Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz held without bail for allegedly poisoning IV bags, killing physician

A Texas physician deemed a “medical terrorist” by prosecutors after allegedly poisoning IV luggage, reportedly inflicting a fellow doctor’s demise and cardiac emergencies for 11 different folks, was ordered held with out bail.

At a federal court docket listening to Monday, prosecutors described Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. as a “medical terrorist” who used heart-stopping medicine to show IV luggage at a surgical facility in Dallas into “poison bombs” that “exploded on unsuspecting sufferers,” FOX 4 Dallas-Forth Price reported. 

He was ordered to stay in custody with out bail whereas awaiting trial. 

Although he has a public defender, prosecutors argued that the anesthesiologist is a flight threat, noting that he allegedly had $7,000 in money on him on the time of his arrest final week, owns a $1.3 million house and 5 luxurious automobiles, together with a Corvette and three Mercedes-brand autos and has tax liens for owing the Inner Income Service thousands and thousands of dollars. 

A legal criticism accuses Ortiz of injecting nerve-blocking and bronchodilation medicine into affected person IV luggage at Baylor Scott & White Surgicare in North Dallas. 

1 of 4
Prosecutors described Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. as a "medical terrorist" who used heart-stopping drugs to turn IV bags into "poison bombs."

Prosecutors described Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. as a "medical terrorist" who used heart-stopping medicine to show IV luggage into "poison bombs."
Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. was ordered to remain in custody while awaiting trial without bail.

Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. was ordered to stay in custody whereas awaiting trial with out bail.
Prosecutors described Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. as a "medical terrorist" who used heart-stopping drugs to turn IV bags into "poison bombs."

Dr. Melanie Kaspar took an allegedly contaminated IV bag house throughout June to rehydrate resulting from an sickness.
Prosecutors accuse Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. of injecting nerve blocking and bronchodilation drugs into patient IV bags at Baylor Scott & White Surgicare.

Dr. Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr. is accused of injecting nerve blocking medicine into affected person IV luggage at Baylor Scott & White Surgicare.

Surveillance video performed out in court docket on Monday exhibits the physician putting an IV bag in a chrome steel hotter outdoors an working room on Aug. 19, based on FOX 4. Minutes later, one other staffer took the bag, and a affected person quickly after reportedly suffered a coronary heart assault. 

Ortiz’s colleague, beloved anesthesiologist Melanie Kaspar, took an allegedly contaminated IV bag house on June 21 to rehydrate resulting from an sickness. Virtually instantly after inserting the IV into her vein, she suffered a severe cardiac occasion and died. An post-mortem confirmed she was fatally poisoned by bupivacaine — a numbing agent that the Justice Division stated “is never abused” however is used to alleviate ache throughout surgical procedure. 

An 18-year-old male affected person skilled a cardiac emergency throughout a scheduled surgical procedure on Aug. 24 resulting from what was discovered to be an apparently contaminated IV bag. The middle recognized 10 further sudden cardiac emergencies that occurred throughout in any other case unremarkable surgical procedures between Could and August. 

The incidents first started two days after Oritz was notified of a disciplinary inquiry towards him over his dealing with of a medical emergency. Different docs famous he complained that the middle was attempting to “crucify” him. 

Not one of the cardiac emergencies occurred throughout his personal surgical procedures, and a nurse advised police that Ortiz “bodily waved off” an IV bag she had retrieved for him from the hotter, based on the criticism. 

Fox Information’ Rebecca Rosenberg contributed to this report. 

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post