Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:13,738 --> 00:00:16,465
[ominous music]
2
00:00:16,467 --> 00:00:18,842
# #
3
00:00:18,844 --> 00:00:20,510
[siren wailing]
4
00:00:20,512 --> 00:00:23,305
- Patients were injured
on the operating table.
5
00:00:23,307 --> 00:00:25,140
- When they cut me open,
6
00:00:25,142 --> 00:00:27,517
something went really bad,
wrong.
7
00:00:27,519 --> 00:00:30,854
- The first words
out of Jeff's mouth was,
8
00:00:30,856 --> 00:00:32,481
"What did he to do me?"
9
00:00:32,483 --> 00:00:35,025
- It was like a crazed
maniac procedure.
10
00:00:35,027 --> 00:00:36,526
- Was it an honest mistake?
11
00:00:36,528 --> 00:00:39,196
- I couldn't feel my feet,
I couldn't talk,
12
00:00:39,198 --> 00:00:41,031
I wanted to die.
13
00:00:41,033 --> 00:00:43,700
- Or was it a warning that
a murderer was on the loose?
14
00:00:43,702 --> 00:00:45,869
- I wanted to lunge at him
and shake him.
15
00:00:45,871 --> 00:00:47,537
- And that's when it hit,
16
00:00:47,539 --> 00:00:48,872
my world just turned
upside down.
17
00:00:48,874 --> 00:00:51,374
- His deadly weapon
was his hands
18
00:00:51,376 --> 00:00:53,043
and his surgical tools.
19
00:00:53,045 --> 00:00:55,879
- This guy's trying to kill
people for a living.
20
00:00:55,881 --> 00:00:57,547
I knew he just needed
to be stopped.
21
00:00:57,549 --> 00:01:00,509
[tense music]
22
00:01:00,511 --> 00:01:02,886
# #
23
00:01:02,888 --> 00:01:04,679
- As a doctor
and certified expert
24
00:01:04,681 --> 00:01:06,890
for the California
Medical Board,
25
00:01:06,892 --> 00:01:09,684
I knew first-hand that most
medical professionals
26
00:01:09,686 --> 00:01:12,562
will go to any length
to help their patients.
27
00:01:12,564 --> 00:01:15,357
But in some cases,
28
00:01:15,359 --> 00:01:18,527
there are those with
a deranged mind
29
00:01:18,529 --> 00:01:20,403
and a license to kill.
30
00:01:20,405 --> 00:01:22,956
[police radio chatter]
31
00:01:24,701 --> 00:01:28,245
In 2011, when 55 year-old
Texas mom, Kellie Martin
32
00:01:28,247 --> 00:01:31,414
decided to have surgery
to treat a minor back injury,
33
00:01:31,416 --> 00:01:35,085
she thought a positive outcome
was all but guaranteed.
34
00:01:35,087 --> 00:01:36,711
But on the day of her procedure,
35
00:01:36,713 --> 00:01:39,548
Kellie's family was shocked
to discover
36
00:01:39,550 --> 00:01:42,684
how quickly the routine
became catastrophic.
37
00:01:44,263 --> 00:01:46,721
[bright music]
38
00:01:46,723 --> 00:01:51,560
# #
39
00:01:51,562 --> 00:01:54,437
- It sounds really clich
40
00:01:54,439 --> 00:01:57,399
but people growing up
said we were like
41
00:01:57,401 --> 00:01:59,401
the Beaver Cleavers.
42
00:01:59,403 --> 00:02:03,738
- My wife, Kellie,
I met her in college.
43
00:02:03,740 --> 00:02:06,908
She caught my interest
and apparently I caught hers.
44
00:02:06,910 --> 00:02:09,411
We dated throughout college,
got married,
45
00:02:09,413 --> 00:02:12,289
and we basically started
a family.
46
00:02:12,291 --> 00:02:14,624
# #
47
00:02:14,626 --> 00:02:17,627
Lauren was born first,
48
00:02:17,629 --> 00:02:19,963
and Caitlin was born
few years later.
49
00:02:19,965 --> 00:02:21,798
And as they grew older,
50
00:02:21,800 --> 00:02:24,426
we got involved
with their school activities,
51
00:02:24,428 --> 00:02:25,635
sports activities.
52
00:02:25,637 --> 00:02:27,971
We had a... we had
a wonderful time.
53
00:02:27,973 --> 00:02:31,266
- We were so lucky to have
two parents
54
00:02:31,268 --> 00:02:35,103
that A, were still married,
and that B, loved us so much.
55
00:02:35,105 --> 00:02:37,480
# #
56
00:02:37,482 --> 00:02:39,649
- Our family was very close.
57
00:02:39,651 --> 00:02:41,276
My father being
a police officer,
58
00:02:41,278 --> 00:02:42,485
and my mother, you know,
59
00:02:42,487 --> 00:02:43,820
she works in the education field
60
00:02:43,822 --> 00:02:45,614
as a librarian.
61
00:02:45,616 --> 00:02:47,824
- She's very passionate
for her daughters
62
00:02:47,826 --> 00:02:49,409
and her family as well.
63
00:02:49,411 --> 00:02:50,619
You know, we did everything
together.
64
00:02:50,621 --> 00:02:52,454
She's a very loving woman.
65
00:02:52,456 --> 00:02:54,456
# #
66
00:02:54,458 --> 00:02:58,126
- In November of 2011,
67
00:02:58,128 --> 00:03:00,795
her and my dad were taking
Christmas decorations down
68
00:03:00,797 --> 00:03:02,672
from the attic,
and she fell down,
69
00:03:02,674 --> 00:03:04,174
and she hurt her back.
70
00:03:04,176 --> 00:03:06,635
- She felt a twinge in her back,
71
00:03:06,637 --> 00:03:08,637
and Kellie got back up.
72
00:03:08,639 --> 00:03:10,847
And she walked around,
she worked it off.
73
00:03:10,849 --> 00:03:14,351
But Kellie's pain continued
after the fall, kept going on.
74
00:03:14,353 --> 00:03:15,685
And I could tell some days
75
00:03:15,687 --> 00:03:17,520
she could do chores
around the house,
76
00:03:17,522 --> 00:03:19,856
and some days she couldn't
get in and out of bed.
77
00:03:19,858 --> 00:03:21,858
We had a big trip planned
to Antigua,
78
00:03:21,860 --> 00:03:23,526
but she was in pain.
79
00:03:23,528 --> 00:03:25,195
It just kept going on
and going on.
80
00:03:25,197 --> 00:03:26,696
And we thought this is never
gonna go away,
81
00:03:26,698 --> 00:03:28,938
and we need... we need
to address this some way.
82
00:03:30,535 --> 00:03:32,327
And that's when we went
to the family doctor
83
00:03:32,329 --> 00:03:34,371
and told him about
what she's been experiencing.
84
00:03:34,373 --> 00:03:37,540
And so, the doctor gave us
his card.
85
00:03:37,542 --> 00:03:39,702
And it said,
"Doctor Christopher Dunstch."
86
00:03:40,879 --> 00:03:43,546
- When you hear the schools
that he went to
87
00:03:43,548 --> 00:03:46,716
and, um, how prestigious it was
88
00:03:46,718 --> 00:03:48,551
to be able to have him
as your physician,
89
00:03:48,553 --> 00:03:50,887
you felt really lucky
to be able to get in.
90
00:03:50,889 --> 00:03:53,890
- Dr. Duntsch seemed
very knowledgeable.
91
00:03:53,892 --> 00:03:56,559
Knew exactly
what he was talking about.
92
00:03:56,561 --> 00:03:59,562
He suggested that we get an MRI.
93
00:03:59,564 --> 00:04:01,564
- Dr. Duntsch showed me
the MRI.
94
00:04:01,566 --> 00:04:04,359
I saw the source of the pain.
95
00:04:04,361 --> 00:04:07,237
And I knew that it was causing
my mom discomfort,
96
00:04:07,239 --> 00:04:09,406
and I didn't want her
to have that pain anymore.
97
00:04:09,408 --> 00:04:11,533
- Kellie Martin had torn
98
00:04:11,535 --> 00:04:15,078
a piece of the disc material
99
00:04:15,080 --> 00:04:17,247
from between the vertebrae
100
00:04:17,249 --> 00:04:20,583
and dislocated it
into the spinal canal.
101
00:04:20,585 --> 00:04:22,877
And that was compressing
on nerves
102
00:04:22,879 --> 00:04:25,588
and producing intense pain.
103
00:04:25,590 --> 00:04:27,757
Dr. Duntsch recommended
that she undergo
104
00:04:27,759 --> 00:04:31,177
a procedure to remove it.
105
00:04:31,179 --> 00:04:35,390
A laminectomy is a basic
spine procedure.
106
00:04:35,392 --> 00:04:37,600
This is the simplest operation
107
00:04:37,602 --> 00:04:40,437
that neurosurgeons do
in the spine.
108
00:04:40,439 --> 00:04:42,897
- The procedure my mom
was going to have
109
00:04:42,899 --> 00:04:45,442
was explained to us
as a simple procedure.
110
00:04:45,444 --> 00:04:47,736
As simple as possibly
even getting a cavity done.
111
00:04:47,738 --> 00:04:50,780
[dramatic music]
112
00:04:50,782 --> 00:04:55,243
# #
113
00:04:55,245 --> 00:04:58,455
- On the day of the surgery,
Kellie, she was concerned.
114
00:04:58,457 --> 00:05:00,415
You could see that on her face
a little bit.
115
00:05:00,417 --> 00:05:03,126
And, uh, but, you know,
I was there to reassure her.
116
00:05:03,128 --> 00:05:06,421
And then I kissed her,
and I told her, "I love you,"
117
00:05:06,423 --> 00:05:08,423
and "I'll see you in an hour."
118
00:05:08,425 --> 00:05:11,468
# #
119
00:05:11,470 --> 00:05:14,262
An hour goes by,
I hadn't heard anything,
120
00:05:14,264 --> 00:05:16,639
nobody's come out to me,
so I went to the desk.
121
00:05:16,641 --> 00:05:18,975
And I asked her if she could
give me an update.
