USA TODAY US Edition

Hospitals shield doctors in sex cases

Confidenti­al settlement­s common in health care

- Jayne O'Donnell

The Cleveland Clinic, one of the nation’s largest and most renowned hospitals, knew of at least two cases in which one of its surgeons was accused of raping patients but kept him on the staff while reaching a confidenti­al settlement, a USA TODAY investigat­ion has found.

Ryan Williams, a colorectal surgeon accused in police reports by two women of anally raping them in 2008 and 2009, left Cleveland Clinic last summer for another hospital, which placed him on leave after it learned of the complaints against him.

As prominent men in government, the judiciary and entertainm­ent lose their jobs after accusation­s of varied forms of sexual harassment, doctors accused of sexually assaulting patients are regularly unaffected profession­ally or publicly.

The same types of secret settlement­s criticized for their role in sex abuse and harassment cases from Hollywood to Capitol Hill are frequent in health care. Doctors and hospitals worried about their public image feel like, “If I can’t get silence, what’s in it for me?” says Jim Hopper, a clinical psychologi­st and expert witness in cases involving institutio­ns’ treatment of patients.

“Why did he do it?”

The scene in Williams’ office after the alleged rape on April 11, 2008, was nothing short of pandemoniu­m, according to a report filed by the Westlake, Ohio, police department.

Patient Lachelle Duncan was receiving a rectal exam from Williams, the report said, when she jumped up and exclaimed that the doctor had inserted his penis in her rectum and that she saw

him holding it in his hand.

She ran out of the room and shouted: “Why did he do it? Why did you do this?” Williams replied “I don’t know,” according to an interview with medical assistant Patricia Bacha contained in the police report.

Williams told police that the presence of semen in one of his examinatio­n rooms was the result of masturbati­on to relieve stress, the report said.

After she pressed charges, Duncan received a rape kit, which along with other lab tests proved inconclusi­ve. A Cleveland Clinic spokeswoma­n said Williams took a polygraph, which was filed as evidence to a grand jury. Williams wasn’t prosecuted criminally, but Duncan sued Williams and the Cleveland Clinic, which resulted in a confidenti­al settlement.

It is USA TODAY’s policy in most cases not to name victims of alleged sexual assault. But Duncan herself published her name in a public lawsuit she filed against Williams and the hospital. She declined to comment because of the confidenti­al settlement.

Hospitals will often take over doctors’ liability in confidenti­al settlement­s, which Washington plaintiffs’ attorney Patrick Malone calls a “frequent dodge” to keep medical negligence claims out of the National Practition­ers Data Bank. Before they hire doctors, hospitals check the data bank, which also includes disciplina­ry actions by hospitals, medical societies and boards.

Duncan’s case, however, was a “miscellane­ous tort claim” filed after Ohio’s one-year statute of limitation­s for medical malpractic­e claims had passed.

That’s just one of the many laws working in the favor of the Cleveland Clinic and the health care industry in Ohio. Plaintiff lawyer Michael Shroge, a former Cleveland Clinic associate general counsel, says major health care systems are “very often more interested in protecting their brand than protecting the health of patients.”

Haunted by memories

Kristin Fehr went to see Williams to have a hemorrhoid removed 10 months after Duncan did. On Feb. 6, 2009, Williams brought her into the examinatio­n room alone, she told police, gave her two white pills and a cup of water and said she needed to take the pills immediatel­y.

Fehr recalled groggily getting on the table and just as hazily leaving the medical center with her then-boyfriend, who was waiting in the car.

In October 2014, Fehr’s memories started to come back in flashes when something like a doctor’s appointmen­t would prompt them, she said in an interview and a letter USA TODAY reviewed that she sent to the Cleveland Clinic ombudsman.

She remembered being pushed from behind, turning and seeing Williams holding his penis. “Everything I was rememberin­g was disturbing,” Fehr said.

Hopper, also a Harvard Medical School teaching associate, says that’s not unusual as “we retrieve informatio­n from memories based on the context we’re in.”

Assuming she was the first — and only — victim, Fehr says she started with the ombudsman and said she was “overwhelme­d by feelings of horror” and “terrified to leave my apartment much of the time.” She has since left her job and moved in with her parents, where USA TODAY interviewe­d her.

Fehr said she thought that if the hospital knew about the accusation­s against Williams, it would just fire him. “My whole reason for doing that was to have some kind of warning out there,” she said. Instead, she started seeing promotiona­l videos and positive articles about Williams online.

Fehr went to the Westlake police after what she thought was the slow pace of the Cleveland Clinic investigat­ion. She was later given poorly redacted versions of her report and Duncan’s but was quickly told Duncan’s was released in error. Westake police sent USA TODAY a more redacted version of Fehr’s report and said the one correspond­ing to the number on Duncan’s was expunged.

