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Ohio woman sues Point doctor for ineffective sterilization

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Nolan

POINT PLEASANT – An Ohio woman alleges that a Mason County physician’s failure to properly sterilize her resulted in not only an unwanted, but also life-threatening pregnancy.

On Aug. 20, Majory Wise of Gallipolis, Ohio, filed suit against Dr. Mark Nolan in Mason Circuit Court. In her complaint and suit, filed with the assistance of Robert W. Bright, with the Story Law Office in Pomeroy, Ohio, failed to sterilize her against a second, unwanted pregnancy.

According to court records, Wise was diagnosed around the time of July 15, 2005 with a blood disorder known as Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, or TTP. Because she “feared that she may suffer debilitation or death as a result of the serious complications and problems caused by TTP,” Wise decided to be sterilized “so that she might not become pregnant again.”

After the baby was delivered via C-Section, records show Nolan “performed a bilateral tubal occlusion/ligation sterilization” on Wise.

However, over a year later, the suit alleges in August 2006 Wise suspected she was pregnant again. A month later, it was confirmed she was indeed pregnant.

Following the birth the second baby on May 17, 2007, Dr. Bridget Y. Skinner performed a second bilateral tubal occlusion/ligation on Wise.

“The surgical procedure performed by the Defendant Nolan on the Plaintiff Majory Wise not only failed to successfully sterilize the Plaintiff and prevent another pregnancy, but also caused Wise to suffer serious emotional distress arising from the unwanted pregnancy,” the suit alleges.

As a result of Nolan’s negligence, Wise alleges she suffered, among other things, past, present and future enjoyment of life, pain and distress by giving birth to child conceived after ineffective sterilization and having a child while dealing “with the possible fatal complications of TTP.”

For damages, Wise is asking for “a sum in excess of the minimum jurisdiction of this Court which will adequately compensate the Plaintiff for her injuries, together with pre-judgment interest, costs and attorney fees.” Specifically, Wise seeks to recover the costs of the two sterilizations and post- and pre-natal care.

The case has been assigned to Judge Thomas C. Evans III.

Mason Circuit Court Case No. 08-C-568


Point VFD alleges Ohio contractor failed to complete insulation job

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The Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department alleges in a lawsuit an Ohio contractor failed to complete insulation work on this building on Jackson Avenue. (Photo by Lawrence J. Smith)

POINT PLEASANT – An Ohio contractor is named as a defendant in a breach of contract suit filed by a Mason County volunteer fire department for failing to insulate one of its buildings.

On Sept. 12, the Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department filed a lawsuit against Ohio Valley Plastering in Mason Circuit Court. In their complaint and suit, filed with the assistance of Matt Clark, with the Point Pleasant law firm of Kayser, Clark and Layne, PPFVD alleges OVP left incomplete an insulation job for which it was hired.

According to court records, PPVFD alleges it entered into a written contract with OVP, which is located in Patriot, Ohio, and owned by Paul R. McCormick, on June 16 “to furnish all labor and materials in application of an Exterior Insulation and Finish System” to the its building on Jackson Avenue. The contract held OVP responsible for exterior of the building except caulking.

The contracted price for the work was $21,500, records show. PPVFD paid $10,750 down with “the remaining sums due upon completion of the contracted work.”

Though records are unclear as to why, but OVP “left the job and has refused to finish the contracted work.” As result of OVP negligence, PPVFD alleges it has suffered damages in not only the uncompleted work, but also in “being unable to procure a replacement contractor to finish the contracted work.”

As compensation, PPVFD is asking to be refunded both the money it paid as well as “any and all sums that it has incurred or will incur in the future to finish the uncompleted work and attorneys fees and costs.” In a separate filing, PPFVD Chief Jeremy Bryant stipulated that the total cost for recovery of damages would be less than $75,000.

The case has been assigned to Judge David W. Nibert.

Mason Circuit Court Case No. 08-C-580

$375K paid to parents of children injured by former Mason teacher

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POINT PLEASANT – The Mason County Board of Education has paid $375,000 to the parents of two Bend-area elementary school students who allege they suffered injuries from improper discipline by their teacher.

According to court records, a formal settlement was reached on July 28 and Sept. 22 in two suits filed against Katherine Parrish, a former New Haven Elementary School teacher. Robert Vaughan, in his capacity as principal of New Haven Elementary was named as a co-defendant.

In their respective suits, Melissa Dawn Fields and Angela Conley Wilson allege their sons, Conner and Jeremiah, were traumatized and injured when Parrish disciplined them on several occasions between August and December 2006.

Their suits allege Parrish went too far in disciplining the boys when she one at least one occasion slammed them down on the bleachers, and in another put them on a cot wrapped in a “body sock” and covered their faces to keep them quiet.

The suits, which were filed with the assistance of Matt Clark, with the Point Pleasant law firm of Kayser, Clark and Layne, allege the boys incurred medical bills for both their physical and mental pain and suffering.