122
00:05:18,977 --> 00:05:22,312
And they just told me that
they're still in the OR,
123
00:05:22,314 --> 00:05:23,980
they're still working on her,
124
00:05:23,982 --> 00:05:27,576
and I said, "Okay," and, uh,
"Just keep me posted."
125
00:05:29,488 --> 00:05:32,322
More time went on,
now I'm kinda worried.
126
00:05:32,324 --> 00:05:35,158
So, I asked her again,
"Can you please call?"
127
00:05:35,160 --> 00:05:38,119
And she said,
128
00:05:38,121 --> 00:05:39,829
"It looks like they're about
to finish it up,
129
00:05:39,831 --> 00:05:41,456
"and that the doctor
will come out
130
00:05:41,458 --> 00:05:43,666
and see you in a few minutes."
131
00:05:43,668 --> 00:05:46,836
Dr. Duntsch came out,
took me to this little room,
132
00:05:46,838 --> 00:05:49,672
and said,
"The surgery went well..."
133
00:05:49,674 --> 00:05:52,300
but he said that "they may
have to keep her overnight.
134
00:05:52,302 --> 00:05:54,636
But we'll see, we don't know."
135
00:05:54,638 --> 00:05:57,013
They may have to take her
up to ICU to finish up.
136
00:05:57,015 --> 00:06:00,850
I said, "Okay, do what
you gotta do."
137
00:06:00,852 --> 00:06:02,644
- I get a phone call
from my father,
138
00:06:02,646 --> 00:06:04,854
and he says, "They're gonna
take her to ICU,
139
00:06:04,856 --> 00:06:06,481
"and I think that it would be
really great
140
00:06:06,483 --> 00:06:08,191
"if you and Lauren could come
141
00:06:08,193 --> 00:06:10,485
and that she could see you
when she wakes up."
142
00:06:10,487 --> 00:06:13,363
- My sister and I walked
into the hospital.
143
00:06:13,365 --> 00:06:15,532
My father was sitting
in the waiting room.
144
00:06:15,534 --> 00:06:17,200
So, I went through
the double doors,
145
00:06:17,202 --> 00:06:18,868
and there's a nurses' station.
146
00:06:18,870 --> 00:06:20,703
And I said, "Hi, my name's
Lauren Martin,
147
00:06:20,705 --> 00:06:22,539
I'm looking for my mother,
Kellie."
148
00:06:22,541 --> 00:06:24,541
And she looked at me,
149
00:06:24,543 --> 00:06:27,544
and her face changed completely.
150
00:06:27,546 --> 00:06:31,381
- She comes around the desk
and ushers us
151
00:06:31,383 --> 00:06:34,384
and, like, shifting her body
so that we can't see
152
00:06:34,386 --> 00:06:35,885
what's going on behind her.
153
00:06:35,887 --> 00:06:39,389
And moves us into
the waiting room,
154
00:06:39,391 --> 00:06:43,560
and that was kind of a moment
that I knew
155
00:06:43,562 --> 00:06:46,071
something is not right.
156
00:06:47,190 --> 00:06:50,024
They ask us to go into
the small private room.
157
00:06:50,026 --> 00:06:54,237
About 15 minutes after being
stuck in that little room,
158
00:06:54,239 --> 00:06:57,740
one of the ER physicians
comes in
159
00:06:57,742 --> 00:06:59,909
and says, "We're still working
on her.
160
00:06:59,911 --> 00:07:02,036
"There's some blood loss,
we're trying to figure out
161
00:07:02,038 --> 00:07:03,913
"where it's coming out of,
and we're gonna figure it out,
162
00:07:03,915 --> 00:07:04,914
"and we're gonna keep
working on her.
163
00:07:04,916 --> 00:07:06,749
We're not giving up."
164
00:07:06,751 --> 00:07:09,210
- And now we're 2 1/2 hours,
three hours into this thing.
165
00:07:09,212 --> 00:07:11,421
And I had a sick feeling
in my gut
166
00:07:11,423 --> 00:07:13,214
that something's wrong.
167
00:07:13,216 --> 00:07:16,593
- My dad is starting to
kind of rock back and forth,
168
00:07:16,595 --> 00:07:19,762
um, my stomach is really
hurting.
169
00:07:19,764 --> 00:07:24,559
And then what happens is that
an ER doctor comes back
170
00:07:24,561 --> 00:07:28,229
and says,
"She's in cardiac arrest,
171
00:07:28,231 --> 00:07:30,440
and we're performing CPR."
172
00:07:30,442 --> 00:07:34,444
And, um, at that point,
173
00:07:34,446 --> 00:07:37,747
I... there was a trash can
and I just started throwing up.
174
00:07:39,618 --> 00:07:42,577
I knew even after, like,
ten, twelve minutes,
175
00:07:42,579 --> 00:07:44,287
a person on... you know,
having CPR
176
00:07:44,289 --> 00:07:46,080
is not gonna be the same.
177
00:07:46,082 --> 00:07:48,416
You're not getting oxygen
to your brain.
178
00:07:48,418 --> 00:07:49,959
I that something was wrong,
179
00:07:49,961 --> 00:07:51,753
and I knew I was losing
my mother.
180
00:07:51,755 --> 00:07:54,964
# #
181
00:07:54,966 --> 00:07:56,466
- Coming up...
182
00:07:56,468 --> 00:07:57,967
- Nurses, they're saying, like,
183
00:07:57,969 --> 00:08:00,261
"Randy you won't believe
what we just saw
184
00:08:00,263 --> 00:08:01,804
in the operating room."
185
00:08:01,806 --> 00:08:03,473
It didn't have any resemblance
to surgery
186
00:08:03,475 --> 00:08:05,600
as we know on the planet Earth.
187
00:08:05,602 --> 00:08:08,603
- I'm realizing that there's
a darker side to him.
188
00:08:08,605 --> 00:08:10,146
- I personally felt that
189
00:08:10,148 --> 00:08:11,648
there was a killer on the loose,
190
00:08:11,650 --> 00:08:13,107
and no one could stop him.
191
00:08:13,109 --> 00:08:15,349
- My husband is laying there
basically dying.
192
00:08:21,425 --> 00:08:23,326
- We were at the hospital
193
00:08:23,328 --> 00:08:25,078
for my mother's surgery.
194
00:08:25,080 --> 00:08:27,580
We've been here now for hours,
195
00:08:27,582 --> 00:08:31,334
and Dr. Duntsch came out,
I would say, at least twice.
196
00:08:31,336 --> 00:08:34,087
And every single time
he came out, though,
197
00:08:34,089 --> 00:08:36,005
he said,
"We're keeping her stable,
198
00:08:36,007 --> 00:08:37,799
you can go in shortly."
199
00:08:37,801 --> 00:08:40,760
- The surgery Kellie Martin
had that day, a laminectomy,
200
00:08:40,762 --> 00:08:43,012
is a safe, outpatient procedure,
201
00:08:43,014 --> 00:08:45,348
because it involves
a small incision
202
00:08:45,350 --> 00:08:49,018
to simply remove a piece
of dislocated disc material
203
00:08:49,020 --> 00:08:51,688
that was pressing on nerves
and causing her pain.
204
00:08:51,690 --> 00:08:55,700
But there was nothing minimal
or safe about what transpired.
205
00:08:57,028 --> 00:08:58,695
- There was the
anesthesiologist,
206
00:08:58,697 --> 00:09:01,698
the pulmonologist,
the ER doctor, and Dr. Duntsch.
207
00:09:01,700 --> 00:09:04,534
All of them came in very somber.
208
00:09:04,536 --> 00:09:07,537
No one was smiling,
no positive energy.
209
00:09:07,539 --> 00:09:09,464
- The ICU doctor...
210
00:09:11,126 --> 00:09:13,206
Said, "We did everything
we could..."
211
00:09:14,212 --> 00:09:16,172
But they just couldn't save her.
212
00:09:18,800 --> 00:09:19,975
- We lost her.
213
00:09:21,803 --> 00:09:23,979
She didn't make it, we lost her.
214
00:09:25,724 --> 00:09:27,724
- I remember at that
moment when they said,
215
00:09:27,726 --> 00:09:29,225
"Kellie is no longer with us,"
216
00:09:29,227 --> 00:09:31,853
I... my sister lets out
this scream
217
00:09:31,855 --> 00:09:34,647
that I will never forget.
218
00:09:34,649 --> 00:09:36,482
And I stand up and I say, "Why?
219
00:09:36,484 --> 00:09:37,859
Why did this happen?"
220
00:09:37,861 --> 00:09:39,902
[solemn music]
221
00:09:39,904 --> 00:09:42,405
- And that's when it hit.
222
00:09:42,407 --> 00:09:43,873
It was real.
223
00:09:45,410 --> 00:09:46,576
And...
224
00:09:46,578 --> 00:09:48,870
[sniffling]
225
00:09:48,872 --> 00:09:51,831
I just knew that... my world
just... just...
226
00:09:51,833 --> 00:09:54,676
My world just turned
upside down, and my loss...
227
00:09:56,755 --> 00:09:59,422
I think that's when my girls
lost it too.
228
00:09:59,424 --> 00:10:04,010
- It was such a slow-motion
feeling of...
229
00:10:04,012 --> 00:10:06,429
"My mom is gone."
230
00:10:06,431 --> 00:10:09,766
This person, my best friend,
the rock of our family,
231
00:10:09,768 --> 00:10:12,027
the center of our universe...
232
00:10:13,438 --> 00:10:17,106
She's gone and I'm never
gonna get to talk to her again.
233
00:10:17,108 --> 00:10:24,205
# #
234
00:10:24,783 --> 00:10:28,618
- Doctor Duntsch said nothing
during this period of time.
235
00:10:28,620 --> 00:10:30,536
He looked at the floor
the entire time,
236
00:10:30,538 --> 00:10:33,956
never gave me or anyone
in my family eye contact.
237
00:10:33,958 --> 00:10:35,625
- He just kept looking down.
238
00:10:35,627 --> 00:10:37,877
He got out of there
as quick as he could.
239
00:10:37,879 --> 00:10:40,630
# #
240
00:10:40,632 --> 00:10:42,382
- When the doctors
left the room,
241
00:10:42,384 --> 00:10:44,467
they asked if we wanted
to see my mother,
242
00:10:44,469 --> 00:10:46,135
and we said yes.
