Doctor in Lisa McPherson case suspended
By THOMAS C. TOBIN and ALISA ULFERTS
© St. Petersburg Times, published August 4, 2001
David I. Minkoff loses his license for one year for improperly
prescribing drugs for the Scientologist. TALLAHASSEE -- Florida's
Board of Medicine has sternly sanctioned Clearwater physician David I. Minkoff,
finding he improperly prescribed medicine for a patient he had never seen --
Scientologist Lisa McPherson.
Minkoff, also a Scientologist, prescribed Valium and the muscle
relaxant chloral hydrate at the behest of unlicensed Church of Scientology
staffers who were trying to nurse McPherson, 36, through a severe mental
breakdown.
When they failed after 17 days of isolating her, Minkoff was
recruited again. This time, he pronounced McPherson dead.
For his role in the 1995 episode that Minkoff himself calls a
"fiasco," the 53-year-old doctor will lose his medical license for one
year and then be made to practice under probation for two more years -- unless
he appeals and wins a reversal.
He also was fined $10,000.
The board's action Friday is the first official consequence for
anyone connected with McPherson's death, which resulted in a two-year criminal
investigation, made headlines around the world, claimed the career of the local
medical examiner and plunged the church into a tumultuous period that sapped its
resources and hurt membership.
The investigation brought two unprecedented felony charges, not
against individuals but against a corporation: Scientology's main entity in
Clearwater. One of them, the charge of practicing medicine without a license,
was related to Minkoff's actions. The other was neglect of a disabled adult.
Both were dropped last year after Pinellas prosecutors reluctantly
concluded their case had been wrecked by Pinellas-Pasco Medical Examiner Joan
Wood, who changed her conclusions about the cause of McPherson's death and later
retired under pressure.
Meanwhile, a wrongful death lawsuit filed in 1997 by McPherson's
family moves slowly through the Pinellas court system.
On Friday, Minkoff appeared before the board to answer charges that
he prescribed medication for McPherson over the phone without examining her and
that he relied on the church's non-licensed medical officers in treating
McPherson.
However, he said nothing during the hearing and declined to speak
to the St. Petersburg Times afterward. Board members agreed to stay Minkoff's
suspension pending his appeal, but added a few words to their punishment.
"This is a healthy, 36-year-old female who died for no reason
I can tell," said Rafael Miguel, one of two board members who wanted to
revoke Minkoff's license. In the last fiscal year, only 8 percent of doctors
disciplined by the Board of Medicine were suspended.
Ken Dandar, the Tampa lawyer who represents McPherson's family,
called the sanctions too lenient. Dandar set off the inquiry that led to
Friday's action, complaining about Minkoff to state health officials in 1997.
He nevertheless credited Minkoff on Friday for the candid accounts
he has given in sworn statements. It was Minkoff, a Scientologist for 20 years,
who told prosecutors in 1998 that McPherson's care at Scientology's Fort
Harrison Hotel in Clearwater was seriously flawed.
McPherson's troubles surfaced Nov. 18, 1995, when she disrobed in
the street after a minor auto accident. Paramedics took her to Morton Plant
Hospital for psychiatric evaluation, but several Scientologists showed up to
object, citing the church's hard stance against psychiatry.
When they took McPherson to the Fort Harrison Hotel, a Scientology
retreat, she became psychotic. Two days later, church staffers called Minkoff,
saying they needed something to help McPherson sleep.
The doctor is a "public" Scientologist, not one of the
uniformed members who staff the church.
Though Minkoff had never seen McPherson and didn't know her medical
history, he prescribed liquid Valium. He also wrote the prescription in the name
of the Scientology staffer who was sent to pick it up -- not the actions of a
"reasonably prudent physician," according to a stinging document
written earlier this year by the state's Agency for Health Care Administration.
Nine days later, the church staffers called again. This time,
Minkoff prescribed chloral hydrate, a prescription sedative, again without
examining McPherson or gleaning information about her medical situation.
On Dec. 5, 1995, when Scientology staffers realized McPherson was
physically ill, they again called Minkoff, who says he told them to take her to
the nearest hospital. But the staffers persisted, saying they feared doctors at
Morton Plant Hospital, two minutes away, would put her in the psychiatric ward.
Minkoff, who worked in the emergency room at a New Port Richey
hospital 45 minutes away, finally agreed to see McPherson. He was "shocked
out of my wits" when she arrived.
After pronouncing McPherson dead, Minkoff told prosecutors he
screamed at church staffer Janis Johnson for bringing him someone in such
"horrific" shape. Johnson was an unlicensed physician.
An autopsy found McPherson died of a blood clot in her left lung.
Minkoff, who also works at a Clearwater clinic, was contrite with
prosecutors about his role, saying, "It was foolish to do what I did."
Because of statements like that, Minkoff has come to be one of the
better witnesses against his own church as McPherson's relatives press their
lawsuit. Once a defendant in that lawsuit, he has settled with McPherson's
family. Minkoff has said Johnson never revealed the severity of McPherson's
psychosis. Had he known more, he would have acted differently, he told
prosecutors.
The church had no response Friday.
Minkoff's attorney, Bruce Lamb, reminded medical board members
Friday that Minkoff has practiced medicine since 1995 without incident.
Suspending him immediately could put other patients in jeopardy, he said.
"There was no intent or bad act committed by Dr. Minkoff."