Records show a tentative settlement was reached on June 18 through mediation. Following hearings on July 18 and Sept. 2, the Board agreed to settle Fields’ suit for $175,000 and Wilson’s for $200,000, respectfully.

According to the terms of the settlement, $112,000 of the $175,000 awarded to Fields would go into an annuity. Also, she would keep $3,181.65 to use for Connor’s immediate benefit.

The remaining $63,000 would go to Wilson to pay Clark for his services. From the $63,000, records show $58,333.34 would go for attorney fees and remaining $1,485.01 for expenses.

In Wilson’s case, $128,500 of the $175,000 would go into an irrevocable trust for Jeremiah. Records show $100 from the settlement was paid to WesBanco to manage the trust account.

After pocketing $1,817.55 for herself, Wilson was to pay the remaining $69,582.45 to Clark, of which $2,915.78 went to expenses.

Also, records show the Board of Risk and Insurance Management, the state’s insurer, paid over $25,000 to attorneys representing Parrish and the Board.

According to BRIM, $10,267.40 was paid to Parrish’s attorney Joanna Tabit, with the Charleston law firm of Steptoe and Johnson. Cheryl L. Connelly, with the Huntington law firm of Campbell Woods, was paid $15,722.49 for her services in representing the Board.
Finally, BRIM paid $1998 to Connie Fisher Thomas who served as guardian ad litem in both cases.

The West Virginia Record attempted to get a comment from Board President Tom Nunnery about the settlement. When contacted, Nunnery was not aware a settlement had been reached and deferred comment to Board Superintendent Larry A. Parsons.

However, Parsons did not return repeated messages for a comment.
As a result of the incident with the boys, who are now both five-years old, Parrish was fired on Jan. 18, 2007. A grievance Parrish filed disputing the firing was upheld at a Level IV hearing on July 9, 2007.

A month later, Parrish appealed the administrative law judge’s decision to Mason Circuit Court. A decision in the case is still pending.

Mason Circuit Court case numbers 07-C-191 (Fields) and 192 (Wilson)

Settlement reached in firing of PVH physician’s assistant

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POINT PLEASANT – A settlement has been reached in a wrongful termination suit filed by a former physician’s assistant who alleged the wife of the doctor for whom she was working ordered her fired on suspicions they were having an affair.

Dec. 9 was the scheduled date for trial in the case of Dr. Anita Petitte v. Robert L. Lewis and Cindy Lewis in Mason Circuit Court. However, trial was averted when on Aug. 12 a settlement was reached.

The terms of the settlement were not disclosed in court records, and W. Jesse Forbes, Petitte’s attorney, and Eric Kinder, with the Charleston law firm of Spilman, Thomas and Battle, attorney for Pleasant Valley Hospital, declined to comment. PVH was named as a co-defendant in the suit.

According to the suit, which was filed in July 2007, Petitte worked as a physician’s assistant for Dr. Lewis at his office at PVH from December 2006 until May 2007. Despite her “extensive training and experience as a physician’s assistant,” Petitte alleges Cindy Lewis had her fired over a suspected affair Petitte was having with Robert.

In her suit, Petitte alleges that Cindy Lewis, who records show, like Petitte, was an employee of PVH on Robert’s staff, “would … send harassing and derogatory messages to [Petitte] via e-mail and telephone calls to her home” concerning the alleged affair.

“Cindy Lewis also publicly demeaned [Petitte's] work performance and work ethic, and made rude, offensive and untrue statements about [her] character in general,” the suit alleges.

As a result of the Lewis’s and PVH’s conduct, Petitte alleged she not only suffered past and future loss of income, but also “difficulties in finding substantially similar employment in terms of wages and duties.” Also, Petitte alleged her firing from PVH caused “problems with her licensing at the West Virginia Board of Medicine and the National Commission for Certification of Physician Assistants.”

Though it is unclear if the settlement played a part, but Board’s Web site show Petitte has an active license as a physician’s assistant until March 31, 2009. Also, she is now working under the supervision of Drs. Nohl A. Braun, Jerry Lee Frame and Piayon E. Kobbah at CAMC’s New Century Physicians of West Virginia Inc. in Cross Lanes.

The West Virginia Record attempted to get a comment from the Lewis’ concerning the settlement. When asked to speak with Cindy at Dr. Lewis’ office, a woman who answered the telephone said, “She doesn’t work here much anymore.”

When contacted at his home in Hurricane, Robert declined to comment on the settlement other than he was satisfied with the terms.