243
00:10:46,137 --> 00:10:49,430
I remember putting my hands
on her,
244
00:10:49,432 --> 00:10:52,308
and thinking, like,
245
00:10:52,310 --> 00:10:54,644
"Is this the last time
I'm going to touch her?"
246
00:10:54,646 --> 00:10:58,064
- I needed something of her
for the memory and...
247
00:10:58,066 --> 00:10:59,649
I asked for a pair of scissors
248
00:10:59,651 --> 00:11:01,317
and the nurse gave me
a scissors,
249
00:11:01,319 --> 00:11:02,652
and I cut some locks
of her hair,
250
00:11:02,654 --> 00:11:04,746
so the girls
and I could have it.
251
00:11:06,491 --> 00:11:09,826
We all had to drive home
in separate cars.
252
00:11:09,828 --> 00:11:13,496
You know, you're driving home,
you're thinking,
253
00:11:13,498 --> 00:11:15,256
"Good God, what now?"
254
00:11:18,169 --> 00:11:21,003
[ominous music]
255
00:11:21,005 --> 00:11:23,506
- Christopher Duntsch
was born in Montana,
256
00:11:23,508 --> 00:11:25,133
but his family moved
to a suburb of Memphis
257
00:11:25,135 --> 00:11:26,592
when he was very young.
258
00:11:26,594 --> 00:11:29,512
He was always arrogant,
sort of a salesman,
259
00:11:29,514 --> 00:11:30,847
kinda... kinda cocky.
260
00:11:30,849 --> 00:11:32,682
He could talk his way out
of situations.
261
00:11:32,684 --> 00:11:36,519
Duntsch had his training
from a fairly reputable
262
00:11:36,521 --> 00:11:38,187
training program at
263
00:11:38,189 --> 00:11:39,522
the University of Tennessee
Memphis.
264
00:11:39,524 --> 00:11:41,524
- He trained with one
of the more famous
265
00:11:41,526 --> 00:11:43,860
spine surgeons
in the United States.
266
00:11:43,862 --> 00:11:47,864
- He was someone who
spent about 15 to 16 years
267
00:11:47,866 --> 00:11:50,867
in school getting
his MD and his PhD,
268
00:11:50,869 --> 00:11:53,453
which is a pretty significant
undertaking.
269
00:11:53,455 --> 00:11:55,705
So, his resume looked
brilliant on paper.
270
00:11:55,707 --> 00:11:58,207
And when he got to Dallas,
he finds a market in Dallas
271
00:11:58,209 --> 00:11:59,625
that is very hungry for
272
00:11:59,627 --> 00:12:01,544
minimally invasive
spine surgery.
273
00:12:01,546 --> 00:12:04,213
And they're looking for people
like Christopher Duntsch.
274
00:12:04,215 --> 00:12:05,965
- Well, I met
Christopher Duntsch
275
00:12:05,967 --> 00:12:07,967
in the doctor's lounge
276
00:12:07,969 --> 00:12:10,887
at Baylor Scott & White, Plano.
277
00:12:10,889 --> 00:12:12,972
He explained to me
that he was the best
278
00:12:12,974 --> 00:12:15,224
spine surgeon in Dallas.
279
00:12:15,226 --> 00:12:16,559
This is, like, a month into
280
00:12:16,561 --> 00:12:19,061
his coming to Dallas
out of training.
281
00:12:19,063 --> 00:12:22,648
He doesn't have the gravitas
282
00:12:22,650 --> 00:12:27,153
or the body of work to be able
to make that kind of statement.
283
00:12:27,155 --> 00:12:29,989
I thought he was crazy.
284
00:12:29,991 --> 00:12:32,658
But I had no idea that things
were gonna get
285
00:12:32,660 --> 00:12:34,085
as bad as they got.
286
00:12:39,592 --> 00:12:41,584
- My name is
Robert J. Henderson.
287
00:12:41,586 --> 00:12:43,002
I'm a physician surgeon.
288
00:12:43,004 --> 00:12:44,921
I... I specialize
in spinal surgery.
289
00:12:44,923 --> 00:12:46,923
I've trained a lot of
different surgeons,
290
00:12:46,925 --> 00:12:49,425
but I've only really been called
291
00:12:49,427 --> 00:12:51,761
in to the operating room once
292
00:12:51,763 --> 00:12:55,440
to take over the entire care
of a patient.
293
00:13:00,438 --> 00:13:03,022
- Mary Efurd was an active
74 year-old
294
00:13:03,024 --> 00:13:04,607
who went into the hospital
295
00:13:04,609 --> 00:13:06,776
to have two of her vertebrae
fused.
296
00:13:06,778 --> 00:13:08,611
It was a routine operation,
297
00:13:08,613 --> 00:13:11,447
easily mastered by most
first-year residents.
298
00:13:11,449 --> 00:13:14,242
But on the day of Efurd's
surgery,
299
00:13:14,244 --> 00:13:17,286
something went horribly wrong.
300
00:13:17,288 --> 00:13:19,622
- I went in to evaluate
the patient.
301
00:13:19,624 --> 00:13:22,875
She had virtually no function
of her left hip-flexors
302
00:13:22,877 --> 00:13:24,460
and her quadricep muscles.
303
00:13:24,462 --> 00:13:28,548
She had inability to hold
her feet up at the ankles,
304
00:13:28,550 --> 00:13:31,968
and she couldn't wiggle
her toes or bring her feet up.
305
00:13:31,970 --> 00:13:33,803
She was in an extraordinary
amount of pain
306
00:13:33,805 --> 00:13:35,471
despite medication.
307
00:13:35,473 --> 00:13:38,641
She could not bear weight
on her legs.
308
00:13:38,643 --> 00:13:40,977
- Bob Henderson,
a fantastic spine surgeon.
309
00:13:40,979 --> 00:13:42,979
He's a Dallas legend.
310
00:13:42,981 --> 00:13:45,990
And Dr. Henderson had to go in
and do the salvage surgery.
311
00:13:48,486 --> 00:13:51,821
- Immediately upon opening
the patient's prior scar,
312
00:13:51,823 --> 00:13:55,825
I could see a screw
penetrating that girl's sack
313
00:13:55,827 --> 00:13:59,287
from the left side
at the bottom.
314
00:13:59,289 --> 00:14:00,997
It was just wobbling there.
315
00:14:00,999 --> 00:14:04,667
It was like somebody just threw
some Tinkertoys in there
316
00:14:04,669 --> 00:14:06,502
or an Erector Set in there.
317
00:14:06,504 --> 00:14:09,005
I had absolutely zero
comprehension
318
00:14:09,007 --> 00:14:12,675
of how a surgeon could
think that he had done
319
00:14:12,677 --> 00:14:14,102
the procedure correctly.
320
00:14:15,763 --> 00:14:17,680
- Another spine surgery
321
00:14:17,682 --> 00:14:19,932
in the Dallas area
had gone awry.
322
00:14:19,934 --> 00:14:21,776
Was it just a coincidence?
323
00:14:23,104 --> 00:14:24,520
- Dr. Henderson and I,
we see each other
324
00:14:24,522 --> 00:14:26,522
in the doctor's lounge.
325
00:14:26,524 --> 00:14:29,358
Doctor Henderson starts
describing
326
00:14:29,360 --> 00:14:32,695
a bad interaction he had,
the Mary Efurd case,
327
00:14:32,697 --> 00:14:34,697
that Dr. Henderson did
all the salvage surgery on.
328
00:14:34,699 --> 00:14:36,449
I didn't know who
the surgeon was,
329
00:14:36,451 --> 00:14:39,702
but eventually we found out
it was Christopher Duntsch.
330
00:14:39,704 --> 00:14:41,704
And then I explained to him
331
00:14:41,706 --> 00:14:44,498
Dr. Duntsch has had
a catastrophic complication
332
00:14:44,500 --> 00:14:47,501
with a patient by the name of
Kellie Martin.
333
00:14:47,503 --> 00:14:50,546
And then I was continuing
to hear these reports
334
00:14:50,548 --> 00:14:53,716
from the nursing staffs
and the medical staffs
335
00:14:53,718 --> 00:14:55,551
of all these hospitals
I work at.
336
00:14:55,553 --> 00:14:57,553
I have privileges at over
60 hospitals
337
00:14:57,555 --> 00:14:59,305
in Dallas, Fort Worth.
338
00:14:59,307 --> 00:15:00,640
They're saying, like,
"Randy, you won't believe
339
00:15:00,642 --> 00:15:03,392
"what we just saw
in the operating room.
340
00:15:03,394 --> 00:15:05,474
What are we gonna do
about this?"
341
00:15:06,397 --> 00:15:08,648
- I'm getting angry that
this individual
342
00:15:08,650 --> 00:15:13,653
is out there perpetrating
his lack of skills
343
00:15:13,655 --> 00:15:17,239
on vulnerable patients
who were going to him for help,
344
00:15:17,241 --> 00:15:19,742
and in fact,
being assaulted instead.
345
00:15:19,744 --> 00:15:22,578
- Christopher Duntsch
had no remorse
346
00:15:22,580 --> 00:15:24,580
about bad results.
347
00:15:24,582 --> 00:15:26,749
He wanted to keep operating
despite
348
00:15:26,751 --> 00:15:28,584
catastrophic complication
349
00:15:28,586 --> 00:15:30,586
after catastrophic complication.
350
00:15:30,588 --> 00:15:32,628
I knew he just needed
to be stopped.
351
00:15:38,328 --> 00:15:40,596
- The death of Kellie Martin
352
00:15:40,598 --> 00:15:42,431
and the disabling of Mary Efurd
353
00:15:42,433 --> 00:15:44,600
were completely unacceptable
and rare outcomes
354
00:15:44,602 --> 00:15:46,435
of very simple procedures.
355
00:15:46,437 --> 00:15:49,021
And both were carried out
by the same physician
356
00:15:49,023 --> 00:15:51,232
who was considered the top
in his field.
357
00:15:51,234 --> 00:15:54,568
Which is why good and brave
doctors, Kirby and Henderson,
358
00:15:54,570 --> 00:15:56,904
were determined to stop
Christopher Duntsch
359
00:15:56,906 --> 00:16:01,000
in his tracks and prevent him
from hurting anymore patients.
