Los Angeles Times

Doctor agrees to yield license

Psychiatri­st who altered clinical notes in ’90s Menendez trial faces new allegation­s.

- By Leila Miller

A psychiatri­st who caused an uproar in the 1990s when he admitted altering clinical notes in the infamous Menendez brothers’ murder trial has agreed to surrender his medical license over new allegation­s of wrongdoing, according to the Medical Board of California.

The decision, which became effective last month, came after the state accused Dr. William Vicary of gross negligence, repeated negligent acts, prescribin­g without an appropriat­e exam, excessive prescribin­g and inadequate record keeping.

The complaint, filed in November 2017, details encounters from 1988 to 2016 between Vicary and eight patients — five of whom were undercover officers — and alleges he prescribed medication­s with a high potential for abuse without making an effort to obtain informatio­n necessary to es

tablish whether a patient suffered from an illness or disorder.

In 2004, he began treating a 50-year-old patient who overdosed in 2014 from cocaine, hydrocodon­e and perhaps other substances. Over the years, Vicary had received many letters from the patient’s medical insurance companies stating that he was receiving a large number of prescripti­ons from multiple providers, the complaint said. Vicary continued prescribin­g him controlled substances, and in an interview with the medical board acknowledg­ed doing so without conducting an examinatio­n or obtaining a history, according to the complaint.

In April 2015, Vicary prescribed Adderall to an undercover officer posing as a patient who said he would be taking it to help him study, the complaint said. The next month, Vicary increased his prescripti­on and later prescribed him Naproxen and Adderall. According to the complaint, Vicary at no point took “any meaningful medical or psychiatri­c history” from the patient and did not inquire into his substance use history after the patient acknowledg­ed he had illegally obtained “a drug of abuse for non-medical reasons.”

In another case, Vicary prescribed another undercover officer Xanax and Ambien in June 2015 after she told him she was taking Xanax twice a day and Ambien every night and that the medication­s were intended “to balance her out.” He did not ask her directly about her history of mental health problems, about substance misuse or about any current symptoms, and diagnosed her with “stress/anxiety and insomnia,” the complaint stated.

Vicary graduated from Harvard Law School and USC’s medical school, and received his physician’s and surgeon’s license in 1975. According to the medical board’s records, he has taught forensic psychiatry on a volunteer basis at USC’s Keck School of Medicine and has served as president of the Southern California Chapter of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law.

A USC spokeswoma­n said she could not immediatel­y say if Vicary was still affiliated with the university. The American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law did not respond to an email seeking comment.

Vicary did not return a message left at his psychiatry practice in Studio City. William G. Moore, the attorney who represente­d him in the case, also did not return messages.

The medical board accused Vicary of excessivel­y prescribin­g drugs to multiple patients. In surrenderi­ng his license, Vicary did not contest that the state could establish a case that he excessivel­y prescribed drugs to two of the patients, including the one who overdosed, according to medical board records.

The surrender of his license follows previous disciplina­ry actions taken by the board against Vicary. In 2012, his license was placed on probation for 35 months in relation to treatment he gave a patient who also worked for him as a psychologi­cal assistant. He repeatedly prescribed the patient dangerous drugs without obtaining patient history and without conducting an initial physical examinatio­n or subsequent periodic examinatio­ns, and he failed to monitor the patient’s progress, according to medical board records.

He was also placed on three years’ probation in April 1998 in relation to his work during the high-profile murder trial of Erik and Lyle Menendez, who were convicted of fatally shooting their parents in 1989 at the family’s Beverly Hills mansion. Lyle was 21 and Erik was 18 at the time of the killings.

The brothers had alleged that they had been sexually abused by their father, while prosecutor­s said they had wanted their parents’ multimilli­on-dollar estate. After being appointed by Erik Menendez’s attorney to serve as a treating and forensic psychiatri­st, Vicary “rewrote pages of his clinical notes deleting potentiall­y damaging material, knowing that his rewritten notes would be provided to prosecutor­s and used in court as though they were originals,” according to medical board records.

Vicary had testified during the brothers’ second trial that he deleted two dozen statements Menendez had made about being molested by his father and hating his parents, and that he rewrote 10 pages of his notes at the direction of Leslie Abramson, Erik Menendez’s chief defense attorney, who he said threatened to take him off the case if he didn’t.

Abramson insisted in an interview with The Times that she never told Vicary to “erase,” “evaporate” or “rewrite” any notes of his sessions with Menendez. Rather, she said, she told Vicary to redact only informatio­n that a Superior Court judge had already ruled inadmissib­le in the brothers’ first trial.

The State Bar of California cleared Abramson of misconduct, but Vicary was removed in 1996 from a panel of mental health profession­als who are appointed by county judges to analyze and testify about defendants in court.

“The downside is that it’s a negative and certainly not going to help my reputation,” Vicary said then. “The upside is that this work doesn’t pay very much and you kind of run yourself ragged driving to all these juvenile halls and local jails and hospitals.”

In his latest disciplina­ry case, Vicary reached an agreement with the medical board to surrender his license rather than present the case before an administra­tive law judge, said Carlos Villatoro, a board spokesman.

If he files for reinstatem­ent of his surrendere­d license, the charges in the 2017 complaint would be deemed true.

 ?? Nick Ut Associated Pres ?? DR. WILLIAM VICARY testifies during the penalty phase of Lyle and Erik Menendez’s double-murder trial in a Van Nuys courthouse in 1996.
Nick Ut Associated Pres DR. WILLIAM VICARY testifies during the penalty phase of Lyle and Erik Menendez’s double-murder trial in a Van Nuys courthouse in 1996.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States