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Verdicts & Settlements
  • $15.0 million involving man who was left a ventilator dependant quadriplegic as result of broken neck during intubation

  • $12.5 million involving a suicide

  • $10.75 million settlement with physicians and hospital in case involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries at birth

  • $8.1 million wrongful death verdict in case involving an outpatient suicide, highest verdict in the United States in a suicide case

  • $7.1 million verdict represented the first medical malpractice verdict ever in Guilford County, highest medical malpractice verdict in North Carolina at the time, the second highest punitive damages verdict in the state

  • $7 million awarded by jury in medmal verdict

  • $4.5 million involving a child who suffered significant brain injury as result of medical treatment received for heart condition

  • $3.5 million verdict involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries

  • $3.25 million for the wrongful death of husband and father of 4 children who died due to a failure to see and appreciate a brain aneurysm by a radiologist performing an MRA (Magnetic Resonance Angiogram)

  • Confidential settlement in 2002: $2.3 million for the wrongful death of a 38 year-old, wife and mother of 2 children who died following a routine thyroidectomy

  • Cumberland County: $1.5 million settlement in a car accident involving a 31 year-old wife and mother of 2 children which resulted in a closed-head injury and permanent brain damage

  • Macon County: $800,000 wrongful death verdict in case involving throat cancer

  • WRONGFUL-DEATH SUIT FILED AGAINST COUNTY; PARAMEDICS LACKED SKILLS, REFUSED AID, MAN'S WIDOW SAYS

    Winston-Salem Journal

    (c) Copyright 2001 Winston-Salem Journal. All rights reserved.

    Wednesday, December 5, 2001

    WINSTON-SALEM JOURNAL; B

    WRONGFUL-DEATH SUIT FILED AGAINST COUNTY; PARAMEDICS LACKED SKILLS, REFUSED AID, MAN'S WIDOW SAYS

    By John Hinton JOURNAL REPORTER

    A Winston-Salem woman filed a wrongful-death lawsuit yesterday,
    charging that Forsyth County paramedics improperly inserted a breathing
    tube into her husband and failed to allow a doctor at the scene to help
    them.

    Mary P. Matthews, the wife of the late Robert B. Matthews, filed the
    lawsuit in Forsyth Civil Superior Court as the administrator of her
    husband's estate. Mary Matthews is suing for more than $20,000 in
    damages to pay for medical expenses, funeral costs and other financial
    losses, according to the lawsuit.

    The lawsuit made the charges against Forsyth County and the Forsyth
    Emergency Medical Services, the agencies listed as defendants. The
    Winston-Salem Journal also reported the incident in January 2000.

    Mary Matthews and her husband were walking along Hawthorne Road on
    Dec. 5, 1999, when Robert Matthews had a heart attack. Dr. Paul Rieker,
    who was then an anesthesiology resident at Wake Forest University
    Baptist Medical Center, stopped to help.

    Rieker tried to revive Robert Matthews and stayed with him until
    paramedics with the Forsyth County Emergency Medical Services arrived.
    The paramedics tried to insert a breathing tube into Matthews' lungs,
    but they had difficulty performing the procedure.

    Rieker offered to help the paramedics and told them that he was an
    anesthesiologist. But the paramedics repeatedly refused Rieker's offers
    of help.

    The paramedics made several unsuccessful attempts to place the
    breathing tube through Robert Matthews' trachea.

    Rieker was later arrested by Winston-Salem police officers, but a
    county magistrate didn't file any charges against him. The paramedics
    and police said that Rieker didn't show proper identification as the
    paramedics were trying to revive Matthews.

    Matthews was taken to Forsyth Medical Center, where emergency workers
    noticed that the breathing tube had been inserted in Matthews' esophagus
    rather than in his trachea or windpipe.

    The esophagus carries food to the stomach and the trachea carries
    oxygen to the lungs. Robert Matthews died at the hospital at 4:12 p.m.

    The lawsuit alleges that the paramedics and the county supervisors
    were negligent because paramedics lacked the training and skills to
    insert a breathing tube into a patient, they failed to notice that they
    improperly inserted the breathing tube in Matthews, and they refused
    Rieker's offer of help without checking his credentials.

    County Manager Graham Pervier declined to comment. County attorney
    Davida Martin said that she hadn't seen the lawsuit and also declined to
    comment.

    In a previous interview, county officials said that paramedics
    followed the rules when they refused Rieker's help and that they gave
    Matthews proper medical care.

    Wade Byrd of Fayetteville, one of Mary Matthews' attorneys, said that
    Rieker knew that the paramedics had incorrectly inserted the breathing
    tube.

    "That is why he was making a fuss," Byrd said. "He was doing all he
    could to help and being a good Samaritan. He didn't get a lot for his
    efforts."