Mason Circuit Court case number 07-C-110

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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Jan. 13
Patricia E. Durst v. Carolyn Sue Enos, individually and as substitute executrix of the estate of Vada Cottrill, and Gene Ann Peoples
P.A. – Lora B. Snodgrass; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is suing for declaratory judgment to determine if a manufactured home previously owned by Cottrill, and situated on the plaintiff’s property, became the property of the plaintiffs following Cottrill’s death on Aug. 12, 2007. In addition to declaratory judgment, the plaintiff is seeking an order restraining the defendants from entering the home.
Case number: 09-C-4

Jan. 30
Harold E. McAfee v. CSX Transportation Inc.
P.A. – Harvey Peyton; J – Nibert
*The plaintiff, a resident of Leon, is suing the defendant for injuries he sustained on June 4, 2007, while working on a railroad crossing near Fostoria, Ohio. The plaintiff is seeking unspecified damages, interest and costs.
Case number: 09-C-8

Frank Paul Wingo and Penny Wingo v. Robert Motz, World’s Fastest Truck Inc., Kanawha Valley Motor Sports Park, Kanawha Valley Dragway Park Inc., Marshall Strawther, International Hot Rod Association Inc., International Hot Rod Association LLC
P.A. – Wayne Van Bibber; J – Nibert
* The plaintiffs are suing the defendants for injuries they sustained when Frank Wingo aided in suppressing a fire that engulfed a rocket-propelled truck owned by Motz at the Kanawha Valley Motor Sports Park in Southside on June 23, 2007. The plaintiffs are seeking unspecified damages, interest and costs.
Case number: 09-C-9

Feb. 2
Marie June Hicks v. Willie J. Lane
P.A. – James Casey; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a resident of Point Pleasant, is suing the defendant, a resident of Hartford, for injuries she sustained following an automobile accident on Feb. 3, 2007, at the intersection of 28th Street and Jackson Avenue in Point Pleasant. In addition to unspecified damages, costs and fees the plaintiff is asking for a judgment to determine her the beneficiary of underinsured motorist coverage from her insurance carrier, State Farm.
Case number: 09-C-10

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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Feb. 17
The state of Ohio Department of Job and Family Services v. Dennis Persons, administrator of the estate of Betty L. Hart a/k/a Betty L. Mercer, Dennis Persons, individually, and Reva Foster, David Persons and Lisa Bolin
P.A. – Matthew Clark; J – Nibert
*The plaintiff is seeking a court-ordered sale of property Hart owned in Mason County to satisfy a $20,000 judgment the plaintiff received against her in Meigs County, Ohio Court of Common Pleas last year following Hart’s death on April 16, 2007 without a will. The plaintiff is asking that any remaining proceeds from the sale be distributed among the heirs who are named as co-defendants in the suit.
Case No. 09-C-18

Feb. 20
Cecilia Goett v. Chuck’s Trucking Inc. and Johnny Junior Fox
P.A. – Paul A. Mackenzie; J – Nibert
*The plaintiff, a resident of Gallipolis, Ohio, is suing the defendants for injuries she sustained from a collision she had with Fox who was driving a tractor trailer owned by Chuck’s in Webster Springs on July 11, 2008, when he attempted to unsuccessfully pass her heading north on U.S. 35. The plaintiff is seeking unspecified damages, costs and interest.
Case No. 09-C-22

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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Feb. 27
Michael and Kathy Little v. James P. Wagner, D.O.
P.A. – Robert P. Welsh; J – Nibert
*`The plaintiffs, who are residents of Gallipolis, Ohio, are suing the defendant for malpractice after Michael suffered two strokes, spinal meningitis on Dec. 11, 2006, leading to permanent and irreversible brain injuries. The plaintiffs are seeking unspecified damages, interest and costs.
Case number: 09-C-24

March 2
Tyler Wilmoth, Bailey Shockey and Kayden Wilmoth v. Dr. Stephen Berych and Pleasant Valley Hospital
P.A. – James A. Henry; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, Tyler Wilmoth, is suing the defendants for malpractice after developing jaundice a week following a laparoscopic choleystectomy for removal of the gall bladder on Feb. 28, 2007. Her children, Bailey Shockey and Kayden Wilmoth, are suing the defendants for mental anguish and depravation of services, comfort, society and companionship of their mother. The plaintiffs are seeking unspecified damages, costs and fees.
Case number: 09-C-25

Ohio man blames Mason doctor for injuries

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Wagner

POINT PLEASANT — An Ohio man is alleging he was permanently injured when his “life-threatening complaints” were not taken seriously by his physician.

Michael Little filed a lawsuit against Dr. James P. Wagner in Mason Circuit Court on Feb. 27. In his complaint, filed with the assistance of Robert P. Welsh of the Masters Law Firm in Charleston, Little, 57, of Gallipolis, Ohio, alleges that the brain injuries he suffered were a result of Wagner’s malpractice.

According to court records, Little sought treatment from Wagner, 65, on Dec. 11, 2006. Records are unclear if this was the first time Little saw Wagner, or if he’d been a regular patient.

However, Little alleges on that day he presented to Wagner “life-threatening complaints.” Though his suit does not specify the nature of the complaints, Little alleges Wager failed to appreciate how serious and life-threatening they were.

According to the suit, Little was a patient at Pleasant Valley Hospital the day he was treated by Wagner. Little alleges at no time during his stay, and under Wagner’s care did Wagner order any testing relating to Little’s complaints or consult with specialists including a neurologist.

