JACKSONVILLE, FL—U.S. District Judge
Marcia Morales Howard yesterday sentenced Steven Beumel (49, Jacksonville) to
30 years in federal prison for one count of tampering with a consumer product
resulting in death, four counts of tampering with a consumer product resulting
in serious bodily injury, and five counts of stealing Fentanyl by deception.
Beumel pleaded guilty to the charges on
May 11, 2012.
According to court documents, Beumel was
a radiology technician at Memorial Hospital from May 1992 through October 2004.
He worked as a radiology technician at Mayo Clinic from October 2004 through
August 2010. Beumel admitted that he stole syringes of Fentanyl during
patients’ procedures and replaced them with syringes of saline contaminated
with hepatitis C. Beumel’s tampering occurred from 2006 through 2008 at the
Mayo Clinic’s Interventional Radiology Unit.
Epidemiologists from Mayo Clinic, the
Florida Department of Health, and the CDC worked for more than three years to
solve the hepatitis C outbreak at the Mayo Clinic. It was eventually linked to
Beumel. Mayo Clinic immediately fired Beumel and reported his actions to law
enforcement. The clinic tested thousands of patients who were potentially put
at risk by Beumel’s actions. Two patients from that testing effort were linked
to Beumel.
This case was investigated by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Food and Drug Administration, the Florida
Department of Financial Services, and the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office
Homicide Unit. It was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Frank
Talbot.
No comments:
Post a Comment