360
00:16:03,621 --> 00:16:06,122
[eerie music]
361
00:16:06,124 --> 00:16:08,124
- A lot of trepidation
on my part
362
00:16:08,126 --> 00:16:11,752
as to how, if ever,
Mrs. Efurd,
363
00:16:11,754 --> 00:16:14,255
she would recover
from the damages
364
00:16:14,257 --> 00:16:17,633
that had been perpetrated
by Dr. Duntsch.
365
00:16:17,635 --> 00:16:20,636
It was apparent she was gonna
have some degree of
366
00:16:20,638 --> 00:16:23,139
permanent paralysis
in her... in her muscles.
367
00:16:23,141 --> 00:16:25,975
It is apparent to me
that I'm dealing with
368
00:16:25,977 --> 00:16:27,977
a surgeon who performed
369
00:16:27,979 --> 00:16:31,647
an egregiously terrible surgery.
370
00:16:31,649 --> 00:16:33,649
And I was concerned about
whether or not
371
00:16:33,651 --> 00:16:36,652
this is a fully trained surgeon.
372
00:16:36,654 --> 00:16:38,946
- So, I said,
"Why don't you just call
373
00:16:38,948 --> 00:16:41,323
"his program director in Memphis
374
00:16:41,325 --> 00:16:43,659
and find out what
the problem is."
375
00:16:43,661 --> 00:16:47,496
- I spoke to the chief
of the neurosurgery department
376
00:16:47,498 --> 00:16:49,498
at University of Tennessee.
377
00:16:49,500 --> 00:16:52,835
And during one of
the latter years
378
00:16:52,837 --> 00:16:55,629
of his training
before his chief year,
379
00:16:55,631 --> 00:16:59,175
Dr. Duntsch had been reported
by a nurse
380
00:16:59,177 --> 00:17:02,678
for having ingested cocaine
and alcohol
381
00:17:02,680 --> 00:17:04,513
and maybe some other drugs
382
00:17:04,515 --> 00:17:07,016
the night before
he was presenting
383
00:17:07,018 --> 00:17:09,643
to the hospital for surgery.
384
00:17:09,645 --> 00:17:12,480
And so, they referred him
385
00:17:12,482 --> 00:17:15,616
to the impaired physician
program.
386
00:17:16,527 --> 00:17:18,360
After hearing this story,
387
00:17:18,362 --> 00:17:21,489
I'm wondering if maybe his brain
388
00:17:21,491 --> 00:17:23,365
may have been impaired
to the point
389
00:17:23,367 --> 00:17:24,867
where he can't remember
390
00:17:24,869 --> 00:17:27,036
how to do these surgical
procedures.
391
00:17:27,038 --> 00:17:30,706
He was making catastrophic
slipshod attempts
392
00:17:30,708 --> 00:17:32,541
at performing surgeries
393
00:17:32,543 --> 00:17:35,878
and has literally got
some grandiose idea
394
00:17:35,880 --> 00:17:39,381
of what he can do without
the actual skills
395
00:17:39,383 --> 00:17:40,716
to perform it.
396
00:17:40,718 --> 00:17:42,551
- To the best of my knowledge,
397
00:17:42,553 --> 00:17:45,554
no one here in Dallas
ever knew about that.
398
00:17:45,556 --> 00:17:50,184
It started coming together
that this is a problem.
399
00:17:50,186 --> 00:17:52,186
He couldn't operate,
400
00:17:52,188 --> 00:17:53,729
he wanted to continue operating,
401
00:17:53,731 --> 00:17:56,565
which was, you know,
sociopathic.
402
00:17:56,567 --> 00:17:59,819
- Christopher Duntsch had more
than just a big ego.
403
00:17:59,821 --> 00:18:02,404
He had what we call
a "God complex."
404
00:18:02,406 --> 00:18:05,407
This is a deadly trait
that drove his career
405
00:18:05,409 --> 00:18:08,077
and potentially put
every one of his patients
406
00:18:08,079 --> 00:18:09,370
in grave danger.
407
00:18:09,372 --> 00:18:12,081
[dramatic music]
408
00:18:12,083 --> 00:18:15,417
- We revoked his privileges
at Dallas Medical Center,
409
00:18:15,419 --> 00:18:19,255
because I thought he was
a real danger to society.
410
00:18:19,257 --> 00:18:21,549
And he never showed up
at the facility again.
411
00:18:21,551 --> 00:18:23,592
- I personally thought
the problem was solved.
412
00:18:23,594 --> 00:18:26,262
I could not conceive of any way
413
00:18:26,264 --> 00:18:28,097
that he could get a patient
in the door
414
00:18:28,099 --> 00:18:29,890
or operate on another patient
415
00:18:29,892 --> 00:18:31,600
after what had happened
at Baylor
416
00:18:31,602 --> 00:18:33,435
and the Dallas Medical Center.
417
00:18:33,437 --> 00:18:36,438
[ominous music]
418
00:18:36,440 --> 00:18:42,611
# #
419
00:18:42,613 --> 00:18:43,604
- At this point in time,
420
00:18:43,606 --> 00:18:46,782
the administrator
at Dallas Medical Center
421
00:18:46,784 --> 00:18:50,244
brings to my attention
an invitation
422
00:18:50,246 --> 00:18:54,415
to meet the newly anointed
spine surgeon
423
00:18:54,417 --> 00:18:56,792
at University General Hospital,
424
00:18:56,794 --> 00:18:59,095
Dr. Christopher Duntsch.
425
00:19:01,632 --> 00:19:05,634
- I was shocked he found
another hospital to operate at.
426
00:19:05,636 --> 00:19:07,094
[chuckles]
427
00:19:07,096 --> 00:19:08,971
Dr. Henderson is livid.
428
00:19:08,973 --> 00:19:10,472
He called
the Texas Medical Board,
429
00:19:10,474 --> 00:19:13,475
and I called the owner
of the hospital.
430
00:19:13,477 --> 00:19:15,811
And the owner of the hospital
said,
431
00:19:15,813 --> 00:19:17,479
"I can't remove him from staff,
432
00:19:17,481 --> 00:19:19,481
"'cause he hasn't done
anything wrong.
433
00:19:19,483 --> 00:19:22,651
"And there's no negative
comments about him
434
00:19:22,653 --> 00:19:24,320
"in his letters
of recommendation,
435
00:19:24,322 --> 00:19:26,488
"there's no negative comments
in his file
436
00:19:26,490 --> 00:19:28,490
"from the National Practitioner
Data Bank.
437
00:19:28,492 --> 00:19:31,493
"And so, if I even tried
to restrict his privileges,
438
00:19:31,495 --> 00:19:33,621
he'd sue me."
439
00:19:33,623 --> 00:19:35,623
- When a doctor's privileges
440
00:19:35,625 --> 00:19:37,666
are revoked in connection
with substandard care
441
00:19:37,668 --> 00:19:40,461
or misconduct,
hospitals are required
442
00:19:40,463 --> 00:19:42,171
by law to report it to
443
00:19:42,173 --> 00:19:44,006
the National Practitioner
Data Bank.
444
00:19:44,008 --> 00:19:46,133
But the system
doesn't always work.
445
00:19:46,135 --> 00:19:50,638
In 2011, a whopping
47% of hospitals
446
00:19:50,640 --> 00:19:52,348
didn't report their restrictions
447
00:19:52,350 --> 00:19:55,017
or revocation of a doctor's
clinical privileges.
448
00:19:55,019 --> 00:19:57,519
Without that paper trail,
449
00:19:57,521 --> 00:20:00,189
Duntsch was able to gain
privileges at this,
450
00:20:00,191 --> 00:20:01,690
his third hospital.
451
00:20:01,692 --> 00:20:05,411
Leaving yet another patient
in danger.
452
00:20:08,866 --> 00:20:10,866
- My name is Jeff Glidewell.
453
00:20:10,868 --> 00:20:14,870
I am 54 years old,
and I live in Forney, Texas.
454
00:20:14,872 --> 00:20:17,373
I am a competitive sports
junkie.
455
00:20:17,375 --> 00:20:20,542
You name it, golf, bowling,
and anything outdoors.
456
00:20:20,544 --> 00:20:22,962
- Jeff and I love
to be outdoors doing things.
457
00:20:22,964 --> 00:20:25,047
Our yearly vacations
were at the beach.
458
00:20:25,049 --> 00:20:26,548
He would bowl tournaments
459
00:20:26,550 --> 00:20:29,551
and enter fishing tournaments
as well.
460
00:20:29,553 --> 00:20:34,056
- August of 2004,
I had this motorcycle accident.
461
00:20:34,058 --> 00:20:36,558
Going probably about
30, 35 miles an hour
462
00:20:36,560 --> 00:20:38,560
and got bucked off.
463
00:20:38,562 --> 00:20:41,563
Landed on my head,
knocked me unconscious.
464
00:20:41,565 --> 00:20:43,399
- After he had the motor
accident,
465
00:20:43,401 --> 00:20:46,527
he wasn't able to do
any of those things
466
00:20:46,529 --> 00:20:47,903
that we used to love to do.
467
00:20:47,905 --> 00:20:50,197
A lot of back issues,
neck issues,
468
00:20:50,199 --> 00:20:52,574
and had multiple surgeries
because of that.
469
00:20:52,576 --> 00:20:56,912
- I tried cortisone shots,
epidurals, therapy...
470
00:20:56,914 --> 00:20:58,664
When all else failed,
471
00:20:58,666 --> 00:21:01,250
then there was no way
around getting surgery.
472
00:21:01,252 --> 00:21:03,210
I called my insurance company.
473
00:21:03,212 --> 00:21:06,422
That's what led me to
Dr. Christopher Duntsch.
474
00:21:06,424 --> 00:21:08,590
All the research I did
475
00:21:08,592 --> 00:21:10,050
on Christopher Duntsch,
476
00:21:10,052 --> 00:21:12,428
I could not find one bad review.
477
00:21:12,430 --> 00:21:14,221
- The Best Docs Network
478
00:21:14,223 --> 00:21:15,723
featuring some of the best
physicians
479
00:21:15,725 --> 00:21:17,391
in the Dallas, Fort Worth area
480
00:21:17,393 --> 00:21:18,934
that are helping to change
people's lives.
