Las Vegas Review-Journal

Patients seek photos by doctor accused of abuse

N.Y. hospital hasn’t said whether it found pictures

- By David Klepper The Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. — Former patients of a doctor accused of molesting children at Rockefelle­r University Hospital for decades are demanding to know what happened to photos they say the physician took while the abuse was occurring.

The physician, Reginald Archibald, worked at the New York City hospital from 1948 to 1982 as an endocrinol­ogist who specialize­d in childhood growth. Former patients have said that, in addition to molesting them, he would photograph them naked for what he said was scientific research. Archibald died in 2007.

Peter Katsikis had only one appointmen­t with Archibald, in 1969. He said Archibald directed him to remove his clothes, touched him sexually and then took several photos of him in the nude. Katsikis was 12 and said it was his first sexual experience. He wouldn’t tell anyone until he told his wife 26 years later.

The trauma changed him, he said, making him cynical and sometimes short-tempered as an adult. The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are sexual assault victims unless they grant permission.

“I’ve replayed the episode a couple thousand times,” said Katsikis, now 61, who lives in North Carolina. “It took me a couple years to sort things out as to what truly happened. I didn’t know anything about sex at 12 years old. When I got older I started to get angry, because I realized he took away my innocence.”

The hospital has acknowledg­ed that Archibald’s conduct with patients was “inappropri­ate” and has hired a law firm to investigat­e. Hospital officials have not, however, said whether any of the photograph­s were found in hospital records. Attorneys for former patients say more than 1,000 children may have been victimized.

The former patients and their attorneys held a news conference Tuesday in front of the hospital to demand more informatio­n about the whereabout­s of the photos. The group says that if the hospital cannot say where the photos are, then it should ask the state attorney general to begin its own investigat­ion into the records.

Questions about the whereabout­s of the photos continues to haunt many of the former patients, according to Michael Pfau, an attorney with the Seattle-based firm of Pfau Cochran Vertetis Amala, who is representi­ng about 100 former patients.

The thought that the photos are now circulatin­g as child pornograph­y compounds his clients’ pain and fear, Pfau said.

A spokesman for the hospital declined to comment when asked about the photos Monday.

The hospital wrote to Archibald’s former patients in September asking about their experience­s and in October released a statement that it had discovered that Archibald “engaged in certain inappropri­ate conduct during patient examinatio­ns.”

The hospital also said it notified authoritie­s when it received a report in 2004 about Archibald’s conduct. It says it changed some pediatric policies after an investigat­ion at that time determined that “certain” of the allegation­s were credible.

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