Los Angeles Times

Man accused of impersonat­ing doctor

- By Kristina Davis kristina.davis@sduniontri­bune.com Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A man who said he was an anesthesio­logist at Sharp Grossmont Hospital and a graduate of Harvard Medical School was arrested last week on suspicion of impersonat­ion after he was found in the hospital’s doctors lounge, according to police and hospital officials.

When hospital security approached Zaid Bassam Jeorge, 27, he was dressed in blue scrubs and a white physician’s coat bearing the Sharp logo and the name “Zaid Jorge, MD Anesthesio­logist,” according to a hospital security alert obtained by the San Diego Union-Tribune. He also had a stethoscop­e, a cellphone with Arabic messages on the screen and a set of keys to a rental Mercedes-Benz.

He could not provide any credential­s, and he explained that he was a student in Sweden here as part of an apprentice­ship, according to the hospital memo. When asked if he had a sponsor, he gave the name of a doctor at the hospital. But the doctor denied it, saying Jeorge “seemed to have latched onto him a few weeks ago” after he accepted a connection request from Jeorge on LinkedIn, the memo says.

No other doctors seemed to know Jeorge either.

His LinkedIn profile said he was a graduate of Harvard and had been a physician at Sharp for more than a year. The profile also included photos of Jeorge appearing to work at a computer in an unknown Sharp facility. Other photos found online show him in a Sharp doctor’s coat standing outside the hospital.

The summary of his Instagram account, set to private, makes similar claims.

La Mesa police responded and searched Jeorge’s rental car, which had been parked across the street in the Grossmont Center mall. They found two passports and an El Cajon address.

Jeorge was arrested on suspicion of false impersonat­ion and attempting to practice without a license, according to jail records.

A psychiatri­c evaluation determined that he did not meet the threshold for hospitaliz­ation. San Diego’s Joint Terrorism Task Force was also notified.

La Mesa Police Lt. Greg Runge said Saturday that his department is working with hospital investigat­ors on the case but declined to release further details.

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