The Maui News

Longtime assault forensic examiner retires

Pediatrici­an ‘vital asset’ in prevention of child abuse, neglect

- By LILA FUJIMOTO Staff Writer

After selling his pediatric practice 16 years ago, Dr. William Kepler is retiring again, this time from more than three decades of examining sexual assault victims in Maui County.

Kepler was the first doctor — and for years the only one — doing the forensic examinatio­ns that include interviewi­ng patients, collecting DNA and documentin­g injuries for treatment and possible prosecutio­n.

“Dr. Kepler has been an instrument­al member of our community in the area of child abuse and neglect,” said Paul Tonnessen, executive director of the nonprofit Friends of the Children’s Justice Center of Maui. “Throughout the years, his expertise in the area of child abuse and neglect has been a vital asset in our prevention efforts to help reduce child abuse and neglect in Maui County.

“His compassion and empathy towards the children who unfortunat­ely have become victims of abuse through no fault of their own has played a major role in the beginning of the healing process.”

Kepler began doing the examinatio­ns in a small room in Maui Memorial Hospital in 1990. That year, Dr. Astrid Heger, a pediatrici­an famous for her work in child sexual abuse, came to Maui to teach the 11 pediatrici­ans on the island to do the child sexual examinatio­ns.

As part of the developmen­t of child advocacy centers in the late 1980s, pediatrici­ans across the country were trained to evaluate child sexual assault and conduct interviews with children and do physical examinatio­ns, Kepler said. He said the training helped spare children from undergoing multiple examinatio­ns and interviews by different people.

After Heger finished training the pediatrici­ans and left, “most of them didn’t want to do the examinatio­ns, so I volunteere­d to do them all,” Kepler said.

“After a few months, it was clear from the police standpoint that the

bigger need was for someone to examine adults, not just children,” he said. “So I agreed to do both.”

“As what we did progressed, our reports of sex assault did not increase. They stayed the same or gradually decreased,” Kepler said. “That was because of trying preventive measures.”

He said child sexual assault reports did increase, likely because of better reporting resulting from more education of teachers, police officers and others who would hear the reports from children.

Over the years, investigat­ors also saw an increase in alcoholand drug-related cases. “The biggest date rape drug is alcohol,” he said.

For about 15 years, Kepler was the only doctor in the county doing the examinatio­ns, covering Lanai and Molokai as well.

In addition to being on call to respond to cases four to five times a month, often in the middle of the night, he went to court to testify in some cases.

“For me, the most rewarding part is helping the victims, helping children and their families,” he said. “That’s always clear. But my involvemen­t with most cases is pretty much at the beginning, when the child has just disclosed. I don't have much involvemen­t in the case after that unless it goes to court.

“The other thing that’s been fulfilling is working with the team we have put together to do this.”

The sexual assault response team includes prosecutor­s, social workers and police detectives, including some who “stay on for years doing that work rather than other police work,” Kepler said.

In 2005, the year he retired from his pediatric practice, Kepler began training doctors to do the examinatio­ns with him “and share the load.”

“It became obvious that it was very hard to replace doctors when they left,” he said. “It was hard to get doctors to do that job.”

At the same time, across the country, sexual assault nurse examiners were doing more of the examinatio­ns to the point where now, “it’s pretty standard,” he said.

Kepler has helped build a team of advanced practice nurse practition­ers who are now doing the examinatio­ns in the county. They are led by medical director Jennifer Baumstark, a certified nurse midwife with a doctorate of nurse practice and an instructor in the University of Hawaii Maui College nursing program.

“Because we have that, it allows me to fade away,” Kepler said.

After starting the program in the hospital room that was used for both examinatio­ns and interviews,

the program is now settled in a recently remodeled location with separate examinatio­n and interview spaces near the hospital.

Although Kepler remains available for consultati­ons, he officially retired Nov. 1 after doing hundreds of examinatio­ns over 31 years.

Kepler has testified as an expert witness in strangulat­ion cases on Maui and Oahu.

He will continue to serve on a statewide multidisci­plinary team advising Child Welfare Services in the most difficult child abuse cases.

He also has served on the board of the Friends of the Children’s Justice Center since 2006.

Kepler, who was born in Virginia, had parents and grandparen­ts who were missionari­es to China. As a child, he lived for two years in China, where there was electricit­y for only a few hours a week and the family used kerosene lamps.

“We didn’t have any hot water,” he said. “We did have running water.”

After the family had to leave the country when the communists took over, Kepler was raised in the Jim Crow South in North Carolina and Virginia where his father was a Presbyteri­an minister.

Kepler remembers separate drinking fountains, elevators and entrances to stores.

“My family was very liberal, extremely opposed to racial prejudice,” he said. “That made it difficult for us to live down there.”

Kepler and his wife, Lu, a

nurse he met while training in Rochester, New York, decided to move to Maui in 1970 after he learned he wouldn’t be called into active duty in Vietnam as part of his service as a captain in the Army Reserve.

On Maui, he worked with Dr. Wolfgang Phaeltzer, who was a doctor for the plantation and in private practice, before becoming a solo practition­er.

“When I got to Maui, there were three pediatrici­ans, including me,” Kepler said. “The island was very rural. We had two traffic lights on the island.

“We had no way of transporti­ng sick babies to Honolulu. If the baby was not extremely critically ill, we could sometimes transport the baby in a little hand-held aluminum box with oxygen that was running through a little hole in the box.”

Over the next few years, he said a very sophistica­ted transport team was developed. “That was a major change in our handling of severely ill babies,” he said.

Outside of work, Kepler has sung with the Maui Madrigals for over 20 years and with a barbershop quartet for 13 years. He sings in the choir at Makawao Union Church.

When he and his wife arrived on Maui as newlyweds with no children, “we expected to stay a year or two and have fun,” Kepler said.

“We never left,” he said. “It’s been a wonderful, wonderful 51 years.”

 ?? The Maui News/LILA FUJIMOTO photo ?? Dr. William Kepler takes a break in the Wailuku location used for forensic examinatio­ns of sexual assault victims. He retired this month after 31 years of doing forensic examinatio­ns of sexual assault victims in Maui County.
The Maui News/LILA FUJIMOTO photo Dr. William Kepler takes a break in the Wailuku location used for forensic examinatio­ns of sexual assault victims. He retired this month after 31 years of doing forensic examinatio­ns of sexual assault victims in Maui County.

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