Las Vegas Review-Journal

Two judges put hurt on injury expert

- COMMENTARY

IN a victory for personal injury attorneys in Las Vegas, two local judges took the unusual step of banning Dr. Derek Duke from testifying as an expert witness in two cases, finding him biased against personal injury plaintiffs.

Duke, a Las Vegas neurosurge­on, earns about $1 million a year giving second opinions in lawsuits. He testifies on behalf of insurance companies.

On March 20, after 11 days of hearings, District Judge Timothy Williams ordered that Duke could not testify in a personal injury case filed by Mitch Wilson.

In a scathing 35-page opinion, Williams found “Dr. Duke’s medical opinions are personal and his methodolog­y unreliable. The Court further finds that Dr. Duke’s medical opinions rely heavily on speculatio­n and other irrelevant factors.”

Williams said Duke couldn’t testify because of “a history of personal bias as to some treating physicians and extreme bias resulting in prejudice against personal injury plaintiffs.”

It’s unusual that a judge would take 11 days to make a full record about an expert witness’s qualificat­ions.

Williams is a former personal injury attorney, but he’s not the only judge to declare that Duke’s testimony is biased. District Judge Mark Denton disqualifi­ed Duke from testifying in an unrelated personal injury case in 2015, also finding him biased.

Williams’ opinion detailed an evaluation of 371 of Duke’s reports. They showed that Duke disagreed with the treating doctor about 95 percent of the time and that 86 percent of the time he found there was no injury or a sprain when the treating doctor concluded there was an injury or more than a sprain or strain.

In Duke’s case notes, he badmouthed other doctors and blamed plaintiffs’ injuries on mental or psychologi­cal conditions, although he is not a psychologi­st.

“The Court notes that on the very first day of his testimony, Dr. Duke informed the Court of his ability to diagnose and treat depression and anxiety without the need for neuropsych­ological testing, and often merely by talking with him,” the opinion said.

Duke sometimes tells the plaintiffs they should use other treatment plans. He asks about litigation and comments on the weakness of the case, which is beyond the scope of his role as a supposedly independen­t examiner, according to Williams’ opinion.

The record showed that in one case, Duke described a doctor as “overtly unethical” and “unprofessi­onal.”

Duke once wrote, “The reputation of Las Vegas spine surgeons nationally is quite poor” and that the treating doctor was “blatantly pandering to those seeking to inflate the economic value of litigation.”

In case you’ve forgotten, the FBI and the U.S. attorney’s office spent years trying to prove exactly what Duke said, but with little success.

The investigat­ion became public in 2008.

They obtained conviction­s or pleas from an attorney, a neurosurge­on and a medical consultant but failed to prove a massive conspiracy between lawyers and doctors trying to run up costs of injuries to drive up the costs of settlement­s.

Duke believed the conspiracy existed. But without proof, federal officials couldn’t prove the existence of a “Medical Mafia.”

In a third personal injury case involving Richard Greene, attorney Dennis Prince is taking the unusual step of suing Duke, alleging that he is part of a civil conspiracy with Allstate Insurance and that the spine surgeon intentiona­lly interfered with

MORRISON Firefighte­rs simulate a rescue in churning water conditions of a wash Wednesday at Wet ’n’ Wild Las Vegas. Story and video online: reviewjour­nal.com/flood_rescue

For example, in 2015, defendants Channing Williams, 27, and Maurice Lewis, 22, are accused of stealing a 2006 Ford F-250 in Las Vegas and selling it for $12,500. The car’s approximat­e value was $21,364. A year later, Williams and Casey Walters, 25, allegedly stole a 2016 Ford F-150 from an Enterprise rental car location in Las Vegas, then sold it on Craigslist in California for $10,000 less than the vehicle’s approximat­e

value. Other vehicles were stolen from Hertz or Enterprise rental companies in California and then sold in Nevada.

More than 30 stolen cars were referenced in the indictment, which estimates the total value of the stolen vehicles to be over $1 million.

The reputed gang members allegedly used Twitter and Instagram to communicat­e about their criminal activities.

The defendants “posted comments onsocialme­diasitessu­chasinstag­ram, bragging about their criminal activities, and including posting

photograph­s of themselves possessing large amounts of unlawfully obtained cash,” the indictment states.

The defendants are expected to be extradited to U.S. District Court in Nevada for prosecutio­n. Federal prosecutor­s also are seeking a court order that would require the defendants to forfeit at least $1.05 million in funds as compensati­on for their crimes.

Contact Jenny Wilson at jenwilson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-384-8710. Follow @jennydwils­on on Twitter.

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