Sunday Funday. What I wish I could tell the court.
ChatGPT and that woman wearing a white business suit and a halo who sits on my right shoulder will try to talk me into taming my sarcasm. I’m rooting for the lady in the red, tight-fitting gown who sits on my left shoulder. The questionable tone is in my motion for spoliation sanctions against UAMS for “writing over” videos of the doctors and nurses who allegedly falsely imprisoned, drugged, battered and raped my son, repeatedly over a two-week span. Then charged him $46,000 after letting him leave in far worse condition than when he was brought in.
Imagine a video of a man who allegedly needed intensive care running down the hallway carrying a full grocery bag of his belongings in each arm, breaking loose of grasping hands of the gang following him, both men and women, all dressed in scrubs, and he outran them to the elevator. A bunch of them, including the man they claim to want to save from having a deadly seizure, get into the closest elevator to H4. A skirmish ensues. The patient’s 60-year-old mother, who was sitting in the waiting area as ordered, sees the chase and moves toward the elevators. The patient yells, “I just want to give these things to my mom.” He is allowed to hand the bags off to his mother. Then he jumps across the aisle to the second elevator, kitty corner to the one closest to ICU. He moves to press a button with his left hand and someone shoves him, causing the left side of his head to hit the wall. This subdues him and the group of healthcare workers is able to bring him back to confinement. This imagery should bring to mind a man who does not consent to treatment and who is amazingly fit, despite this being the second week of his imprisonment, starvation and poisoning after falling on his head from the 10-foot rung of a ladder and being denied uninterrupted sleep or proper hydration. But UAMS destroyed the video. They claim now that they had no indication that there might be criminal or civil misconduct alleged. Nope, they say, this is a routine event. Shred away.
SPOILER ALERT: The patient did not die after we left UAMS against unsolicited advice. 18 months later and he is enroute home from an African Photo Safari. He hopes to find an attorney who will represent him against UAMS and a list of doctors and nurses including Dr. Mary Kimbrough, Dr. Jordan Greer, Dr. Joseph Deloach, Dr. Elizabeth Brown, Nurse Shannon Cobb and a host of others.
Send emails of interest to bohemian_books@yahoo.com. You can watch videos that we took against the intimidations of the alleged criminals on Youtube.
FREE Doc of the Day: Third Set of Interrogatories in False Imprisonment case against UAMS
All the questions are good, but as a teaser, here are two that together will make weaseling work.
INTERROGATORY NO. 59:
Did Joseph P. Deloach sincerely worry that Sean Lynn would “have continued agitation” after leaving UAMS on January 27, 2024? (See Med. Rec. 4/29/25 at page 105.)
and
INTERROGATORY NO. 84
UAMS wrote in its Response to Claimants’ First Set of Requests for Admission:
REQUEST NUMBER 10: Admit that Sean Lynn had the right to be informed of continuing health care requirements following discharge from the hospital.
ANSWER: Admitted. The discharging physician also advised Lynn, both in person and in writing, during the discharge against medical advice to go to another hospital for continued treatment as the physician did not believe that Lynn was medically stable for discharge.
UAMS admitted:
REQUEST NUMBER 9: Admit that Mr. Lynn was discharged with a prescription for only propranolol and sodium tablets sent to a pharmacy.
And
REQUEST NUMBER 8: Admit that the “Discharge of Patient from Hospital Against Medical Advice” form (shown on Med. Rec. 4/29/25 at page 1301 and repeated on page 1303) has a handwritten note that
says, “I have requested prescriptions for the 3 medications that stabilized Sean. I agree to follow the protocol Sean Lynn is on until receiving medical advice.”
Is it true that the only medications UAMS opined were necessary to stabilize Sean Lynn at the time of discharge “Against Medical Advice” were propranolol and sodium tablets?
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Dr. Joseph Deloach claimed to “worry” that the patient would have continued agitation at home, but failed to prescribe any of the long list of antipsychotics and benzodiazepines UAMS used to restrain him from leaving the hospital.