In his suit, Little alleges the untreated complaints led to life-threatening complications. Though records are unclear if it occurred the day he was at PVH and under Wager’s care or sometime later, Little alleges those complications led to an undiagnosed brain abscess, spinal meningitis and two strokes which left him “with permanent and irreversible brain injury.”

As a result of Wagner’s alleged malpractice, Little says he has and “continues to experience and endure, great physical and mental pain and suffering.” Also, he has and “continues to expend sums of money for medical care and treatment far in excess of that which he would have incurred but for the negligence of Dr. Wagner.”

Furthermore, Little’s wife, Kathy, 46, makes a claim of a loss of spousal consortium and household services due to Michael’s injuries. She is listed as a co-plaintiff in the suit.

The Littles are seeking unspecified damages, interest and costs.

The case has been assigned to Judge David W. Nibert.

Mason Circuit Court case number: 09-C-24


Improper surgical care harmed Ohio woman and her children, suit alleges

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Rerych

POINT PLEASANT – An Ohio woman is alleging both she and her children where harmed by the negligent actions of both a Mason County physician and hospital.

Both Dr. Stephen Rerych and Pleasant Valley Hospital have been named as defendants in lawsuit filed by Tyler Wilmoth. In her complaint filed with the assistance of Gallipolis, Ohio, attorney James R. Henry, Wilmoth, also of Gallipolis, alleges both Rerych and PVH staff did not take proper care of her following surgery on her gall bladder in 2007.

According to court records, Wilmoth became Rerych’s patient on Feb. 28, 2007. She sought Rerych’s care for purposes of removal of her gall bladder which was done via a laparoscopic choleystectomy that same day.

Records are unclear as to how long Wilmoth stayed at PVH following her surgery. However, she returned on March 6 with an alleged case of jaundice.

In her suit, Wilmoth alleges Rerych and PVH staff are responsible for her developing jaundice. The jaundice has caused her “physical weakness … loss of use and function; permanent disfigurement; pain, embarrassment, mental anguish, emotional distress and an impairment of the capacity to enjoy life both past and future.”

In addition to herself, Wilmoth alleges her three minor children, Bailey Shockey, Madalyn Jeffers and Kayden Wilmoth, suffered, too. In addition to their own mental anguish, Wilmoth alleges Bailey, Madalyn and Kayden “have been deprived of [her] services, comfort, society and companionship” and will “continue to so suffer in the indefinite future.”

The children are named as co-plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

Both Wilmoth and her children are seeking unspecified damages.

The case has been assigned to Judge David W. Nibert

Mason Circuit Court case number: 09-C-26

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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March 13
Clarence Williamson, Jorja Williamson and Aaron Williamson v. Countrywide Bank FSB, Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., Title First Agency, Inc. of Columbus, Ohio
PA- Joe M. Supple; J – Nibert
* The plaintiffs, residents of Southside, are suing the defendants for inflating the appraisal of the plaintiff’s property prior to issuing a loan to Clarence and Jorja which prohibited their ability to transfer funds to Aaron due to excessive tax liability. They are seeking unspecified damages, costs, fees and $4,100 in civil penalties for each violation of the state Consumer Credit Protection Act.
Case number: 09-C-29

March 17
Jordan Landing, LLC v. Christopher G. Morris and Ronald L. Hickman
PA- Herschel H. Rose III; J – Evans
* The plaintiff, a Camp Conley apartment complex, is disputing a ruling from Morris, the state tax commissioner, and conveyed by Hickman, the county assessor, in February that low income housing tax credits were considered intangible property not exempt from taxation to the Jordan Landing’s individual investors. They are seeking a ruling from the court on the taxability of the credits, and a corrected assessment.
Case number: 09-C-31

March 19
Triple F Logging, Inc. v. Angela Chapman and John Todd Stephenson
PA-Ronald F. Stein Jr.; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, an Ashton business now known as Triple F Resources, is asking for a restraining order and temporary injunction against Chapman, both individually and as administrix of the estate of Jerry Lee Pinson, and Stephenson, both individually an as an heir to the Pinson estate, to prohibit them from disposing of any real property until the plaintiff’s claims against the estate of $140,000 are settled.
Case number: 09-C-33

Putnam man files suit over drag strip truck fire

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Bob Motz fires up his 20,000-horsepower Jet Kenworth in a file photo. A Putnam County man has filed a suit against Motz and Kanawha Valley Dragway Park after he rescued Motz from the burning vehicle after an accident during a 2007 event.

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POINT PLEASANT – A Putnam County man is alleging he was severely injured during a mishap that occurred at a highly touted racing event in Mason County.

In Mason Circuit Court, Frank Paul Wingo of Hurricane filed a lawsuit against both the owners of the World’s Fastest Truck, and the Kanawha Valley Dragway Park. In his complaint filed on Jan. 30 with the assistance of Teays Valley attorney Wayne Van Bibber, the 54-year-old Wingo alleges all were responsible for burns he suffered when the truck caught fire during an appearance at KVDP in 2007.

