The Future of Sex Offenders: Your Friendly Paramedic

by Michelle Says So | December 15, 2008 at 02:06 pm
1423 views | 5 Recommendations | 7 comments

Photos

Ambulance Sex Offenders

Ambulance Sex Offenders

see larger image

uploaded by Michelle Says So

This probe found at that at least 129 EMT workers have been accused of sex-related crimes in the last 18 months. With nearly 900,000 EMT workers employed in the U.S., this is something that should be investigated immediately. 

How lax is the EMT application process?  An absolute must should be implementing stringent application procedures including criminal and sexual offender background checks.  Prior to many assumptions, not every State requires such.

If this trend continues, hospitals and ambulance companies will see a lot of litigation and negative public attention headed their way.

Is this the future of medicine?


(AP) They answer the call 24-7, often risking their own safety to rescue the sick and injured and rush them to the hospital. But some paramedics have been more predator than hero.

Over the past 18 months, at least 129 ambulance attendants across the U.S. have been accused of sex-related crimes on duty or off, an investigation by The Associated Press found. Some of them molested patients in the back of an ambulance.

"It's a dream job for a sexual predator," said Greg Kafoury, a Portland, Ore., lawyer who represents three women who were groped by a paramedic. "Everything is there: Women who are incapacitated, so they're hugely distracted. Medical cover to put your hands in places where, in any other context, a predator would be immediately recognized as such."

Across the U.S., emergency medical technicians have been accused in recent months of such crimes as rape, soliciting minors over the Internet and possession of child porn, according to an AP survey of the state agencies that oversee those professions.

Exactly how many of these EMTs were alleged to have committed their crimes on the job is unclear. But some of more shocking cases include:

  • A Standish, Mich., paramedic sent to prison in March for molesting a girl who was on her way to the hospital after she was injured at her 15th birthday party.

  • A Pinellas County, Fla., paramedic arrested in July after he allegedly sexually assaulted a woman in an ambulance en route to a hospital.

  • A Chester County, Pa., paramedic sentenced in July to up to 20 years in prison for engaging in sex and providing alcohol to teenagers he befriended through their interest in emergency medical service.

  • A Copperas Cove, Texas, paramedic awaiting trial in January on charges he exposed and touched an 18-year-old accident victim's breasts while pretending to tend to her injuries.

  • A Chattanooga, Tenn., EMT accused in a lawsuit of giving a 30-year-old woman an extra dose of morphine and then completely undressing her in the back of an ambulance even though her injuries were minor.

    State health officials in 23 states reported receiving sex-related complaints involving EMS workers. New York reported the most complaints - 17. Thirteen of the complaints were substantiated and resulted in workers losing their certification. Texas reported 13 complaints, Massachusetts 11 and Virginia 10. No breakdown was immediately available showing how many of those allegations involved sexual misconduct on the job.

    Several EMS officials said the number of complaints is troubling but does not necessarily point to an industrywide problem. They noted that the profession employs nearly 900,000 people in the U.S.

    "That number in and of itself doesn't shock me, knowing the number of providers we have in the country," said Steve Blessing, state EMS director in Delaware and president of the National Association of State EMS Officials. "Is even one case tolerable? I think most state directors would say no. But we're bound by reality here."

    In Portland, paramedic Lannie Haszard was sentenced to five years in prison in August after pleading guilty to five counts of attempted sexual abuse. Haszard, 62, was charged with inappropriately touching four female patients while they were being taken by ambulance to hospitals.

    Three of the women have sued Haszard and American Medical Response, his employer at the time. The lawsuits contend that the company, which operates ambulances in 40 states, failed to react to previous complaints about the paramedic's conduct.

    Haszard's behavior came to light last December when a 28-year-old single mother of three, Royshekka Herring, told police that he touched her genitals while she was en route to the hospital for emergency treatment of a gastrointestinal condition.

    In a recent taped deposition, Herring's voice shook with emotion as she described how a nurse tried to convince her that Haszard was probably performing an abdominal exam.

    "I started yelling at her, because I didn't feel safe," Herring testified. "Somebody I never expected to touch me touched me."

    A spokesman for American Medical Response had no comment on the case.

    Former Dallas Fire Chief Steve Abraira suggested ambulances carry three workers. Ambulances usually have two - one in the front, one in the back.

    "If there's a person predisposed to do something wrong, there's nobody there to witness or discourage that individual from doing something," said Abraira, now the fire chief in Palm Bay, Fla.

