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Dr. Raynaldo Ortiz, a Texas doctor, was found guilty of injecting heart-stopping poison into IVs at his former medical clinic in North Dallas. A jury found him guilty on all 10 counts after nearly seven hours of deliberation. Ortiz showed no emotion when the verdict was read. Several patients suffered cardiac emergencies as a result of Ortiz’s actions, and Dr. Melanie Kaspar died after using one of the contaminated IV bags. Federal prosecutors alleged that Ortiz committed the crimes in retaliation for a medical misconduct probe by injecting nerve blocking and bronchodilation drugs into patient IV bags.

Surveillance video showed Ortiz placing an IV bag in a stainless steel warmer outside an operating room, with another staff member taking the bag and a patient subsequently suffering a heart attack. Ortiz’s colleague, Dr. Melanie Kaspar, died after taking a contaminated IV bag home for hydration and immediately experiencing a serious cardiac event. An autopsy revealed she was poisoned with bupivacaine, a numbing agent rarely abused but used for pain relief during surgery. Witnesses at the trial included the anesthesiologist who discovered the tainted bags, Dr. Kaspar’s widower John Kaspar, and a teen who suffered cardiac arrest during nose surgery.

The events began two days after Ortiz was notified of a disciplinary inquiry over his handling of a medical emergency, with other doctors noting his complaints of being unfairly targeted by the clinic. Thirteen patients experienced similar cardiac emergencies between May and August 2022, leading to Ortiz being charged with causing bodily injury to four patients in August. Ortiz was ordered to be held before trial on the grounds that he was a danger to the community, citing a previous incident in 2015 where he shot his neighbor’s dog in retaliation for assisting his then-girlfriend in obtaining a restraining order against him after a domestic violence incident.

Ortiz was convicted of four counts of tampering with consumer products resulting in serious bodily injury, one count of tampering with a consumer product, and five counts of intentional adulteration of a drug. He is expected to be sentenced in two to three months and faces up to life in prison. The case has left a lingering impact on the family and loved ones of the victims, with Dr. Kaspar’s widower expressing his grief and the lack of closure he feels following the tragic loss of his best friend. Prosecutors and witnesses, including other medical professionals and patients affected by Ortiz’s actions, detailed the extent of the harm caused by the doctor’s deliberate poisoning of IV bags at the clinic.

The doctor’s actions have been described as shocking and deliberate, with federal prosecutors asserting that Ortiz carried out the poisonings as a form of retaliation for a disciplinary inquiry against him. The intentional adulteration of IV bags with dangerous substances led to several patients suffering cardiac emergencies and, tragically, the death of Dr. Melanie Kaspar. Ortiz’s lack of remorse or emotion during the trial underscored the severity and calculated nature of his actions, which were designed to harm individuals in his care. Ortiz’s conviction on multiple counts of tampering with consumer products and intentional adulteration of drugs highlights the serious consequences of his criminal behavior and the need for justice to be served in the case.

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