According to court records, Wingo was at KVDP in Southside on June 23, 2007, during an appearance of the World’s Fastest Truck, a tractor trailer rig with a jet engine. As they had in the past, KVDP officials asked Wingo to be a starter for the event for which they paid him a cash incentive.

Though records are unclear as to how or when, the truck’s cab caught fire, trapping the owner and driver, Robert Motz, inside. Nevertheless, after the fire started, Wingo states in his lawsuit that he “approached the burning truck cab in order to extinguish the flames and save the life of Defendant Robert Motz.”

Though he does not specify, Wingo alleges he sustained “temporary and permanent serious injuries” in his effort to fight the fire and rescue Motz. He claims his injuries were a direct result of KVDP officials failing to provide adequate fire suppression equipment and personnel during the event.

In his suit, Wingo alleges as a result of the defendants’ negligence he “suffered great pain of body and mind, past and future; has incurred and will be required in the future to incur certain sums of money for and about the treatment of his injuries; sustained a loss of income, past and future; and suffered a diminution in his ability to enjoy life.” Also, Wingo’s wife, Penny, 53, who is listed as co-plaintiff, makes a claim for loss of consortium.

In addition to KVDP and Motz, Wingo lists Marshall Strawther and the International Hot Rod Association as co-defendants. According to Wingo’s lawsuit, Strawther operates and leases the Park, and the IHRA promotes and sanctions its events.

The Wingos are seeking unspecified damages, costs and fees.

Different defendants, answers

Through their attorney James D. McQueen Jr., with the Charleston law firm of Frost Brown Todd, Strawther and IRHA filed their respective answers to Wingo’s lawsuit on March 13. Both deny the allegations except that Motz and his truck were present at KVDP on June 23, 2007.

Though Strawther denied promoting or sanctioning the event, IHRA, Inc. admitted it did, but qualified its admission by saying only its subsidiary, IHRA, LLC, a Texas-chartered corporation with principal offices in Beverly Hills, Calif, sanctions events.

In their defense, both Strawther and IHRA said Wingo is at fault for his own injuries as he knew he would be at risk of getting burned when he attempted to extinguish the fire. Furthermore, they deny his claims that allowing Motz’ rocket-propelled truck to operate on the drag strip was not “ultra hazardous…nor …abnormally dangerous.”

In filing its answer to Wingo’s suit on March 27, KVDP via its attorney Harold S. Albertson of Charleston, said it was without sufficient information to admit or deny virtually all of Wingo’s allegations. The only one to which it admitted was that it is a ” a business entity formed and licensed in the State of West Virginia for the purpose of owning and operating a drag racing site.”

Like Strawther and IHRA, KVDP said Wingo knew the risk he was taking when he not only came to the event, but also attempted to fight the fire. However, they went a step further by filing a cross claim against all the other defendants saying if Wingo was damaged in any way, it was their fault.

As of press time, Motz, who records show lives in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, had yet to file his answer to the lawsuit.

The case has been assigned to Judge David W. Nibert.

Mason Circuit Court, Case No. 09-C-09

Mason hospital adds doctor in wrongful death suit to staff

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POINT PLEASANT – A Mason County hospital apparently has opened its doors to a South Charleston physician who’s quality of care has been called into question multiple times in the last eight years.

Those allegations, records show, include not only being named twice in separate wrongful death suits in hospital emergency rooms, but also his privileges being revoked in 2001 from a state VA hospital.

Recently, The West Virginia Record reported on a lawsuit the family of a deceased Glasgow woman filed against Dr. M. Anwar Yahar Abdeen. In the complaint she filed as the administratrix of the estate of her mother, Pamela Campbell Smith, and in conjunction with her sister and father last month in Kanawha Circuit Court, Jamie Lee Davis alleged that Abdeen was responsible for Smith’s death in 2006.

In their suit, Smith’s family alleges that administrators at Montgomery General Hospital, where Abdeen worked at the time, knew his work had fallen below acceptable standards of care. Though he was demoted as director of MGH’s emergency room, he continued to treat patients there, including Smith.

Specifically, the family alleges Abdeen failed to properly treat Smith’s complaints of hypertension, headaches and vomiting after he examined her in MGH’s ER the night of Oct. 13, 2006. Despite being prescribed medication for both her pain and nausea, she died early the next day.

Also, the suit makes reference to Abdeen being named as a defendant in another wrongful death of another Upper Kanawha Valley woman during the time he treated Smith. In that suit, Joshua M. Scott, of Belle, as executor of the estate of his mother, Lida, alleged Abdeen in 2004 did not properly treat her for a heart attack following her admission to the ER at St. Francis Hospital in Charleston.