481
00:21:18,936 --> 00:21:21,437
- I drove out to Duntsch's
office.
482
00:21:21,439 --> 00:21:23,605
He told me that he was
one of the best
483
00:21:23,607 --> 00:21:27,234
minimally invasive
spine surgeons
484
00:21:27,236 --> 00:21:28,777
in the state of Texas,
485
00:21:28,779 --> 00:21:30,571
and he believed he could
help me.
486
00:21:30,573 --> 00:21:33,541
And I was just excited that
someone was gonna fix me.
487
00:21:40,958 --> 00:21:44,626
- We got to the hospital,
hooked Jeff up to the IV,
488
00:21:44,628 --> 00:21:46,253
and then it was like
a waiting game.
489
00:21:46,255 --> 00:21:48,589
We were waiting for the doctor.
490
00:21:48,591 --> 00:21:50,758
They said they were trying
to get in touch with him.
491
00:21:50,760 --> 00:21:53,436
- Two hours had passed,
no doctor.
492
00:21:55,139 --> 00:21:57,473
Told them that maybe we need
to do this another time,
493
00:21:57,475 --> 00:22:00,309
and we... we took my IV out.
494
00:22:00,311 --> 00:22:01,777
We're gonna leave the hospital.
495
00:22:04,440 --> 00:22:07,649
- Regarding Dr. Duntsch,
I've never really encountered
496
00:22:07,651 --> 00:22:10,611
this level of... of incompetence.
497
00:22:10,613 --> 00:22:12,613
My immediate fear was that
498
00:22:12,615 --> 00:22:14,615
he was gonna injure somebody
else,
499
00:22:14,617 --> 00:22:16,492
and that he may kill
somebody else.
500
00:22:16,494 --> 00:22:18,827
And I felt that the only way
to stop him completely
501
00:22:18,829 --> 00:22:21,830
was to get his medical license
revoked.
502
00:22:21,832 --> 00:22:24,458
[tense music]
503
00:22:24,460 --> 00:22:26,335
- I explained to
the Texas Medical Board
504
00:22:26,337 --> 00:22:28,629
what happened at Baylor Plano
and at Dallas Medical Center,
505
00:22:28,631 --> 00:22:29,963
but now he's got privileges
506
00:22:29,965 --> 00:22:31,507
at University General Hospital.
507
00:22:31,509 --> 00:22:33,342
How could this happen
in our community?
508
00:22:33,344 --> 00:22:35,636
He's been able to jump from
two hospitals
509
00:22:35,638 --> 00:22:37,012
in less than a year.
510
00:22:37,014 --> 00:22:38,972
I mean, he can find somewhere
else to operate.
511
00:22:38,974 --> 00:22:40,599
I think you need to investigate.
512
00:22:40,601 --> 00:22:42,401
We had a real problem here.
513
00:22:52,186 --> 00:22:54,696
- It can take months, even years
514
00:22:54,698 --> 00:22:56,365
for state medical boards
to properly investigate
515
00:22:56,367 --> 00:22:58,867
malpractice complaints
and decide whether or not
516
00:22:58,869 --> 00:23:01,036
to revoke a physician's
medical license.
517
00:23:01,038 --> 00:23:03,622
So, despite the quick action
518
00:23:03,624 --> 00:23:05,666
by doctors, Kirby and Henderson,
519
00:23:05,668 --> 00:23:09,044
Dr. Duntsch, a known danger
in the operating room,
520
00:23:09,046 --> 00:23:11,380
was still allowed to
continue practicing
521
00:23:11,382 --> 00:23:13,674
medicine and hurting
his patients.
522
00:23:13,676 --> 00:23:16,718
[dramatic music]
523
00:23:16,720 --> 00:23:21,056
# #
524
00:23:21,058 --> 00:23:23,016
- Two hours had passed.
525
00:23:23,018 --> 00:23:25,644
I was getting aggravated
at this point,
526
00:23:25,646 --> 00:23:29,523
because no one knows where
Dr. Duntsch is.
527
00:23:29,525 --> 00:23:31,024
He hasn't called the hospital.
528
00:23:31,026 --> 00:23:33,402
And it was about the time
that I took my IV out,
529
00:23:33,404 --> 00:23:35,571
and we're gonna leave
the hospital...
530
00:23:35,573 --> 00:23:39,241
# #
531
00:23:39,243 --> 00:23:40,668
And then Duntsch showed up.
532
00:23:42,580 --> 00:23:45,539
He said that he had had
a flat tire,
533
00:23:45,541 --> 00:23:48,083
and, um, he showed up in a cab.
534
00:23:48,085 --> 00:23:51,545
And I thought that was strange.
535
00:23:51,547 --> 00:23:53,589
I asked him why he didn't call
536
00:23:53,591 --> 00:23:55,924
and let anybody know
where he was at.
537
00:23:55,926 --> 00:23:58,218
He didn't answer me,
he just said,
538
00:23:58,220 --> 00:23:59,761
"Have you never had a flat tire?
539
00:23:59,763 --> 00:24:01,430
You know that things happen."
540
00:24:01,432 --> 00:24:03,265
- Jeff is wanting to leave,
541
00:24:03,267 --> 00:24:04,725
but I was like, "No."
542
00:24:04,727 --> 00:24:06,727
I really wanted Jeff
to have the surgery,
543
00:24:06,729 --> 00:24:09,438
so that hopefully he could
get back to normal.
544
00:24:09,440 --> 00:24:13,275
- So, they put my IV back in,
started taking me back...
545
00:24:13,277 --> 00:24:17,613
I basically, um, told my wife
I'll see her in a little bit,
546
00:24:17,615 --> 00:24:19,707
and we kissed and that was it.
547
00:24:24,788 --> 00:24:27,789
[eerie music]
548
00:24:27,791 --> 00:24:29,458
I wake up from surgery
549
00:24:29,460 --> 00:24:32,794
and I knew something was wrong.
550
00:24:32,796 --> 00:24:35,964
I couldn't feel my... my feet.
551
00:24:35,966 --> 00:24:38,592
I could not move my left arm.
552
00:24:38,594 --> 00:24:40,636
I couldn't talk.
553
00:24:40,638 --> 00:24:45,307
I was in more pain than
I ever thought imaginable.
554
00:24:45,309 --> 00:24:48,977
And... my wife, uh,
555
00:24:48,979 --> 00:24:53,482
walked over and... and, um,
she was crying.
556
00:24:53,484 --> 00:24:57,486
My wife told me that
they had encountered a tumor
557
00:24:57,488 --> 00:25:00,656
during surgery,
and it started bleeding so bad
558
00:25:00,658 --> 00:25:02,824
that they had to abort
the surgery.
559
00:25:02,826 --> 00:25:06,453
- It took almost four hours
to get it to quit bleeding.
560
00:25:06,455 --> 00:25:09,498
They had it be cauterized,
and he did a biopsy.
561
00:25:09,500 --> 00:25:11,625
Um, then proceeded to ask
562
00:25:11,627 --> 00:25:15,504
if Jeff had any cancer
that ran in his family,
563
00:25:15,506 --> 00:25:19,508
making me believe, oh my gosh,
my husband has cancer.
564
00:25:19,510 --> 00:25:22,511
So, I was so distraught,
565
00:25:22,513 --> 00:25:24,680
emotional, crying...
566
00:25:24,682 --> 00:25:28,475
- I couldn't talk,
nothing's come out of my voice,
567
00:25:28,477 --> 00:25:30,686
so finally, you know,
people are bending over,
568
00:25:30,688 --> 00:25:32,521
and I'm able to whisper.
569
00:25:32,523 --> 00:25:36,149
- The first words
out of Jeff's mouth was,
570
00:25:36,151 --> 00:25:37,952
"What did he do to me?"
571
00:25:39,697 --> 00:25:41,330
- Oh, God.
572
00:25:43,701 --> 00:25:45,584
[groaning]
573
00:25:47,162 --> 00:25:50,372
I just think that something
went really bad, wrong
574
00:25:50,374 --> 00:25:53,041
in surgery, and I wanted to die.
575
00:25:53,043 --> 00:25:57,504
I did not wanna live paralyzed.
576
00:25:57,506 --> 00:25:59,548
I didn't wanna think about
going through life,
577
00:25:59,550 --> 00:26:01,717
you know, not being able
to walk,
578
00:26:01,719 --> 00:26:05,554
with the use of just one arm,
not being able to talk.
579
00:26:05,556 --> 00:26:08,724
[dramatic music]
580
00:26:08,726 --> 00:26:11,518
The next thing I remember is,
581
00:26:11,520 --> 00:26:15,355
um, some other doctors...
582
00:26:15,357 --> 00:26:17,232
Uh, taking a look at me.
583
00:26:17,234 --> 00:26:21,737
They were fussing over
infection that I've got.
584
00:26:21,739 --> 00:26:25,907
- Jeff's gown, pillow, sheets
585
00:26:25,909 --> 00:26:28,577
were saturated in fluid.
586
00:26:28,579 --> 00:26:31,580
It looked like somebody
had poured a Coke all over him.
587
00:26:31,582 --> 00:26:34,541
It appeared to be pus
coming out of the incision.
588
00:26:34,543 --> 00:26:37,377
About ten minutes after
all this is going on,
589
00:26:37,379 --> 00:26:41,590
Dr. Duntsch comes in, uh,
looks at the incision,
590
00:26:41,592 --> 00:26:44,393
and all that... and said,
"It appears to be normal."
591
00:26:45,429 --> 00:26:47,429
I was furious.
592
00:26:47,431 --> 00:26:48,930
I was screaming and hollering
at the doctor,
593
00:26:48,932 --> 00:26:50,557
"This is not normal."
594
00:26:50,559 --> 00:26:52,893
And the nurse was agreeing
with me,
595
00:26:52,895 --> 00:26:55,270
shaking her head,
"Yes, that's right."
596
00:26:55,272 --> 00:26:58,732
Because my husband is laying
there basically dying.
597
00:26:58,734 --> 00:27:00,609
So, at that point, I could...
598
00:27:00,611 --> 00:27:02,611
Knew I could not trust this
doctor.
