Texas Doctor Tainted IV Bags Dubbed ‘Poison Bombs’ – Everything Law and Order Blog

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A federal jury convicted Raylando Ortiz, Jr of tampering with IV bags at a Texas surgery center. Prosecutors say Ortiz, who had recently been disciplined, wanted to sabotage his coworkers. Ortiz’s suspicious behavior was caught on surveillance cameras multiple times and led to 11 patients suffering cardiac emergencies. In a sick twist, Ortiz’s actions also caused the death of a fellow anesthesiologist. Law&Crime’s Jesse Weber breaks down the unique case with Texas attorney Nicole DeBorde.

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45 thoughts on “Texas Doctor Tainted IV Bags Dubbed ‘Poison Bombs’”
  1. I’ve experienced enough malpractice by doctors, to not trust them. The trust patients have is blinding. They make oaths that protect each other, some states even make you sign waivers protecting them from malpractice. May all those like this man be brought to justice.

  2. It would be incredible easy to run the footage through an AI to recognize when people are doing suspicious things. This could also be used for the much more likely case to identify and prevent mistakes, but that's just too much hassle for these hospitals

  3. Im a nurse and we had a child come in ED who coded, I am paging the anesthesiologist to come to the code over and over and we ended up finding him dead in the on call room with a needle in his arm. This guy needs to be locked up forever. People are completely vulnerable and trusting of anesthesiologists

  4. This a hole literally raised his hand, recited, and swore to the Hippocratic Oath at one point in time. What a total failure of a human being. Also relinquishing ones hospital privs in lieu of an investigation is supposed to be reported to NPDB regardless of the circumstances. It then becomes hospital's (future employer's) onus to properly query new physicians and professional providers within the databank before making a hiring decision So the hospital becomes on the hook for negligent hiring, etc. This was likely a fed case b/c the NPDB is an HHS entity which is under the executive branch – DOJ and CMS (i.e. Medicare). Plus, hospitals/Providers that receive medicare reimbursements have to abide by CMS guidelines; so again, federal. Also, not saying this is the case, but if he was at, say a VA facility, that would be federal in nature.

  5. As a medical professional. Periodically I see MDs who have no business practicing medicine do so and after reporting such ppl many times their employment remained intact. The worst thing that ever happens when something happens are they get moved to practice in another location or system by their medical group. It's incredibly sad. Same with some nurses, but at least they don't stay in the care of the same patients for long enough to cause any obvious problems. Still overall inexcusable.

  6. My daughter had her throat slit after she passed out in the bathroom in her HOSPITAL bathroom. They said she some how cutt herself when she fell! They had to take her to a different hospital to a trauma center to sew her up. It took 26 stitches to close. This hospital was in Allen Texas and they took her to their Dallas hospital. They reported it to police as an accident, so the police didn’t talk or even looked at her. I went to the police my self and they said if hospital said it’s an accident and that’s it! They said the videos show only hospital personnel entering her room. We can’t see the video without sapenna! No lawyer will help!

  7. I’m not supporting the spouse abuse crimes he committed, but they really have nothing to do with what he did at the hospitals.

    With or without them, he should spend the rest of his time in prison.

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