Furthermore, the Smith lawsuit states that allegations of substandard care were leveled against Abdeen as early as 2001, the same year he was granted his West Virginia license, records show. On Sept. 1, Abdeen’s employment was terminated and his privileges withdrawn from the Veteran’s Medical Center in Huntington after he “substantially failed to meet generally accepted standards of clinical practice as to raise reasonable concern for the safety of patients,” wrote the Center’s acting director in a 2002 memorandum.

Now, according to the state Board of Medicine, Abdeen is practicing at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant. In December, Dr. Danny R. Westmoreland filed a lawsuit against both PVH and several other physicians in federal court alleging that they, without cause or provocation, revoked his privileges early last year.

Though his privileges have since been restored, Westmoreland, who’s only lawsuit alleging malpractice against him was filed by an ex-in-law, and later dismissed for failing to serve him notice of the suit, says how both he and Abdeen have been treated by administrators is typical of PVH.

Problems pre-date WV licensure

According to the Board, prior to being granted his West Virginia license, Abdeen, now 45, graduated medical school in 1991 at the American University of Beirut’s Faculty of Medicine in Lebanon. Five years later he completed his residency at St. Barnabas Hospital in the Bronx, N.Y.

Records show his West Virginia license was officially granted on Sept. 10, 2001, nine days after he was asked to leave the Huntington VA center due to substandard care. In his memo dated Nov. 1, 2002, Gale Beaman, the center’s then-acting director, which was attached as an exhibit in the Smith family complaint, did not go into detail about Abdeen’s quality of care except it was “evidenced by the occurrence of multiple diagnostic and treatment errors during his clinical performance as in internist.”

Nevertheless, Beaman’s memo which was addressed to the VA’s general counsel, said “that there is substantial evidence to make a report to the Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee S[tate] L[icensing ] B[oards]” regarding Abdeen’s lack of care. Abdeen’s Tennessee license, records show, since the time of the memo has been inactive.

The only state to give Beaman’s referral any serious consideration was Alabama, where Abdeen was also licensed at the time. Record show in August 2003, the Alabama Board of Medical Examiners, based on Beaman’s memo, announced its intention to contest Abdeen’s request for reinstatement before the state’s Medical Licensure Commission.

Though it unclear as to when, records show Abdeen’s license “had previously lapsed for non-payment of the annual registration fee.”

After a hearing, the Commission on Nov. 23, 2003 ruled that the grounds on which ABME was contesting Abdeen’s reinstatement “insufficient”, and ordered that he “be reissued a full license to practice medicine in Alabama.” However, by the end of the year, Abdeen allowed his license to again lapse, and it has not been renewed since.

Records show, the only state where Abdeen has an active medical license, other than West Virginia, is Kentucky.

Red flags

In the lawsuit he filed on Aug. 10, 2006, Scott alleged that Abdeen failed to diagnose Lida’s complaints of chest pain as a heart attack which resulted in her death on April 9, 2004. In addition to accusing Abdeen of wrongful death, Scott accused Mountain Emergency Physicians, L.L.P., a Traverse City, Mich.-based medical staffing company that served as Abdeen’s employer, of negligent hiring and credentialing.

MEP, Scott alleged, knew Abdeen “was not board certified in Emergency Medicine, and did not have the proper training and experience in providing the necessary services to patients such as Lida Scott who presented with complaints of chest pain.” According to the state Board’s Web site, Abdeen specializes in internal medicine and nutrition.

On Jan. 31, 2007, records show Scott’s lawsuit was dismissed after Abdeen’s insurer, National Guardian Risk Retention Group, settled with the estate for $487,500.

Similar to Scott’s, Smith’s lawsuit makes a claim of wrongful death against Abdeen, and negligent hiring and credentialing against both MGH, and Emcare Physician Services, Inc., a Dallas, Texas-based medical staffing company that employed Abdeen. The family alleges that the problems with Abdeen’s care that surfaced at the Huntington VA and St. Francis should have raised red flags.

However, the Smith family alleges the problems continued to manifest themselves when MGH was put “on notice that Defendant Abdeen was practicing below accepted standards of care prior to October 16, 2006,” three days after Smith’s death.

Standard procedure

When Abdeen came to PVH and what he is doing there is unclear as hospital spokeswoman Amy Leach did not return repeated telephone calls seeking a comment. However, when contacted Westmoreland said granting privileges to someone like Abdeen who’s already proven to be a liability, while playing games with his, is standard for PVH.

“This is typical of the way I’ve been treated,” Westmoreland said, “and its disgusts me.”

Records show in all the years he’s practiced in Mason County, one time was he sued for malpractice. On Sept. 4, 2001, Peggy Varney, as the administratrix of the estate Westmoreland’s nephew, Shannon, named him as a co-defendant in a wrongful death suit.

Ironically, along with PVH and Jackson General Hospital, Varney’s suit also named Dr. Shrikant K. Vaidya as a co-defendant. In addition his one for malpractice, Westmoreland has named Vaidya as a co-defendant in his privileges lawsuit.

