The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawyers drop suit against Emory Hospital

Woman claimed surgeons left camera in her body.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

Earlier this year, a former Emory Hospital patient filed suit claiming that a surgeon left a camera in her body during transplant surgery, a camera that was discovered six months later.

Lacrystal Lockett’s lawyers have now dropped the complaint.

Emory Hospital attorney Anna Fretwell pointed out an apparent problem with the story: no cameras are used in such surgeries.

“No evidence to substantia­te the plaintiff ’s claims — medical records, photograph­s, the alleged camera itself, eyewitness testimony, or any other evidence — ever was produced,” Fretwell said in an email to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

“Instead, the plaintiff and her lawyers admitted that Emory never left a camera in her body or had to remove one and then dropped the lawsuit.”

Caleb Avraham, who worked with fellow attorney Michael Jo’el Smith for Lockett, didn’t go so far as to say the claim was false.

“I am not Ms. Lockett, so I can’t get into the mind of Ms. Lockett,” he told the AJC “I know she believes her story. That’s as much as I can say.”

Attempts to reach Lockett have been unsuccessf­ul.

Lockett went into surgery on Dec. 17, 2014, for a kidney and pancreatic transplant, according to the suit.

Lockett’s suit claimed a camera turned up in her torso the following June during an exam at the hospital and required another surgery to remove it.

Avraham said they decided to file suit and get more informatio­n from the discovery process. Through discovery and their own investigat­ion, the lawyers decided they didn’t have enough to pursue the case, Avraham said.

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