Kellie Martin and her husband Don were taking Christmas decorations down from the attic of their suburban Garland, Texas, home in late 2011 when their lives changed forever.
Kellie, 54, missed a step on a ladder and fell, resulting in
a herniated disk in her back. After physical therapy and muscle relaxers, their
family doctor recommended neurosurgeon Christopher Duntsch. The couple agreed
to visit the doctor — a decision that will forever haunt Don and their two
daughters.
The case of Duntsch is explored in the new Oxygen
docu-series, “License to Kill,” premiering on June 23. The show, hosted by
renowned plastic surgeon Dr. Terry Dubrow of “Botched," chronicles the
harrowing accounts of patients put into jeopardy by medical professionals’ insidious
use of their expertise. It highlights interviews with families, medical
professionals and law enforcement.
Duntsch was recently the subject of a true crime podcast
earlier this year titled “Dr. Death” by Wondery — the same podcast network
behind their hit series “Dirty John.”
“From the initial fall, it wasn’t that super great,” Don
told Fox News about his wife’s injury. “It was a lingering pain. It never went
away. We did all kinds of treatments to help alleviate the pain, but it just
remained persistent. We were planning on going to an out of country trip, so we
thought we might get this fixed before we did. And she was in more pain than
she led on. I could see it. I didn’t want her to go through that if we could
avoid it. That’s when we started exploring surgery options.”
The couple soon found themselves in Dr. Duntsch’s office
scheduling surgery for during the elementary school teacher’s March 2012 spring
break. Duntsch insisted the 45-minute procedure was routine and simple to do.
“He sounded very
articulate,” reflected Don. “It sounded like he knew what he was doing. We
figure it wouldn’t be an issue… He said it was a minor surgery, but that she
would be OK after the procedure. A very simple, common procedure — that’s what
we were hoping for. A quick recovery."
But on the day of surgery, Don found himself waiting, not
knowing what happened to Martin.
“About an hour later, I’m still sitting in the waiting room
and I hadn’t heard from anybody,” he explained. “I asked one of the nurses to
check and see what was going on. Then 15-20 minutes later, [Duntsch] came out.
He tells me the surgery went well and she’s moving around, but was in obvious
pain so they gave her more medicine. She may have to go up to the ICU or maybe
stay overnight, but she was going to be OK… That’s when I called my daughters
to come up to the hospital. That’s when I realized this is not good.”
The wait continued and Don agonized over Martin, wondering
what was happening behind closed doors.
“I’m starting to
freak out,” he said. “Something just wasn’t right because no one was telling
me, ‘Hey, she’s recovering, you can come to see her.’ Instead, they’re
continuing to work on her. This is going on now for two hours. My girls were
holding on to hope, but I just knew something was seriously wrong."
Don said the ICU physician, as well as Duntsch and the
anesthesiologist, came to see him and the couple’s two daughters to deliver the
devastating news — the beloved matriarch was dead.
“They told us they tried everything they could, but they
couldn’t save her,” said Don. “That’s when the girls lost it. I lost it. That’s
when the nightmare started… We didn’t get a chance to say goodbye to her. We
went in there with good faith, believing in the doctors and the medical world
so they could help us. Instead, they ended up turning our world upside down. It
was pure misery. I was totally lost. My world just ended right then and there.”
People magazine reported the medical examiner confirmed
Don’s fears. It turned out Martin had bled to death after Duntsch sliced an
artery. According to the outlet, Don also learned that Duntsch had earlier
operated on one of the coroner’s office employees and left the man paralyzed.
The Dallas County district attorney’s office would later learn that that out of
38 surgeries undertaken by Duntsch in less than two years, 33 had gone wrong.
Two patients had died, one was rendered a quadriplegic and many were left with
permanent injuries.
