The Signal

Polygraph test roils Cleveland rape case

Judge weighs next move amid rare circumstan­ces

- Jayne O’Donnell Have a tip about a doctor or hospital? Email jodonnell@usatoday.com

The grand jury that declined to indict a former Cleveland Clinic surgeon accused of anal rape was given the results of a polygraph the doctor passed, which is so rare that it could justify releasing the proceeding’s transcript­s, according to Cuyahoga County Judge Michael Donnelly.

The Ohio Supreme Court adopted a new rule to promote transparen­cy where transcript­s can be obtained when the public’s interest to know outweighs grand jury secrecy. Donnelly says he’s never heard of polygraph evidence being introduced by a defendant in a grand jury proceeding in his 25 years in the legal profession.

Judges in this county, which includes Cleveland, preside over grand juries on a rotating basis.

“The science behind polygraphs is suspect,” says Donnelly. “That’s why it’s not admissible in court.”

In very rare cases, parties will agree to allow such evidence at trial, but he says he has never heard of it being presented by a defendant in a grand jury proceeding.

The surgeon, Ryan Williams, was put on paid administra­tive leave by Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in December after USA TODAY asked about the rape allegation­s. He left Cleveland Clinic last July after his contract wasn’t renewed for reasons unrelated to the accusation­s, according to Cleveland Clinic spokeswoma­n Eileen Sheil.

Williams told USA TODAY he “vehemently” denied the allegation­s.

While the proceeding­s of grand juries are secret, what happens in them and whether physicians are indicted has great influence over medical boards’ decisions on whether to sanction or even investigat­e doctors. The Williams grand jury is particular­ly important as it influenced the favorable treatment he got from his employer — one of the highestrat­ed hospitals in the country — from Ohio’s medical board and from subsequent prosecutor­s. His medical license was blemish-free for almost a decade until he moved to Ohio State University last summer.

Along with being possibly “unpreceden­ted,” Cleveland criminal defense and civil rights attorney Terry Gilbert says the grand jury’s considerat­ion of Williams’ polygraph results smacks of special treatment.

“That’s not offered to the common person under investigat­ion in a grand jury indictment,” says Gilbert, who has been a lawyer for 44 years. “If they really think a polygraph is credible informatio­n that could shed light on whether or not this event happened, then it should be offered to everyone, including people who are indigent.”

Donnelly agrees: “It goes to a public confidence issue. Who is permitted to do this and who isn’t?”

Gilbert, who often represents victims of police shootings, says police in Cleveland “get extra attention and favors unlike regular shooting or homicide cases.” That’s also true of Ohio’s biggest employer, he says. “No one wants to be on (Cleveland Clinic’s) bad side, including prosecutor­s and politician­s,” says Gilbert. “There’s a certain deference afforded those associated with the clinic.”

Cleveland attorney and former prosecutor Rob Glickman, however, says that while he agrees the submission of polygraph evidence to grand juries is “very unusual,” he believes that’s “only in Cuyahoga County.”

“There’s nothing wrong with results being presented at grand jury,” says Glickman, who says his family’s name is on the urology department but he does sue the hospital occasional­ly.

According to Ohio rules governing its medical board, if a doctor is found guilty of a felony, a misdemeano­r in his or her work or a misdemeano­r of “moral turpitude,” it’s grounds for discipline by the Ohio medical board.

“If the courts find someone guilty, then we can bring an action based on that conviction,” says medical board spokeswoma­n Tessie Pollock. “If the courts have not gone forward with a conviction, law enforcemen­t may or may not share their evidence with us.”

There’s no statute requiring them to do so in Ohio, she says.

After the grand jury declined to indict Williams, the alleged victim filed a civil suit against the doctor that was settled confidenti­ally. The case was expunged, so it’s as if it never existed, although USA TODAY obtained a copy of the police report detailing the alleged rape.

Less than a year after the first alleged rape, Kristin Fehr says she experience­d a near-identical assault. Unlike the first woman, who was given only a local anesthetic, Fehr says she was unexpected­ly pushed to take pills right before her procedure that she believes were sedatives. That led her to have piecemeal and long-delayed memories of the alleged assault, which she wasn’t able to reconstruc­t entirely for six years.

Cleveland Clinic chose not to discipline the surgeon beyond the chaperone he was required to have with female patients during the first investigat­ion.

“I got a pretty clear indication, they (the medical board) were not doing anything until there was a guilty verdict in place,” says Fehr. Instead, prosecutor­s “were the ones preventing the guilty verdict from being possible.”

“If they really think a polygraph is credible informatio­n ... then it should be offered to everyone, including people who are indigent.”

Terry Gilbert civil rights attorney

 ?? TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY ?? Cuyahoga County Judge Michael Donnelly says he’s never heard of a defendant introducin­g polygraph evidence to a grand jury.
TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY Cuyahoga County Judge Michael Donnelly says he’s never heard of a defendant introducin­g polygraph evidence to a grand jury.

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