599
00:27:02,613 --> 00:27:05,447
He... he's lying to me
for some reason.
600
00:27:05,449 --> 00:27:08,450
- I do remember
Dr. Christopher Duntsch
601
00:27:08,452 --> 00:27:10,044
coming into the room...
602
00:27:11,121 --> 00:27:13,622
And he basically just
looked me in the eyes
603
00:27:13,624 --> 00:27:17,125
and... told me... he said,
604
00:27:17,127 --> 00:27:20,962
"You know, we encountered
a tumor, did a biopsy..."
605
00:27:20,964 --> 00:27:22,631
And I said,
"Well what about this arm?
606
00:27:22,633 --> 00:27:24,633
Why am I... why can't I
feel my arm?"
607
00:27:24,635 --> 00:27:25,801
And he said, "Well, I don't know
608
00:27:25,803 --> 00:27:27,469
what to tell you about that."
609
00:27:27,471 --> 00:27:28,929
And he turned around
and walked off,
610
00:27:28,931 --> 00:27:31,473
and that's the last time
I saw Duntsch.
611
00:27:31,475 --> 00:27:33,317
We never spoke again.
612
00:27:34,645 --> 00:27:36,478
Yeah.
613
00:27:36,480 --> 00:27:39,648
- It was about 2:00
in the afternoon,
614
00:27:39,650 --> 00:27:42,484
I got a call from the CEO
615
00:27:42,486 --> 00:27:45,320
of University General Hospital.
616
00:27:45,322 --> 00:27:48,824
And said, "Randy,
he's done something terrible.
617
00:27:48,826 --> 00:27:51,952
"Dr. Duntsch just had
a catastrophic complication
618
00:27:51,954 --> 00:27:54,830
doing a simple anterior
cervical fusion procedure."
619
00:27:54,832 --> 00:27:56,498
Which on a scale from
one to ten's about a two
620
00:27:56,500 --> 00:27:58,333
in level of difficulty
for a neurosurgeon.
621
00:27:58,335 --> 00:27:59,835
"And if someone doesn't
get down there
622
00:27:59,837 --> 00:28:01,837
and take care of it,
the patient is gonna die."
623
00:28:01,839 --> 00:28:03,505
So, I transferred the patient
624
00:28:03,507 --> 00:28:05,173
to the Methodist Dallas
Medical Center,
625
00:28:05,175 --> 00:28:07,175
and then we took him
to the operating room.
626
00:28:07,177 --> 00:28:09,511
The incision was in
the wrong place.
627
00:28:09,513 --> 00:28:13,306
Dr. Duntsch, he put a hole
the size of a silver dollar
628
00:28:13,308 --> 00:28:15,684
in Mr. Glidewell's
esophagus.
629
00:28:15,686 --> 00:28:17,978
He'd taken out the recurrent
laryngeal nerve
630
00:28:17,980 --> 00:28:22,023
and had cut
the vertebral artery...
631
00:28:22,025 --> 00:28:24,651
Which is a huge artery...
In half.
632
00:28:24,653 --> 00:28:27,195
And then he shoved a sponge
in there
633
00:28:27,197 --> 00:28:29,623
to stop the bleeding
from the artery and closed.
634
00:28:31,535 --> 00:28:34,661
It was like a crazed
maniac procedure.
635
00:28:34,663 --> 00:28:36,538
There's... it didn't have
any resemblance
636
00:28:36,540 --> 00:28:39,708
to surgery as we know it
on the planet Earth.
637
00:28:39,710 --> 00:28:41,334
And at that point in time,
638
00:28:41,336 --> 00:28:43,044
I kinda started thinking
to myself:
639
00:28:43,046 --> 00:28:45,973
"This guy is trying to kill
people for a living."
640
00:28:47,217 --> 00:28:48,767
And no one is stopping him.
641
00:28:57,827 --> 00:29:00,520
- When I got moved
to a regular room,
642
00:29:00,522 --> 00:29:03,565
that's when...
643
00:29:03,567 --> 00:29:06,234
Dr. Kirby comes in
644
00:29:06,236 --> 00:29:10,572
explaining that, uh, Duntsch
tried to kill me.
645
00:29:10,574 --> 00:29:12,574
"You beat him," he said,
"You lived.
646
00:29:12,576 --> 00:29:14,576
He tried... he literally tried
to kill you."
647
00:29:14,578 --> 00:29:19,247
I've been told that he has
cut a hole in my esophagus.
648
00:29:19,249 --> 00:29:21,541
He had damaged my vocal cords
649
00:29:21,543 --> 00:29:24,085
and done a lot of nerve damage.
650
00:29:24,087 --> 00:29:26,922
The doctor that did
the X-ray came back
651
00:29:26,924 --> 00:29:29,716
and told my wife:
652
00:29:29,718 --> 00:29:32,594
"There's not a tumor
in his throat,"
653
00:29:32,596 --> 00:29:35,055
he said, "But there is
a surgical sponge
654
00:29:35,057 --> 00:29:37,933
retained in his body
from the surgery."
655
00:29:37,935 --> 00:29:40,435
- And I'm just blown away
by this.
656
00:29:40,437 --> 00:29:42,604
This is... crazy doctor
is trying to kill...
657
00:29:42,606 --> 00:29:44,606
He tried to kill my husband.
658
00:29:44,608 --> 00:29:47,275
I went to the Dallas
Police Department,
659
00:29:47,277 --> 00:29:49,444
and it was a female officer,
660
00:29:49,446 --> 00:29:51,446
I explained to her
what had happened.
661
00:29:51,448 --> 00:29:53,615
And she said they do not
have the resources
662
00:29:53,617 --> 00:29:56,284
to file criminal charges
against a doctor.
663
00:29:56,286 --> 00:29:58,954
So, I filed the complaint
with the Medical Board,
664
00:29:58,956 --> 00:30:01,623
and Dr. Kirby had also
sent one.
665
00:30:01,625 --> 00:30:04,751
- I called the lead investigator
666
00:30:04,753 --> 00:30:06,628
of the Texas Medical Board
again.
667
00:30:06,630 --> 00:30:08,463
And I told her,
"We've got a problem,
668
00:30:08,465 --> 00:30:09,965
and you're either gonna
address it
669
00:30:09,967 --> 00:30:11,258
or I'm gonna call
The New York Times
670
00:30:11,260 --> 00:30:13,426
and Rick Perry, the Governor.
671
00:30:13,428 --> 00:30:16,263
So, I got the patients' names,
social security numbers,
672
00:30:16,265 --> 00:30:17,973
phone numbers, everything.
673
00:30:17,975 --> 00:30:20,642
And I put together,
like, a six-page letter.
674
00:30:20,644 --> 00:30:22,644
It took me about a week
to write it,
675
00:30:22,646 --> 00:30:24,312
but a whistle-blower's gotta do
676
00:30:24,314 --> 00:30:26,274
what a whistle-blower's
gotta do.
677
00:30:31,154 --> 00:30:32,821
- We found out that his license
678
00:30:32,823 --> 00:30:34,322
had been taken away,
679
00:30:34,324 --> 00:30:36,074
and it was on the front page.
680
00:30:36,076 --> 00:30:37,993
Physicians saying that
this other doctor
681
00:30:37,995 --> 00:30:39,995
was basically a serial killer.
682
00:30:39,997 --> 00:30:42,756
And then to turn the page
and to see your mom's face...
683
00:30:44,167 --> 00:30:45,959
Was gut-wrenching.
684
00:30:45,961 --> 00:30:47,502
- Now we're starting
really to think,
685
00:30:47,504 --> 00:30:50,005
Kellie's surgery,
the loss of Kellie,
686
00:30:50,007 --> 00:30:51,673
wasn't just an accident.
687
00:30:51,675 --> 00:30:53,508
And I realized...
688
00:30:53,510 --> 00:30:56,895
Yeah, this guy, quite possibly,
is doing this on purpose.
689
00:31:00,851 --> 00:31:04,311
- Revoking Duntsch's license
was the one thing
690
00:31:04,313 --> 00:31:07,355
that should have stopped
him from practicing medicine.
691
00:31:07,357 --> 00:31:10,191
But in reality,
it only limited him.
692
00:31:10,193 --> 00:31:13,653
He could still apply for
a license outside of Texas.
693
00:31:13,655 --> 00:31:17,282
Which is why Dr. Kirby knew
something much more radical
694
00:31:17,284 --> 00:31:18,867
needed to be done.
695
00:31:18,869 --> 00:31:22,537
- I thought it was important
that we not stop
696
00:31:22,539 --> 00:31:24,664
at the Texas Medical Board
level.
697
00:31:24,666 --> 00:31:26,875
I thought it was extremely
important
698
00:31:26,877 --> 00:31:30,045
that he was investigated
by the authorities,
699
00:31:30,047 --> 00:31:33,048
because I thought that what
he was doing was criminal.
700
00:31:33,050 --> 00:31:35,050
And so, I called
the District Attorney
701
00:31:35,052 --> 00:31:36,551
in Dallas.
702
00:31:36,553 --> 00:31:39,554
[suspenseful music]
703
00:31:39,556 --> 00:31:42,390
# #
704
00:31:42,392 --> 00:31:44,059
- This is not the type of case
705
00:31:44,061 --> 00:31:45,894
that is normally prosecuted.
706
00:31:45,896 --> 00:31:47,562
It's not what we normally
handle.
707
00:31:47,564 --> 00:31:49,898
So, when we initially
started we didn't know
708
00:31:49,900 --> 00:31:51,524
whether a crime had occurred
709
00:31:51,526 --> 00:31:54,527
or if these were just
malpractice cases
710
00:31:54,529 --> 00:31:56,905
that they were trying to bring
into the criminal realm.
711
00:31:56,907 --> 00:31:58,657
And so, what we really had
to focus on
712
00:31:58,659 --> 00:32:01,242
was figuring out what
had happened to the patients
713
00:32:01,244 --> 00:32:04,338
and did it amount to
any criminal act?
714
00:32:06,249 --> 00:32:08,750
We started by just going
and talking to the patients
715
00:32:08,752 --> 00:32:10,585
and hearing their stories.