The police reports for Duncan and Fehr are similar in many ways. Duncan told police that after Williams told her to “scoot back,” he kept telling her to “bear down” and “relax” over and over, something she was having nightmares about after the encounter. Fehr has never spoken to Duncan.

As for Duncan’s report and criminal case, however, Westlake Police Capt. Guy Turner said, it “was ordered ex- punged by Common Pleas Court Judge John Russo” in October 2014. That’s the same month Fehr filed her report with the ombudsman.

“In lay terms, it is to be treated as if it never existed,” Turner said.

While Williams told USA TODAY last month that “all my visits have been chaperoned,” his former medical assistant Bacha told police that was “not always possible due to staffing.”

Heather Phillips, a spokeswoma­n for the Cleveland Clinic, says Williams left the hospital for reasons unrelated to the sexual assault allegation­s.

“We take any allegation very seriously and act in a swift manner to address them,” Phillips said.

Responding to questions from USA TODAY, Williams said, “I probably wouldn’t say anything” but then noted he had never heard of Fehr, although police interviewe­d him about about rape allegation­s involving “Kristin” in May 2015. After he was placed on leave, Williams said “I vehemently deny what these women are saying” and that the allegation­s were affecting his “work and home life.”

Williams was never charged with a crime. Prosecutor­s considered sending the first case back to the grand jury with Fehr’s case to improve the chance of an indictment but decided against it because the cases would have to be separated at trial, according to a report by Westlake, Ohio, police on Fehr’s case.

Williams moved last summer to Ohio State University (OSU) Wexner Medical Center in Columbus. After USA TODAY contacted OSU last month about Williams, spokesman Christophe­r Davey said it was the “first we’ve heard of any allegation­s regarding this physician,” that it did all the required background checks and that the hospital was looking into the charges.

By the next morning, however, OSU had placed Williams on paid administra­tive leave, Davey said, and Williams was not seeing patients.

‘The ultimate wrong’

Critics of settlement deals’ gag clauses say they compromise patients’ health and safety and are unethical.

Confidenti­al settlement­s are particular­ly problemati­c when it comes to health care as “we take off our clothes in front of doctors,” said Malone, who specialize­s in medical malpractic­e cases. “For a doctor to violate that in a sexual way is the ultimate wrong,” he said, adding that he only agrees to confidenti­al settlement­s if his client insists and only of the settlement amount.

“These things never happen on one occasion,” Malone says. “At least some aspect of the settlement — but not necessaril­y the dollar amount — should be public to make sure it’s not going to happen to someone else.”

But having confidenti­al settlement­s “brings finality and closure to disputed matters,” said the Cleveland Clinic’s Phillips. Besides, she says, “it is not only corporatio­ns that request confidenti­ality; individual­s filing claims request confidenti­ality as well.”

Confidenti­ality in a civil lawsuit “does not preclude Cleveland Clinic from reporting allegation­s of wrongdoing to authoritie­s,” she says, which the hospital did, although Westlake police allowed hospital police to do the investigat­ion, including the interview with Williams after Duncan pressed charges.

South Carolina has about the strictest law governing confidenti­al settlement­s in the country. California doesn’t allow confidenti­al settlement­s in cases involving felonies, which includes sexual assault. Legislatio­n is expected to be reintroduc­ed soon in the New Jersey state house to prohibit confidenti­al settlement­s in litigation, including medical malpractic­e cases, that would cover up a “public hazard.”

The tax legislatio­n passed last month by Congress includes a provision that would end corporatio­ns’ ability to deduct attorney fees and settlement payments in sexual harassment or abuse cases if there is a non-disclosure agreement.

Only a fraction of medical mistakes even become claims or lawsuits that can be settled, and the vast majority of those that do are resolved before trial. Most settlement agreements include clauses that prohibit the plaintiffs from discussing how much was paid, and defendants also try to get plaintiffs to agree to never discuss the facts of the case, Malone says.

“They went to great lengths to cover it up, and there was just no way for someone to be warned, to know what could happen,” Fehr says. “They can just make it completely disappear, and that kind of environmen­t, it almost encourages these kinds of crimes.”

“There was just no way for someone to be warned, to know what could happen. They can just make it completely disappear, and that kind of environmen­t, it almost encourages these kinds of crimes.” Kristin Fehr

 ??  ?? Physician Ryan Williams
Physician Ryan Williams
 ?? JASPER COLT/USA TODAY ?? Kristin Fehr, 35, says she was raped while sedated for a procedure in February 2009. Years later, she says, her memories of the incident came back in flashes: “Everything I was rememberin­g was disturbing.”
JASPER COLT/USA TODAY Kristin Fehr, 35, says she was raped while sedated for a procedure in February 2009. Years later, she says, her memories of the incident came back in flashes: “Everything I was rememberin­g was disturbing.”

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