Birmingham Post

Doctor jailed after he groped female patient Woman ‘frozen with shock’ after sexual assault in surgery

- Ross McCarthy Court Correspond­ent

AGP has been jailed for groping a woman’s breasts after she visited a walk-in surgery fearing she was suffering from a heart attack.

Dr Rajeshkuma­r Mehta, 64, of Dale Meadow Close, Coventry, also asked the victim intimate questions.

The medic, who had previously been found guilty of sexual assault following a trial at Birmingham Crown Court, was sentenced to 15 months in jail. He was also ordered to register as a sex offender for ten years.

The court heard that the doctor had been working for a short time at Sparkhill Primary Care and Community Centre, in Birmingham, on an ad hoc basis.

On May 10, 2016, a woman had come to the walk-in centre complainin­g of sensations to her body which she could not identify.

She was suffering from anxiety and was concerned she might be experienci­ng the early stages of a heart attack.

Mehta took down some details, then asked her to lie down on the diagnostic couch.

She unbuttoned her blouse in anticipati­on of the examinatio­n but the GP pulled down her vest and bra, exposing her breasts and fondling them.

The victim was “frozen shock”, the court was told.

After she challenged Mehta he stopped what he was doing and moved away.

But it was obvious he had obtained sexual gratificat­ion from what he had done.

Mehta then asked her questions about her personal life and with sexual partners, making her uncomforta­ble.

The mother-of-two did not complain straight away but, after speaking to one of her daughters, went back to the surgery and reported what had happened to her.

Judge Kristina Montgomery QC told Mehta: “She looked to you for profession­alism, care and concern – and you returned that request by abusing her.

“This was a patient in a particular­ly vulnerable state, anxious, confused and frightened by her symptomato­logy and you utilised that, in my view, to carry out a sexual assault upon her without fearing at that time that she would be physically and mentally robust enough to defend herself and complain about you after the event.”

The judge said she that the doctor was of feel accepted previous good character and had health difficulti­es, but he had shown no remorse and continued to deny the offence.

She also said the victim’s education had been disrupted and that family relationsh­ips had become strained.

Scott Avill, defending, said Mehta had been in practice for nearly four decades and there had been no suggestion of any previous inappropri­ate behaviour.

“The consequenc­es of this conviction have been devastatin­g for him and for his family,” he said.

“He had planned to work as an ad hoc locum up to the age of 70. That opportunit­y has now gone.

“He has lost entirely his reputation. He was an enormously respected individual enjoying a successful career.

“That career is, of course, now in tatters, and he will inevitably be struck off.”

 ??  ?? > Dr Rajeshkuma­r Mehta was jailed for 15 months
> Dr Rajeshkuma­r Mehta was jailed for 15 months

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