‘Dr Death’ Jayant Patel arrives in Australia to face charges

By Neena Bhandari, IANS,

Sydney : Families and former patients of “Dr Death” Jayant Patel heaved a sigh of relief as he arrived in Brisbane Monday after being extradited from the US to face charges for 13 offences, including manslaughter, causing grievous bodily harm and fraud.


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The offences relate to his employment as director of surgery at the Bundaberg Base Hospital in Queensland between 2003 and 2005.

“Obviously the fact that he has arrived back here has been a huge weight lifted. We always kept the faith. We always knew it was going to happen. We never wavered in that faith even through all of the hiccups we have had, so we’ve always been very positive that that would be the end result,” Bundaberg Hospital Patients Support Group spokeswoman Beryl Crosby told the Australian Associated Press (AAP).

The 58-year-old doctor, dressed in jeans and mustard shirt, and his police escorts were the last to disembark from the Qantas flight from Los Angeles Monday morning. He was briefly placed in an airport security lounge, before being whisked away in a police motorcade to the Brisbane Watchouse in Queensland capital’s central business district.

Three years and four months since concerns were first raised about his botched surgeries, in what is probably the most anticipated court appearance, Patel’s bail hearing began at the Brisbane Magistrate’s Court Monday afternoon.

Judy Kemps, whose husband was a patient of Patel and died after being operated on in December 2004, told AAP: “I’m very apprehensive about it but I’m very excited that after all that hard years of work and everything that at last he is here.”

An India-born US citizen, Patel had on June 26 voluntarily agreed to his extradition to stand trial in Australia. US District Court Judge Dennis Hubel had set a deadline for Australian and US authorities to extradite Patel by July 21.

“I think people would understand that there are very serious charges, there will be many times when this matter will come before the courts before we see a formal committal hearing and beyond that a full trial,” Queensland Premier Anna Bligh told ABC Radio.

Patel, banned from surgery in two US states, was employed at the regional Bundaberg Base hospital for Australian $200,000 ($195,000) per annum in 2003. In late 2003, he was promoted to director of surgery at the hospital. On April 1, 2005, Patel’s bosses signed on a $3,547 business-class, one-way air fare for him to travel to the US despite him being neck-deep in accusations of fatal incompetence.

Welcoming Patel’s return to Queensland, Federal Home Affairs Minister Bob Debus told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) that it shows the importance of international cooperation in making sure people cannot evade justice by crossing borders.

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