Los Angeles Times

Drug theft suspect is HIV-positive

Fired hospital worker is also accused of swapping syringes.

- By Rick Anderson

SEATTLE — Rocky Elbert Allen, the medical technician suspected of stealing drugs and contaminat­ing surgical instrument­s at six Western hospitals, has tested positive for HIV, the Denver U.S. attorney’s office said.

Confirmati­on that Allen has the virus that causes AIDS poses an added concern for 6,400 surgical patients in California, Washington, Colorado and Arizona who may have been exposed to infection by Allen’s alleged needle swapping, said an attorney who has filed lawsuits against five of the hospitals.

“Everyone exposed and their families are squarely facing HIV risk on a new level,” said Denver lawyer James Avery, who has been contacted by 150 former patients seeking legal representa­tion. “It was abstract before; now it is tangible, and the reaction is mostly devastatio­n, fear and anger.”

The U.S. attorney’s office said it was releasing the test results so former patients could be fully informed.

Many of the patients at hospitals where Allen worked as a surgical technician — in or around Denver, San Diego, Seattle and Phoenix — had already been tested for HIV and hepatitis B and C in the wake of his February indictment. Prosecutor­s this week said that no cases of HIV had been detected in the Denver-area testing and that Allen tested negative for hepatitis.

Avery said test results are far from complete at all the hospitals and more testing is needed. For example, almost 3,000 patients who had surgery at Swedish Medical Center in suburban Denver during the time Allen worked there, from August 2015 until he was fired in January, were notified to come in for free tests. About 2,500 did so, prosecutor­s say, but so far only 2,000 have returned for retesting.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that anyone tested within three months of a potential HIV exposure be retested three months later to confirm the results.

Allen, 28, was indicted by a federal grand jury on two criminal charges — drug theft and tampering with syringes at Swedish Medical Center. After the indictment was announced, five other hospitals reported similar incidents and revealed that they, too, had fired Allen. He was able to move from hospital to hospital by lying about his prior employment history and misleading interviewe­rs, prosecutor­s alleged.

Most of the hospitals also failed to report Allen’s firings to authoritie­s, making it difficult to follow his trail.

The thefts, according to prosecutor­s, “occurred at virtually each and every healthcare facility dating back to his employment with the Navy,” where Allen, according to records, confessed to stealing 30 syringes of the pain narcotic fentanyl from a NATO hospital.

Allen — who went to high school in Boise, Idaho, and attended the University of Washington in Seattle — said after his 2011 court-martial that he was getting help for his drug abuse but that “it could take months, possibly years, before I fully recover from my experience­s.”

During his five years as a surgical technician at U.S. hospitals, Allen was suspected of swapping sterile needles with syringes he may have used, possibly exposing patients to infection, according to court records.

Allen’s attorney, Timothy O’Hara, has argued that although Allen might have switched syringes, there was no evidence he had used them. Allen has pleaded not guilty and faces trial in August.

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