    Twenty-eight states do not automatically bar known sex offenders from working as EMTs, the AP found.

    Although most insist they would rarely, if ever, allow sex offenders to work those jobs, the AP found that Texas has knowingly allowed eight, Louisiana two and Maine, Virginia and North Carolina one each. There is no indication any of those people were accused of sexual misconduct after being allowed to work EMS jobs.

    Twenty-two states strictly prohibit such offenders from working as EMTs.

    "This is the type of person we don't want in the back of an ambulance with your mother or daughter," said March Tucker, an EMS regulator in West Virginia.

    All but one of the eight registered sex offenders certified to work in Texas victimized children ranging in age from 6 to 16.

    "Oh, my goodness, that's really scary," said Winfred Dean, who supervises the sex offender monitoring unit for the Harris County probation department in Houston. "I thought people like that would more than likely be eliminated."

    Texas officials said state regulations call for EMS licensing decisions to be made on a case-by-case basis.

    "The only thing we can do is follow the law, and the law allows this," said Maxie Bishop, state EMS director. "We have to take a look at the crime, how long it's been, the nature of it and what that person has done since."
  • recommend This comment thread is now closed
    0
    Jawa Lunk

    Wow...I wonder what it is about the job that draws them?

    Perhaps it's underlying guilt for their crime, and this profession, servicing and helping those in need, has a redemptive quality about it that draws them?

    I would like to see the statistics of how many of them actually committed their crimes while holding this job versus how many committed their crime before.

    I think that information would be insightful.

    0
    Sputnic

    That is ridiculous ! Sex offenders should not be doing those kind of jobs, at all, ever

    0
    Jawa Lunk

    I was talking to my wife about it, and she said that she just heard of a case where the paramedic has drugged the teen girl in the ambulance, and was feeling her up, but got busted.

    How sick is that?

    "Sorry about your broken leg and multiple contusions, here, let me feel you up, that will help"

    0
    Michelle Says So

    I used to work at a law firm where we represented a woman who was suing an ambulance company for a paramedic did the same thing.  Except she was AWAKE!  And she actually knew who he was too!  He was that cocky thinking that she wouldn't do or say anything.  What's that old saying about not ASSUMING?  ;)

    0
    Jawa Lunk

    man..I am amazed sometimes at the creepiness of some people...

    So many freaks out there...

    0
    Dave T

    What is NOT said is whether any of the people in this article were registered sex offenders.  Were it so, headline would be "Registered Sex Offender Working as Paramedic ......(you can fill in the rest). 

    No background or records check will detect someone who is about to commit their first offense.  Approximately 95% of all sexual assaults are first offenses (the offender isn't on any list).  Overall, sex offenders have the second lowest recidivism rate (somewhere between 5 and 10% depending on whom you ask) of any crime tracked by the Department of Justice.  The only lower rate is for murder.  In fact, someone who has been in prison for an unrelated felony is six times more likely to commit a sex offense than is a registered sex offender.

    This doesn't mean that we should simply throw open all jobs, willy nilly, to anyone and everyone who shows up at the door.  It does mean that we need to exercise common sense, and treat each case individually, and that we need to base our actions on facts rather than supposition or emotion.

    As John Adams is famously quoted to have said, "Facts are stubborn things."

    0
    WWJS

    Excellent point. 

    It's amazing how much fear and ignorance there is surrounding "sex offenders". Reminds me of the fear over witches just a few hundred years ago. Estimated that 60 to 300 thousand woman were tortured and killed because of fear and ignorance. The media and TV shows have painted a picture of "sex offenders" as evil men who can not stop molesting and killing children.


    Truth is most labeled sex offenders have never even touched anyone and as you pointed out, rarely commit the same crime again. Even more amazing is the range of crimes that can get you labeled as a sex offender. If you are convicted in Alabama of mooning someone you will be a sex offender and have to suffer the same stigma as a rapist. Good luck finding a job or place to live. I can't count the number of moons that I have seen out the bus window in the 70's and 80's. Drop your pants now and you'll be in prison for 10 years.


    Don't get me wrong I don't support any offensive behavior, but a burn um all at the stake mentality is just as wrong. Let him who has never sinned cast the first stone.

    This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

    What is NowPublic?

    NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

    Find out more

    Crowd Power

    Jawa Lunk
    First Flagged at 6:17 AM, Dec 16, 2008 by Jawa Lunk
    These members have powered this story:

    Related Stories

    Recommendations (5)

    Most recently recommended by:
     

    closeSign in to NowPublic

    is reporting from