Anonymous wrote:The mom and the sister of the deceased knew full well she was a drug addict and had been for years before she met the good doctor. They also knew what she was doing with the doctor 6 months before she died. And they didn’t do anything to stop it - no intervention, no call to the police, etc. BS that the sister waits for her to die and then gathers all the evidence for the cops.
Anonymous wrote:So, he became her drug dealer and fueled her drug addiction in order to manipulate her into a sexual relationship. He is a disgusting animal and predator. Fingers crossed the other inmates in jail handle him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mom and the sister of the deceased knew full well she was a drug addict and had been for years before she met the good doctor. They also knew what she was doing with the doctor 6 months before she died. And they didn’t do anything to stop it - no intervention, no call to the police, etc. BS that the sister waits for her to die and then gathers all the evidence for the cops.
There’s really not much you can do when someone is an addict. Interventions don’t work. The police can’t really do much over a he said/she said situation. Unfortunately most of the time all you can do is watch and let them face the consequences of their actions, and sadly in this case the consequences were severe.
I am curious why the staff didn’t report his to the licensing board.
Anonymous wrote:Oh my gosh! He did my daughter’s lip and tongue tie, he was SO nice, we thought he was great. Holy crap! It sounds like it was an accidental overdose vs him intentionally giving her bad drugs, but wow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not shocked re:the drugs. My friend is married to an anesthesiologist and they do ketamine recreationally.
Odd and rare. I am an anesthesiologist, and I know no drug users now. In the past, I have had a few associates that had problems with drugs, they either retired, died, or got help. Recreational ketamine is unlikely because addiction follows shortly.
Anonymous wrote:The mom and the sister of the deceased knew full well she was a drug addict and had been for years before she met the good doctor. They also knew what she was doing with the doctor 6 months before she died. And they didn’t do anything to stop it - no intervention, no call to the police, etc. BS that the sister waits for her to die and then gathers all the evidence for the cops.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mom and the sister of the deceased knew full well she was a drug addict and had been for years before she met the good doctor. They also knew what she was doing with the doctor 6 months before she died. And they didn’t do anything to stop it - no intervention, no call to the police, etc. BS that the sister waits for her to die and then gathers all the evidence for the cops.
There’s really not much you can do when someone is an addict. Interventions don’t work. The police can’t really do much over a he said/she said situation. Unfortunately most of the time all you can do is watch and let them face the consequences of their actions, and sadly in this case the consequences were severe.
I am curious why the staff didn’t report his to the licensing board.
Anonymous wrote:The mom and the sister of the deceased knew full well she was a drug addict and had been for years before she met the good doctor. They also knew what she was doing with the doctor 6 months before she died. And they didn’t do anything to stop it - no intervention, no call to the police, etc. BS that the sister waits for her to die and then gathers all the evidence for the cops.
Anonymous wrote:The mom and the sister of the deceased knew full well she was a drug addict and had been for years before she met the good doctor. They also knew what she was doing with the doctor 6 months before she died. And they didn’t do anything to stop it - no intervention, no call to the police, etc. BS that the sister waits for her to die and then gathers all the evidence for the cops.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not shocked re:the drugs. My friend is married to an anesthesiologist and they do ketamine recreationally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not shocked re:the drugs. My friend is married to an anesthesiologist and they do ketamine recreationally.
Odd and rare. I am an anesthesiologist, and I know no drug users now. In the past, I have had a few associates that had problems with drugs, they either retired, died, or got help. Recreational ketamine is unlikely because addiction follows shortly.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not shocked re:the drugs. My friend is married to an anesthesiologist and they do ketamine recreationally.
. Thank goodness his other kids are grown, but my heart breaks for them too.