Las Vegas Review-Journal

Desai lawyer wants indictment dismissed

Doctor facing murder charge after patient died of hepatitis C

- By JEFF GERMAN LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

Defense lawyers were in court Tuesday seeking the dismissal of the murder indictment against Dr. Dipak Desai and nurse anesthetis­t Ronald Lakeman in the hepatitis C outbreak.

Desai, 63, who attended the hearing, and Lakeman, 65, are facing a seconddegr­ee murder charge stemming from the death this year of Rodolfo Meana, a victim of the 2007 outbreak.

Margaret Stanish, who represents Desai, and Rick Santacroce, who is defending Lakeman, told District Judge Valerie Adair that the indictment violates their clients’ due process rights and does not directly tie them to the cause of Meana’s death.

“My client had nothing, nothing to do with Mr. Meana,” Santacroce said. “To allow this indictment to go forward is absolutely absurd.”

Keith Mathahs, another nurse anesthetis­t, participat­ed in the colonoscop­y Desai performed on Meana that led to his infection.

But Chief Deputy District Attorney Mike Staudaher argued Tuesday that Lakeman was just as culpable in Meana’s death under the theory of the murder charge, which alleges all three defendants were part of the conspiracy that endangered the lives of Desai’s patients.

Mathahs, 76, pleaded guilty on Monday to five criminal charges, including pa- tient neglect resulting in Meana’s death. Mathahs agreed to testify against Desai and Lakeman at their April 22 trial.

Adair promised a decision next week on whether to toss out the indictment.

The indictment accuses Desai, a gastroente­rologist who has surrendere­d his medical license, and the nurse anesthetis­ts of unlawfully “introducin­g the hepatitis C virus” into Meana’s body while he underwent the colonoscop­y in 2007.

Meana, 77, died in April of complicati­ons from hepatitis C in his native Philippine­s. His infection was among seven that health officials geneticall­y linked to Desai’s main clinic, the Endoscopy Center of Southern Nevada. Health officials have said dozens more cases were “possibly linked” to the clinic.

Officials concluded Meana and five other patients contracted hepatitis C through unsafe injection practices on Sept. 21, 2007. Another patient was infected on July 25, 2007. The outbreak was blamed on nurse anesthetis­ts reusing vials of the sedative propofol between patients after they had become contaminat­ed by patients with hepatitis C.

Desai, Lakeman and Mathahs, were originally charged in June 2010 with several felony counts, including racketeeri­ng, neglect of patients and insurance fraud. The murder indictment was filed in August.

 ?? JESSICA EBELHAR/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Dr. Dipak Desai, center, appears in court Tuesday at the Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas, where his attorney asked that a murder indictment against him be dismissed. The case stems from the hepatitis C outbreak that health officials linked to...
JESSICA EBELHAR/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Dr. Dipak Desai, center, appears in court Tuesday at the Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas, where his attorney asked that a murder indictment against him be dismissed. The case stems from the hepatitis C outbreak that health officials linked to...

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