The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Clayton County doctor re-indicted in murder case

Narendra Nagareddy faces fewer charges in OD deaths of 6 patients.

- By Carrie Teegardin cteegardin@ajc.com

The unusual murder case against Dr. Narendra K. Nagareddy has taken another turn.

The Clayton County psychiatri­st who stands accused in the overdose deaths of patients has been re-indicted — again. The Clayton County district attorney’s office first indicted the doctor on a slew of charges in 2016, including the overdose deaths of three patients. Last year the county dismissed the first indictment and issued a new one adding three more felony murder charges against the doctor with a new indictment.

Now Nagareddy has been charged once again in a new indictment that still accuses him of causing the deaths of six patients between 2011 and 2015. But the latest indictment contains fewer counts related to improper prescribin­g. The 2017 indictment included a total of 71 charges. The doctor now faces 62 charges.

Like the last indictment, the latest one also accuses the doctor of sexual assault by a psychother­apist against a patient.

“We will attack this indictment just as we have the other two,” said Steven Frey, one of the attorneys representi­ng Nagareddy.

“He’s not guilty of this or anything else.”

Clayton County District Attorney Tracy Graham Lawson declined to comment on the new indictment.

But the defense said the series of indictment­s raises questions about the strength of the case against the doctor.

“The many indictment­s do not reflect the discovery of more allegation­s,” Frey said. “Rather, it is the state’s inability to support its theories with provable facts.”

In the Clayton County case, the prosecutio­n is accusing the doctor of prescribin­g powerful opioid medication­s — hydrocodon­e, oxycodone and methadone — for no legitimate medical purpose and outside the scope of the psychiatri­st’s practice. He is also accused of post-dating prescripti­ons. The prescripti­ons are the basis of dozens of felony drug charges.

In the cases of six patients, the charges say, the doctor caused the death of the patients by writing illegal prescripti­ons that led to overdoses.

Audrey Austin is one of the patients whose death Nagareddy is accused of causing.

A civil suit filed by Austin’s husband says that the woman had been a patient of Nagareddy’s since 2008, but had not been to his office for several months while she was in rehab to deal with addiction issues. She went back to the psychiatri­st in 2014 after leaving rehab, the suit says, and the doctor gave her prescripti­ons for Xanax, a strong sedative, and Methadone, which is a narcotic. The suit also says she was given a prescripti­on for amphetamin­e pills.

Austin overdosed in 2014, the day after receiving the prescripti­ons from the doctor. She was placed on life support and died two days later, the suit says.

Clayton County prosecutor­s aren’t the first to try to connect the dots between a doctor’s prescribin­g habits and overdose deaths.

In 2015, a California jury convicted Dr. Hsiu-Ying “Lisa” Tseng in the deaths of three patients who overdosed as a result of rampant overprescr­ibing. Tseng, a general practition­er, gave out prescripti­ons for pain pills without proper medical evaluation­s and to patients who admitted they were addicts. Tseng kept prescribin­g improperly, the prosecutio­n said, even after being told repeatedly by authoritie­s that patients had overdosed.

In the Clayton County case, the deaths that Nagareddy is accused of causing in 2011 include Cheryl Pennington, Paul Pennington, Richard Moore and Lauren McCollum. In addition to Austin’s death in 2014, the doctor is also accused in the 2015 death of David Robinson.

Nagareddy’s attorneys have argued from day one that the doctor was running a legitimate practice and that he was trying to properly treat the patients who came to him for help.

The Georgia Composite Medical Board, which licenses and discipline­s doctor, had never publicly discipline­d Nagareddy before his arrest in 2016, according to the board’s website. Nagareddy agreed in 2016 to a suspension of his medical license while the criminal case is pending.

With overdose deaths related to opioids rising in Georgia, Attorney General Chris Carr announced last year the creation of the Statewide Opioid Task Force. High prescribin­g of highly addictive medication­s is one of the issues that the task force was created to address. Carr said last year that during a recent 12-month period, the total number of opioid doses legally prescribed to Georgia patients surpassed 541 million — roughly 54 legal doses for every adult and child in the state.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@ AJC.COM ?? Dr. Narendra Nagareddy is accused of causing the deaths of his patients by writing illegal prescripti­ons that led to overdoses.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@ AJC.COM Dr. Narendra Nagareddy is accused of causing the deaths of his patients by writing illegal prescripti­ons that led to overdoses.

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