and professionals allegedly bought into a “so-called epidemic of Munchausen child abuse” for their personal benefit. The attorneys allegedly uncovered texts and emails where various professionals “boasted that they could become famous on a news program like 60 Minutes for ‘saving’ Jessica’s child,” according to the press release.

    The Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, who was named by attorneys as one of the bodies allegedly “essentially monetizing” Gasser’s case, declined to comment about the decision to WFAA, saying, “We respect the grand jury’s decision.”

    After the grand jury decision and a case by Child Protective Services was also dropped, Gasser and her husband were reunited with their daughter, who is now almost 4.

    “Any normal parent would do exactly as I did,” Gasser told WFAA. “If no one was helping your child, what would you do? You would go to somebody else who would. That is all I did.”

    Originally published on Latin Times

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  • Arizona Pastor Accused of Medicaid Fraud After Submitting False Claims Worth Millions: Attorney General

    Arizona Pastor Accused of Medicaid Fraud After Submitting False Claims Worth Millions: Attorney General

    An Arizona pastor has been indicted alongside 16 others in a sweeping Medicaid fraud case, accused of helping funnel millions in state healthcare funds through fake rehab claims and laundering the proceeds through his church, state officials announced.

    A grand jury indicted 17 individuals and two organizations, including Hope of Life International Church and its pastor, Theodore Mucuranyana. Authorities allege that from August 2022 to July 2023, co-defendants Desire Rusingizwa and Fabrice Mvuyekure used their business, Happy House Behavioral Health, to submit more than $60 million in fraudulent Medicaid claims, according to AZ Central.



    Prosecutors allege that the company billed for services to patients who were deceased, incarcerated or hospitalized—and funneled more than $5 million to the church as the investigation loomed.

    Most defendants were scheduled to be arraigned between May 20 and May 27. Mucuranyana and the church face money laundering charges, while Happy House has been suspended from the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System. Assets including luxury goods and properties are now subject to seizure as part of ongoing investigations.

    The pastor’s lawyer told 12 News that he knew “nothing” about the alleged fraud.

    Since Attorney General Kris Mayes took office in early 2023, over 100 people across 14 cases have been charged following accusations of exploiting the system—largely by billing for nonexistent alcohol and drug rehabilitation services,

    Officials say more indictments could follow as investigations continue into how widespread the misuse of state funds may be.

    Originally published on Latin Times

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  • Dad Dies Year After Brain Tumor Diagnosis, Doctor Initially Dismissed Symptoms As Stress, Accused Him Of Faking

    Dad Dies Year After Brain Tumor Diagnosis, Doctor Initially Dismissed Symptoms As Stress, Accused Him Of Faking

    A 53-year-old U.K. man with troubling signs, including headaches and jumbled speech, was initially dismissed as stressed. His doctor even accused him of faking symptoms before being diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumor. A year later, he died. Now, his daughter is running a marathon to raise awareness and money for cancer research.

    Stephen Blakeston, from Hull, England, started experiencing massive headaches and was jumbling up sentences when his wife noticed the symptoms and took him to a doctor in October 2010.

    “I couldn’t believe it when we visited the GP, who dismissed his symptoms as stress-related and even said he was faking, something I know my dad wouldn’t do,” Blakeston’s daughter Hollie Rhodes recollected.

    Blakeston later got a CT scan done and realized that a tumor was growing on the left side of his brain, which was affecting his speech. He underwent surgery soon, and a biopsy confirmed that the tumor was a glioblastoma, a fast-growing, incurable cancer, leaving him with just 12-18 months to live.

    After the surgery, Blakeston underwent intensive radiotherapy and two rounds of chemotherapy to halt the growth of the tumor and scans showed no signs of further regrowth.

    However, around 9 months later, Blakeston suddenly collapsed and died after a blood clot, believed to be related to his treatment, or the tumor traveled to his heart.

    “It was horrible for us to lose him so suddenly, but there is some comfort in knowing it was quick and likely the way he would have wanted to go. I’ll always miss hearing his laugh,” Rhodes said.

    Glioblastoma is a fairly common form of brain tumor, with more than 13,000 Americans are diagnosed with it every year. The symptoms vary but often include persistent headaches, nausea, confusion, memory loss, and personality changes. Other signs to watch out for include vision problems, speech difficulties, muscle weakness, and seizures, especially in those without a history of them.

    “It’s the biggest cancer killer of children and adults under 40, so it should absolutely be a priority to stop these deaths. It almost feels like people view brain tumors as a final prognosis. That whole narrative needs to change because more funding in research would bring hope to those impacted,” said Rhodes, who is running the London Marathon to raise money for Brain Tumor Research.

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  • Texas Doctor Accused of Being High During Surgeries Loses License After Testing Positive for Cocaine

    Texas Doctor Accused of Being High During Surgeries Loses License After Testing Positive for Cocaine

    A Houston urologist had his medical license revoked after testing positive for cocaine, following previous allegations of him performing surgeries under the influence.

    Dr. Nathan Robert Starke reportedly exhibited signs of impairment while consulting a patient before a prostate biopsy in August 2024. Records indicated he was absent for all but three minutes of one surgical procedure, despite being the attending physician, as reported by KTRK.

    By September, Houston Methodist had suspended him and later confirmed that he was no longer working at the hospital.

    After the Texas Medical Board to suspend his license in September, drug tests submitted in October indicated the presence of cocaine and kratom in Starke’s system. Kratom is a controversial supplement often associated with energy boosts and managing withdrawal symptoms, as reported by ABC13.



    Since earning his medical license in 2017, Starke’s legal troubles shadowed his career. Within a month of being licensed, he was arrested for driving under the influence. His record also includes a 2023 charge for assaulting a former girlfriend, leaving her with a chipped tooth and bruises.

    These incidents raised red flags about his fitness to practice, leading to mandated drug and alcohol screenings last year.

    “You are putting people’s lives in your hands,” a former patient told ABC13.

    Starke previously served as the head of the men’s health clinic, a position he held until the recent suspension. The hospital has since erased his profile. Houston Methodist’s Fannin Street location, where Starke performed surgeries, is currently listed online as “permanently closed.”

    What’s next for the doctor remains unclear, yet FOX26 reported that he could get his license back.

    Substance use was the leading cause of actions against U.S. physicians’ licenses, comprising 76.3% of cases between 2004 and 2020, a 2022 study found.

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