“I was angry,” said Don when he learned of Duntsch’s other
victims. “I was angry at the medical world. If this doctor had previous bad
outcomes, why did he still had the ability to do surgery? It was such a
cover-up. As things progressed, I got angrier and angrier with the system. But
by the grace of God, other doctors started voicing their opinions about
[Duntsch]. But how was I going to survive? How am I going to live day by day
now?”
Between 2011 and 2013, Rolling Stone previously reported,
Duntsch was employed by four Dallas-area hospitals and nearly all of his
patients, those who survived, came out in far worse shape than ever before.
During the trial, Dallas surgeon Randall Kirby, who assisted
on one of Duntsch’s surgeries in 2012, told jurors he sent information to the
Texas Medical Board, warning them of Duntsch’s botched procedures. D Magazine
shared that despite receiving complaints dating back to 2012, the Texas Medical
Board reportedly didn’t revoke Duntsch’s privileges until 2013. Texas Observer
clarified that the Texas Medical Board is "limited" in its ability to
investigate malpractice, which could have possibly resulted in the delay.
According to records, Duntsch was booked into the Dallas
County Jail in 2015. He was charged with five counts of aggravated assault
causing serious bodily injury and one count of injury to a child, elderly or
disabled person.
D Magazine reported that in July 2016, the Dallas County
District Attorney’s Office followed through and a grand jury returned five
indictments of aggravated assault and one of harming an elderly person. Duntsch
pleaded not guilty and alleged in emails that he was at the center of “a vast
conspiracy to bilk money from the hospitals where he practiced.”
The indictment accused Duntsch of wide-ranging malpractice,
including improper placement of screws and plates along patients’ spines, a
sponge left in one patient, and a major vein cut in another. Records also
showed that Duntsch operated on the wrong part of a patient’s spine, damaged
nerves and left one woman with chronic pain and dependent on a wheelchair.
At the time, Duntsch was struggling financially and had
racked up a series of arrests, including stealing Walmart merchandise.
During the trial, prosecutors said Duntsch’s hands and
surgical tools amounted to “deadly weapons,” and contended that he “intentionally,
knowingly and recklessly” harmed up to 15 of his patients. Prosecutors also
claimed that in a 2011 email to a girlfriend, Duntsch said he would “become a
cold-blooded killer.”
Dallas surgeon Randall Kirby says his former colleague, Dr.
Christopher Duntsch, managed to commit crimes so heinous that patients
everywhere are still struck by fear when they hear about the case for the first
time.
However, Duntsch’s attorneys argued that he was not a
criminal but just a lousy surgeon committing malpractice in chaotic operating
rooms in hospitals in Dallas and its northern suburbs. They also said the tone
of the email in question was unclear and could have been meant as sarcasm.
The New Yorker reported Duntsch was ultimately stopped after
the combined involvement of the Dallas Country district attorney, an attorney,
a journalist, and the state medical board with the efforts initiated by Kirby
and Dr. Robert Henderson, a veteran surgeon at the Dallas Medical Center.
In 2017, a jury sentenced Duntsch to life in prison for
maiming patients who had turned to him for surgery to resolve debilitating
injuries. The decision came almost a week after the Dallas County jury
convicted Duntsch of first-degree felony injury to an elderly person.
But life for Don and his family still isn’t easy.
“I’m not gonna lie, I think this puts a strain on our
relationship a little bit,” said Don about his daughters. “We were such a
close-knit family. It was difficult for them. It was difficult for all of us.
They were trying to be careful around me, trying not to say anything or do
anything that will upset me. My whole lifestyle has changed. Everything is
different now. I look at life differently totally differently. Life is just too
precious, too short. We can’t take the little things for granted. We’re just
trying to make the best of each day.”
Don hopes viewers will be compelled to conduct no-nonsense on any physician or surgeon they’re considering — and to never take any kind of procedure for granted.
“Get a second opinion no matter what,” he said. “Evaluate
everything to make sure you really want to do this surgery. Explore all
options. And realize that no surgery is a routine, simple surgery. Everything
can be a life or death situation.”
https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/dr-death-license-to-kill-documentary
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