In her suit, Varney, who is Westmoreland’s ex-sister-in-law, alleges all the defendants failed to diagnose and treat Shannon for testicular cancer. According to the suit, he died on Sept. 4, 1999 at the age of 27.

The suit was dismissed two years later since none of the defendants where ever served. Also, records show, other than the complaint, nothing else was filed prior to a notice sent to Varney dated Aug. 1, 2003 by Judge David W. Nibert of his intention to dismiss he suit for failure to serve process.

According to Westmoreland, he never treated Shannon. The only role he played in Shannon’s death was to pay for his funeral expenses.

The only reason he was named in the suit was because the attorney who helped Varney file the suit decided to list anybody associated with Shannon’s name with the title of doctor.

“That’s the thank you I got for being his uncle,” Westmoreland said.

In any event, Westmoreland says allowing Abdeen onto PVH’s staff in light of his checkered past will not only prove useful in his lawsuit, which is preparing to enter the discovery phase, but also vindicate him in his effort to see good doctors rewarded, and bad ones punished.

“I’ve actively worked to protect the area from bad doctors, and it is one of the reasons that I’m treated as an outcast by the medical community,” Westmoreland said.

Kanawha Circuit Court, Case Nos. 06-C-1596 (Scott) and 09-C-443 (Smith); Mason Circuit Court, Case No. 01-C-299; U.S. District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, Case No. 08-cv-1444

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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April 3
State Farm Automobile Insurance Company v. Alvis Dean II
P.A. – David J. Rosenberg; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is suing the defendant on behalf of its policyholder, Brian Crawford, for subrogation of a claim he filed following a car wreck with the defendant on Aug. 4, 2007. In addition to judgment in the amount of the claim, $5,439.62, the plaintiff is seeking costs and pre- and post-judgment interest.
Case number: 09-C-39

April 6
Megan McDermott v. Cara Rae Grindstaff
P.A. – Jeffrey Vollmer; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a resident of Millwood, is suing the defendant, a resident of Mason, for injuries she sustained in a car wreck with the defendant on April 27, 2007 on Dunham Rd. in Mason County. She is seeking unspecified damages and costs.
Case number: 09-C-41

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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April 14
Charlotte R. Knacl v. Charles and Nathanial Scott Spencer
P.A. – Bradley H. Layne; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is suing the defendants for injuries she sustained in a car wreck with Nathanial on April 20, 2007. She is seeking unspecified damages, costs and fees.
Case number: 09-C-46

Carol R. and Richard Jarrell v. Charles and Nathanial Scott Spencer
P.A. – Bradley H. Layne; J – Nibert
* The plaintiffs are suing the defendants for injuries they sustained in a car wreck with Nathanial on April 20, 2007. They are seeking unspecified damages, costs and fees.
Case number: 09-C-47

April 22
Ralph E. Rose Jr. v. Inland Marine Service, Inc. and The Motor Vessel R.W. Naye
P.A. – James M. Casey; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is suing the defendants for injuries he sustained while working as a deckhand on the R.W. Naye on June 5, 2008. He is seeking unspecified damages, costs and fees.
Case number: 09-C-48

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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April 27
Donnie S. Waugh v. Debra Deal and Bobby Deal
P.A. – Kevin W. Hughart; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a resident of Glenwood, is suing the defendants for injuries he sustained on July 29, 2007 when struck by a tow dolly owned by Debra, a Huntington resident, and operated by Bobby, a Glenwood resident. He is seeking unspecified damages, costs and interest.
Case number: 09-C-51

May 1
Martin Randall Woodall Jr. v. Campbell Transportation Company, Inc.
P.A. – Matthew L. Clark; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a Point Pleasant resident, is suing the defendant, a Pennsylvania corporation, for injuries he sustained while working as a deckhand on the motor vessel Leila Shearer in December 2008. He is seeking unspecified damages and fees.
Case number: 09-C-54

Derek R. Riffle v. Campbell Transportation Company, Inc.
P.A. – Raymond G. Musgrave; J – Evans
* The plaintiff, a resident of Evans, is suing the defendant, a Pennsylvania corporation, for injuries he sustained on the motor vessel R. G. Mayes on June 2, 2006. He is seeking $50,000 in damages plus interest and costs
Case number: 09-C-55

Mariessa K. Donahue v. Mark Roush
P.A. – W. Dan Roll; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a Point Pleasant resident, is seeking a court-order evicting the defendant from property the plaintiff owns on Rt. 1, Box 619 in Point Pleasant. Also, she is seeking judgment in the amount of $6633.88 for rent arrearage, unpaid taxes and insurance premiums and cost to repair damages to the property plus costs and fees.
Case number: 09-C-56


THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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May 19
Odean Legg v. Catherine Neville
P.A. – Matthew J. Woelfel; J – Evans
* The plaintiff is suing the defendant for injuries she sustained after being struck by Neville’s car while on Main Street in her motorized wheelchair. She is seeking unspecified damages, costs and interest.
Case number: 09-C-61