716
00:32:10,587 --> 00:32:13,421
And we sent out over 800
subpoenas,
717
00:32:13,423 --> 00:32:16,091
and talked to over 100
witnesses trying to figure out
718
00:32:16,093 --> 00:32:17,926
exactly what was going on.
719
00:32:17,928 --> 00:32:20,220
We kept hearing about
more patients,
720
00:32:20,222 --> 00:32:24,432
and so many of
the patients' stories
721
00:32:24,434 --> 00:32:25,600
are heart-wrenching.
722
00:32:25,602 --> 00:32:28,770
They're crying in front of us.
723
00:32:28,772 --> 00:32:32,774
[bright music]
724
00:32:32,776 --> 00:32:36,611
From there we started going
and talking to
725
00:32:36,613 --> 00:32:39,614
the surgeons who later
reviewed the cases.
726
00:32:39,616 --> 00:32:42,617
- I was appalled...
727
00:32:42,619 --> 00:32:45,578
After I saw the Kellie Martin
case.
728
00:32:45,580 --> 00:32:49,791
Kellie Martin died because
of an injury
729
00:32:49,793 --> 00:32:52,961
to a blood vessel... a large
blood vessel
730
00:32:52,963 --> 00:32:55,797
that lies in front of
the spinal column.
731
00:32:55,799 --> 00:32:59,217
Dr. Duntsch undoubtedly
had gone through that
732
00:32:59,219 --> 00:33:02,637
and torn a hole in the vein,
she bled to death.
733
00:33:02,639 --> 00:33:06,975
It became very clear
in reviewing those cases
734
00:33:06,977 --> 00:33:10,645
that what Dr. Duntsch did
was so egregious
735
00:33:10,647 --> 00:33:13,815
that society needs to be
assured that
736
00:33:13,817 --> 00:33:18,486
he will never be able to do
anything like this again.
737
00:33:18,488 --> 00:33:21,489
- A pattern is emerging
that he is hurting
738
00:33:21,491 --> 00:33:24,325
most of the patients
that he touches.
739
00:33:24,327 --> 00:33:26,745
And two of those people
had died.
740
00:33:26,747 --> 00:33:29,330
Based on all of these events
put together,
741
00:33:29,332 --> 00:33:30,832
we believe that he intentionally
742
00:33:30,834 --> 00:33:33,001
and knowingly committed
this crime.
743
00:33:33,003 --> 00:33:36,504
And that's what helped
make our decision
744
00:33:36,506 --> 00:33:38,173
that this was absolutely
criminal,
745
00:33:38,175 --> 00:33:39,335
and he had to be stopped.
746
00:33:40,844 --> 00:33:44,345
We knew that we had to take
the case.
747
00:33:44,347 --> 00:33:46,514
- When we were told that
they would take it on,
748
00:33:46,516 --> 00:33:48,183
I was beyond grateful.
749
00:33:48,185 --> 00:33:50,643
Someone else was fighting
for my family.
750
00:33:50,645 --> 00:33:52,020
I personally felt that
751
00:33:52,022 --> 00:33:53,521
there was a killer on the loose,
752
00:33:53,523 --> 00:33:56,283
why hasn't this person
been stopped?
753
00:34:06,536 --> 00:34:08,703
- During this period of time,
754
00:34:08,705 --> 00:34:11,539
uh, Dr. Duntsch
gets arrested
755
00:34:11,541 --> 00:34:15,376
for nothing to do
with medical reasons.
756
00:34:15,378 --> 00:34:18,546
He actually gets arrested
for shoplifting.
757
00:34:18,548 --> 00:34:21,049
- He stole about $400
of sunglasses
758
00:34:21,051 --> 00:34:23,009
and pants and things.
759
00:34:23,011 --> 00:34:25,553
And he was thrown in jail,
posted bail.
760
00:34:25,555 --> 00:34:27,222
- He had moved back to Colorado
761
00:34:27,224 --> 00:34:28,556
and was living with his parents.
762
00:34:28,558 --> 00:34:31,184
But he would come to Texas
periodically
763
00:34:31,186 --> 00:34:32,560
to visit his children.
764
00:34:32,562 --> 00:34:34,521
It was on one of those occasions
765
00:34:34,523 --> 00:34:37,732
that we issued the indictments
through the grand jury
766
00:34:37,734 --> 00:34:39,201
and arrested him.
767
00:34:40,987 --> 00:34:43,071
- The day Dr. Duntsch
was finally arrested,
768
00:34:43,073 --> 00:34:46,199
Jeff and I were probably
the happiest
769
00:34:46,201 --> 00:34:49,577
we'd been in a long time
to know that this doctor
770
00:34:49,579 --> 00:34:53,039
was hopefully gonna pay
for what he had done to Jeff.
771
00:34:53,041 --> 00:34:55,583
- After we arrested him
at his hotel room,
772
00:34:55,585 --> 00:34:57,585
they brought him back
to the police department
773
00:34:57,587 --> 00:34:58,678
to be interviewed.
774
00:35:10,433 --> 00:35:12,600
- Christopher Duntsch
gets charged with
775
00:35:12,602 --> 00:35:15,937
one count of injury
to an elderly person,
776
00:35:15,939 --> 00:35:17,438
which was Mary Efurd.
777
00:35:17,440 --> 00:35:20,608
She was left partially
paralyzed.
778
00:35:20,610 --> 00:35:23,570
- We also filed five indictments
779
00:35:23,572 --> 00:35:25,780
for aggravated assault
with a deadly weapon.
780
00:35:25,782 --> 00:35:28,616
These included four other
patients,
781
00:35:28,618 --> 00:35:31,452
and his deadly weapon
was his hands
782
00:35:31,454 --> 00:35:33,505
and his surgical tools.
783
00:35:37,794 --> 00:35:41,254
- Our ultimate goal,
when we prosecuted this case,
784
00:35:41,256 --> 00:35:43,631
was to get a large enough
sentence
785
00:35:43,633 --> 00:35:45,633
so that he could never
practice medicine again.
786
00:35:45,635 --> 00:35:47,802
- As we were strategizing
for the trial,
787
00:35:47,804 --> 00:35:50,805
we really zeroed in
on Mary Efurd's case,
788
00:35:50,807 --> 00:35:53,641
because it would give us
the biggest punishment range,
789
00:35:53,643 --> 00:35:55,643
injury to an elderly person.
790
00:35:55,645 --> 00:35:57,478
If the jury found that
he intentionally
791
00:35:57,480 --> 00:36:00,982
and knowingly committed
this act against Mary Efurd,
792
00:36:00,984 --> 00:36:03,818
then they would be able to
sentence him anywhere between
793
00:36:03,820 --> 00:36:06,487
probation up to a life sentence.
794
00:36:06,489 --> 00:36:08,281
We also asked the judge
to allow us
795
00:36:08,283 --> 00:36:09,991
to put in other patients.
796
00:36:09,993 --> 00:36:13,161
Part of our theory was that
Christopher Duntsch
797
00:36:13,163 --> 00:36:15,788
knew before he went
into Mary Efurd's surgery
798
00:36:15,790 --> 00:36:17,665
that he was going to hurt her,
799
00:36:17,667 --> 00:36:19,959
because he knew that he had hurt
800
00:36:19,961 --> 00:36:22,095
all of these other patients
before.
801
00:36:23,506 --> 00:36:25,965
- The challenge
in a prosecution like this
802
00:36:25,967 --> 00:36:30,136
is that you're not going
to have the surgeon
803
00:36:30,138 --> 00:36:34,140
admitting that he intended
to hurt somebody.
804
00:36:34,142 --> 00:36:37,143
And it's not like he, you know,
805
00:36:37,145 --> 00:36:39,687
had there a bunch of witnesses
who watched him walk into
806
00:36:39,689 --> 00:36:42,106
a bank and pull a gun
and shoot somebody.
807
00:36:42,108 --> 00:36:44,484
- We looked at cases
over the years
808
00:36:44,486 --> 00:36:46,277
that have prosecuted
medical crimes
809
00:36:46,279 --> 00:36:48,029
to see if this was something
that had been done.
810
00:36:48,031 --> 00:36:50,198
We could not find a single case
like this one
811
00:36:50,200 --> 00:36:53,493
where we were going to be
inferring knowledge and intent.
812
00:36:53,495 --> 00:36:57,872
- I can't explain to you
the worries that I had,
813
00:36:57,874 --> 00:37:01,000
the sleepless nights,
the doubts on whether we could
814
00:37:01,002 --> 00:37:03,544
convince a jury that what
he did was criminal.
815
00:37:03,546 --> 00:37:06,381
It was so important,
because he wanted to go
816
00:37:06,383 --> 00:37:09,884
operate on and assault
more people.
817
00:37:09,886 --> 00:37:13,012
The only way to stop him
was to put him in jail,
818
00:37:13,014 --> 00:37:15,148
because he was not going to
stop himself.
819
00:37:21,722 --> 00:37:24,023
[dramatic music]
820
00:37:24,025 --> 00:37:25,817
- The first time that
I was in the courtroom,
821
00:37:25,819 --> 00:37:28,536
I was violently shaking.
822
00:37:36,037 --> 00:37:39,247
- My husband had to physically
put his hands on my shoulders,
823
00:37:39,249 --> 00:37:41,416
and say, "Caitlin, you have to
take a deep breath."
824
00:37:41,418 --> 00:37:45,753
You have to just sit there
ten feet away
825
00:37:45,755 --> 00:37:48,548
from the man who took
your mother from you.
826
00:37:48,550 --> 00:37:51,592
I wanted to lunge at him.
[cries]
827
00:37:51,594 --> 00:37:53,594
I wanted to lunge at him
and I wanted to put
828
00:37:53,596 --> 00:37:56,055
my hands around him
and shake him and tell him,
829
00:37:56,057 --> 00:37:58,525
"How could you take my mother
from me?"
830
00:38:00,437 --> 00:38:02,562
- Duntsch sat motionless,
831
00:38:02,564 --> 00:38:06,065
he stared forward nearly
the entire time.
832
00:38:06,067 --> 00:38:07,442
- He looks terrible.
833
00:38:07,444 --> 00:38:08,443
He's put on, like,
30, 40 pounds.