Tracy Brown v. the West Virginia Public Employees Grievance Board and the Mason County Board of Education
P.A. – Dwight J. Staples; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff has filed a writ of mandamus with the court asking it to order the defendants to produce an investigative report conducted by Linda Rollins in response to a grievance Brown filed on Oct. 2, 2007 following a three-day suspension.
Case number: 09-C-62

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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May 21
The Board of Education of Mason County v. The Community Excellence Corp., Geneth Krebs, Adam Stanley Krebs and Scott Simms, sheriff
P.A. – Robert L. Bays; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is asking for a court order to condemn the land owned by the Krebs near Meadowbrook Subdivision for the purpose of constructing an athletic facility. The estimated fair market value of the property is $200,000.
Case number: 09-C-65

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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June 10
Progressive Specialty Insurance Company v. Allen Johnson
P.A. – Ryan S. Marsteller; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a Mayfield, Ohio-based business, is suing the defendant, a Mason resident, for subrogation of a claim filed by its policyholder, Judith Knapp, following a collision between her daughter, Ashley, and the defendant on June 19, 2007. In addition to a judgment of $56,386.02, they are seeking costs, fees and interest.
Case number: 09-C-69

June 16
Brenda Lee Bailes and Breanna Milhoan v. Todd Andrew McDade, Mark and Brenda Wright
P.A. – Charles M. Hatcher; J – Nibert
* The plaintiffs, residents of Glenwood, are suing the defendants, for injuries they sustained in a collision with McDade on June 21, 2007 at the intersection of W. Va. 2 and Crab Creed Road in Gallipolis Ferry. They are seeking damages in a minimum of $20,000 each for lost wages and hospitalization plus interest and costs.
Case number: 09-C-70

June 23
Charles D. McCallister v. Pleasant Valley Hospital
P.A. – pro se.; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a resident of Apple Grove, is suing the defendant for injuries he sustained from a dog bite while outside the emergency room while awaiting a wheelchair for his wife. He is seeking damages of $5,000. The case was originally filed in Mason Magistrate Court on May 29 and removed to circuit court at the request of the defendant.
Case number: 09-C-73

June 25
Cindy and Greg Stalnaker v. Jim Rubenstein and the West Virginia Division of Corrections
P.A. – Craig Tatterson; J – Nibert
* The plaintiffs are suing the defendants for injuries Cindy sustained on June 27, 2007 after falling on slippery floor at the Lakin Correctional Center following a job interview. Greg makes a claim for loss of consortium. They are seeking unspecified damages.
Case number: 09-C-74

Darrell B. and Mary Lou Cogar and Jonathan Dean v. Donna G. and Scott Slayton
P.A. – R. Michael Shaw; J – Nibert
* The plaintiffs are suing the defendants for deliberately setting fire to their property. They are seeking judgment in the amount of the damages, $8,723.83
Case number: 09-C-75

June 26
Samantha G. Adams v. Lawrence J. Lee and Estes Express Lines
P.A. – James M. Casey; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, a resident of Southside, is suing the defendants in both her personal capacity and as administratrix of the estate of Betty C. Errett for Errett’s wrongful death following a collision on June 27, 2007 with Lee on U.S. 35. She is seeking unspecified damages and fees.
Case number: 09-C-76

In re: Kelly Randolph, as the natural parent and next friend of Christina Marie Bonecutter, an infant
P.A. – Bradley H. Layne: J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is petitioning the court to approve settlement of an insurance claim against Dairyland Insurance Company. Randolph is seeking $20,000 against the policy held by Herbert Willet for injuries her daughter, Christina, sustained on Nov. 16, 2008 while riding as a passenger in vehicle driven by Jackie Randolph, a 15-year-old unlicensed driver, following a single-vehicle accident.

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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Aug. 4
The estate of Dean Watson Smith, deceased, by its administrator, the Sheriff of Mason County, West Virginia, David Anthony vs. Scott Edward Smith
PA – Damon Morgan; J – Nibert
* The petitioner is asking the court to order immediate possession of a 1972 Ford Torino currently held by the respondent, a resident of Hartford.
Case number: 09-C-83

THIS JUST IN: Mason County

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Aug. 18
Drema Ashley vs. Pleasant Valley Hospital and James Toothman, M.D.
PA – J. Michael Ranson; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff, an Ohio resident, is suing the defendants for causing her finger to be amputated after improperly treating it following a dog bite. She is seeking unspecified damages, court costs and attorney fees.
Case number: 09-C-90

Aug. 21
Michael Sheets vs. Appalachian Power Company/American Electric Power Corp. and Thomas Ohlinger
PA – Andrew J. Katz; J – Nibert
* The plaintiff is suing the defendant for improperly placing him on medical leave under the Family Medical Leave Act for five months starting on Aug. 22, 2007 despite having clearance from his doctor he could work without restriction. He is seeking unspecified damages, including all lost wages during the time he was on leave, plus court costs and attorney fees.
Case number: 09-C-92

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