834
00:38:08,445 --> 00:38:10,778
He's almost unrecognizable,
835
00:38:10,780 --> 00:38:13,498
and he's got a surly look
on his face.
836
00:38:15,952 --> 00:38:17,618
- I go down to
837
00:38:17,620 --> 00:38:19,620
the Dallas County Courthouse
to testify.
838
00:38:19,622 --> 00:38:22,457
I basically had an opportunity
to tell
839
00:38:22,459 --> 00:38:24,625
what happened the day
of Kellie's surgery,
840
00:38:24,627 --> 00:38:27,462
and then how the loss of Kellie
841
00:38:27,464 --> 00:38:31,057
has impacted, uh,
me and our family.
842
00:38:34,471 --> 00:38:37,764
- So I walk into
the courtroom and I'm sworn in,
843
00:38:37,766 --> 00:38:39,474
I start getting
kind of emotional,
844
00:38:39,476 --> 00:38:42,477
because I'm still going
down and getting
845
00:38:42,479 --> 00:38:46,647
my esophagus dilated 'cause
it filled in with scar tissue.
846
00:38:46,649 --> 00:38:51,578
# #
847
00:38:57,327 --> 00:38:59,660
- Sitting in that room
and hearing the stories
848
00:38:59,662 --> 00:39:02,497
of the other people
that he had hurt,
849
00:39:02,499 --> 00:39:04,123
I realized at that point in time
850
00:39:04,125 --> 00:39:07,635
this is so much bigger... so much
bigger than just us.
851
00:39:09,464 --> 00:39:13,508
- I spent quite a bit of time
discussing my circumstances
852
00:39:13,510 --> 00:39:15,510
with Mrs. Efurd,
and interpreting
853
00:39:15,512 --> 00:39:17,512
some of the video
that I had taken
854
00:39:17,514 --> 00:39:19,806
of the surgical procedure.
855
00:39:19,808 --> 00:39:22,975
So, this is not providing
856
00:39:22,977 --> 00:39:25,186
any stability at all.
857
00:39:25,188 --> 00:39:28,189
There's bone fragments
just laying
858
00:39:28,191 --> 00:39:32,652
over the exposed dura here
on the left side.
859
00:39:32,654 --> 00:39:35,363
And I was able to point out
to the jury
860
00:39:35,365 --> 00:39:36,989
where the defects were,
861
00:39:36,991 --> 00:39:38,699
where the errors were
in the surgery,
862
00:39:38,701 --> 00:39:41,202
where things were
mal-positioned,
863
00:39:41,204 --> 00:39:43,204
where the nerve had been
amputated,
864
00:39:43,206 --> 00:39:44,872
where the holes were
in the bone.
865
00:39:44,874 --> 00:39:48,042
I get off the stand
and I said... I said to myself,
866
00:39:48,044 --> 00:39:49,877
"Well, did I do enough?
Did I say enough?
867
00:39:49,879 --> 00:39:52,097
Did I explain it well enough?"
868
00:39:53,550 --> 00:39:55,550
- Despite overwhelming evidence
869
00:39:55,552 --> 00:39:57,552
of the harm done by
Christopher Duntsch,
870
00:39:57,554 --> 00:40:01,013
the crux of the case against
him depended on proving
871
00:40:01,015 --> 00:40:03,558
that he intentionally
and knowingly
872
00:40:03,560 --> 00:40:05,518
committed these offenses.
873
00:40:05,520 --> 00:40:07,728
To do that,
prosecutors would have to
874
00:40:07,730 --> 00:40:09,564
pull off the impossible.
875
00:40:09,566 --> 00:40:11,357
- We needed a glimpse
into his mind.
876
00:40:11,359 --> 00:40:14,402
I would say the most important
piece of evidence
877
00:40:14,404 --> 00:40:17,163
that we really worked hard
to get was the email.
878
00:40:18,408 --> 00:40:21,576
- The District Attorney
presented to the jury an email
879
00:40:21,578 --> 00:40:24,912
that Duntsch had written
in which he said,
880
00:40:24,914 --> 00:40:27,874
"I am ready to be what
I've always been,
881
00:40:27,876 --> 00:40:30,585
a cold blooded killer."
882
00:40:30,587 --> 00:40:33,379
- Saying that he had godlike
hands,
883
00:40:33,381 --> 00:40:35,256
but he was also the anti-Christ,
884
00:40:35,258 --> 00:40:37,925
and he was freeing these people
from their body.
885
00:40:37,927 --> 00:40:39,594
And it really showed that
886
00:40:39,596 --> 00:40:42,054
he was intentionally doing this.
887
00:40:42,056 --> 00:40:43,890
- This was an email that
he had written
888
00:40:43,892 --> 00:40:47,101
to one of his physician
assistants.
889
00:40:47,103 --> 00:40:48,561
He's basically admitting that
890
00:40:48,563 --> 00:40:50,104
he was hurting these patients
on purpose.
891
00:40:50,106 --> 00:40:52,273
I hope that would convince
a jury
892
00:40:52,275 --> 00:40:53,616
that he was guilty.
893
00:40:55,403 --> 00:40:58,446
[dramatic music]
894
00:40:58,448 --> 00:41:01,741
- I was at work and, um,
895
00:41:01,743 --> 00:41:05,286
I was... I was literally gripping
my phone at my desk.
896
00:41:05,288 --> 00:41:06,746
My palms were sweating so hard.
897
00:41:06,748 --> 00:41:08,456
I knew it was gonna happen
within that hour.
898
00:41:08,458 --> 00:41:11,292
And my dad calls me...
899
00:41:11,294 --> 00:41:12,919
And he tells me,
900
00:41:12,921 --> 00:41:14,629
"It's guilty, it's guilty."
901
00:41:14,631 --> 00:41:16,130
"We the Jury having found
the defendant,
902
00:41:16,132 --> 00:41:17,465
"Christopher Daniel Duntsch,
903
00:41:17,467 --> 00:41:19,592
"guilty of injury
to an elderly individual,
904
00:41:19,594 --> 00:41:21,469
"unanimously assess
his punishment
905
00:41:21,471 --> 00:41:22,929
"confinement of Texas
Department of Criminal Justice
906
00:41:22,931 --> 00:41:24,472
for life."
907
00:41:24,474 --> 00:41:26,474
- I'm literally jumping
up and down at my desk,
908
00:41:26,476 --> 00:41:29,527
so happy that this
actually happened.
909
00:41:32,106 --> 00:41:34,908
- I remember that day,
finally hearing...
910
00:41:36,611 --> 00:41:38,786
That he had been sentenced
to life.
911
00:41:42,492 --> 00:41:44,459
And just thinking...
912
00:41:47,330 --> 00:41:49,214
It finally happened.
913
00:41:50,833 --> 00:41:53,167
This man,
914
00:41:53,169 --> 00:41:56,095
who ripped my mother
from my life...
915
00:41:57,799 --> 00:42:00,058
Is finally going away.
916
00:42:01,678 --> 00:42:04,270
There was this huge
sense of relief.
917
00:42:05,974 --> 00:42:08,683
Finally feeling validated
918
00:42:08,685 --> 00:42:10,518
for all of the pain
and the frustration
919
00:42:10,520 --> 00:42:12,353
that we had been having.
920
00:42:12,355 --> 00:42:14,480
- It took the jury about
an hour to decide.
921
00:42:14,482 --> 00:42:16,816
Life in prison
for a doctor convicted
922
00:42:16,818 --> 00:42:18,859
of maiming and killing
his patients.
923
00:42:18,861 --> 00:42:21,988
- When I heard the final verdict
924
00:42:21,990 --> 00:42:24,198
against Dr. Dunstch,
925
00:42:24,200 --> 00:42:26,826
I was happy but sad,
because as a husband,
926
00:42:26,828 --> 00:42:28,536
I don't have my wife
and my life partner
927
00:42:28,538 --> 00:42:30,037
with me anymore.
928
00:42:30,039 --> 00:42:31,205
You know, we were about
to plan...
929
00:42:31,207 --> 00:42:33,332
When we retire, to do things.
930
00:42:33,334 --> 00:42:35,543
That's gone.
But you have to, you know...
931
00:42:35,545 --> 00:42:37,211
I try to remain strong
for my girls
932
00:42:37,213 --> 00:42:39,547
and, you know,
just keep the head up high.
933
00:42:39,549 --> 00:42:42,550
- Thinking about what
all he had done to Jeff
934
00:42:42,552 --> 00:42:44,051
and all these other patients,
935
00:42:44,053 --> 00:42:46,470
I hope he rots in prison.
936
00:42:46,472 --> 00:42:49,557
- I truly believe today
and I did then
937
00:42:49,559 --> 00:42:51,559
that this was a serial killer
938
00:42:51,561 --> 00:42:52,986
and a serial maimer.
939
00:42:54,564 --> 00:42:56,731
I mean, I just did
what was right.
940
00:42:56,733 --> 00:42:58,899
- He'll no longer be able to
941
00:42:58,901 --> 00:43:01,494
go out and wreak havoc
in the community.
942
00:43:03,573 --> 00:43:05,531
The Dallas County D.A.'s
office
943
00:43:05,533 --> 00:43:08,242
put away a killer
with a God complex
944
00:43:08,244 --> 00:43:10,578
for the rest of his life.
945
00:43:10,580 --> 00:43:14,749
- Between May 2011
and June 2013,
946
00:43:14,751 --> 00:43:17,877
Christopher Dunstch
operated on 38 patients.
947
00:43:17,879 --> 00:43:19,545
Of those patients,
948
00:43:19,547 --> 00:43:22,214
31 were seriously injured.
949
00:43:22,216 --> 00:43:24,216
Two were, in fact, killed.
950
00:43:24,218 --> 00:43:26,052
Thanks to ethical physicians
951
00:43:26,054 --> 00:43:27,762
like doctors Henderson and
Kirby,
952
00:43:27,764 --> 00:43:30,264
as well as a highly skilled
D.A.'s office,
953
00:43:30,266 --> 00:43:31,932
justice was served
954
00:43:31,934 --> 00:43:35,153
and a cold-blooded killer
is behind bars.
955
00:43:41,527 --> 00:43:44,495
For more on License to Kill,
go to Oxygen.com.
74806
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.