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One of the physicians, hired by CMS, had once lost his license over sexual and financial improprieties. The other doctor had pleaded guilty to a sex crime. He was hired fresh from drug treatment.
Correctional
Medical Services filled two key jobs in the Alabama prison system
with doctors who have troubled personal and professional histories.
The physicians are Dr. Gail Williams and Dr. Walter Mauney.
The state of Michigan revoked Williams' medical license in 1985 after
finding that he had engaged in sexual acts with a psychiatric patient
and falsely billed an insurance company for the treatment. The board
also found that the psychiatrist lied under oath when he denied he had
sex with any other patient.
But that and other professional
problems didn't stop CMS from hiring Williams in 1994 as head of
mental health services for the Alabama prison system.
Mauney
pleaded guilty in 1979 of a sex crime in Tennessee. He received a
sentence of 10 years in the state penitentiary, which was suspended.
Mauney also spent time in a drug treatment center from October 1994 to
February 1995. Still, CMS hired Mauney as a medical director for one
of Alabama's correction facilities shortly after his release from the
drug center. He served until 1997 and was a defendant in the Calvin
Moore wrongful death suit, which was settled in August.
A
further look into Mauney's records show that he put misleading
statements in his application about the nature of his sex conviction.
In Williams' case, a CMS official said the company believes it hired
"the most qualified physician who applied for the job.''
The Williams Hiring
After losing his medical license in Michigan in 1985, Williams found a
job in 1990 as head of mental health services for the Oklahoma
Department of Corrections. The state gave him a license restricted to
practice in prisons or other surpervised settings.
But it
revoked his license in November 1993 after he was accused of sexually
battering and harassing a nurse and other female prison staff members.
The women won a sexual harassment civil suit against the Department of
Corrections.
Williams says he was the victim of "a power struggle'' and a conspiracy led by a nurse.
CMS hired Williams in November 1994 despite the fact that he had no
medical license and had worked as a physician in just three of the
previous eight years.
The following month, Alabama's Medical
Licensing Commission granted Williams a medical license restricted to
practice in Alabama's prisons.
Larry Linton, regional manager for
the CMS Alabama office, said Williams' "experience in managing a
statewide mental health program made him an ideal candidate. We were
fully aware of his (discipline problems) and discussed them with the
(Alabama) board of examiners."
CMS supervises and provides quarterly reports on Williams to the medical licensing board, Linton said.
"There hasn't been a single incident reported that even suggests Dr.
Williams is anything less than what he needs to be, and that is a
professional," he said.
Larrry Dixon, executive director of the
Alabama State Board of Medical Examiners, said the board had
thoroughly reviewed his application and got assurances from CMS
concerning how he would be supervised.
"I think that the board has
placed sufficient safeguards to protect the patient population and
for four years it appears that quality medical services have been
provided without incident,'' Dixon said. "We have gotten nothing but
exemplary quarterly reports from the other physicians he works with as
well as from the Department of Corrections and CMS. I don't know what
else can be demanded of us."
The Mauney Hiring
Walter Mauney says he has tried to be a "good, caring doctor.'' But he may not have been honest with his employer.
In his job application with CMS, Mauney stated he once pleaded guilty
to a sexual misconduct charge for having sex with an 18-year-old when
the age of consent was 19.
When recently asked if this was a truthful statement, Mauney said, "Yes. Absolutely. Why would I lie about that?"
Records from the Monroe County (Tenn.) Criminal Court show that in
1979, Mauney was charged by a Tennessee grand jury with three counts
of having oral and "penetrating" sex with a 16-year-old "mentally
defective" boy.
He pleaded guilty to one count of "crime against
nature." When asked about the discrepancy on his application, Mauney
said that he thought the boy was 18 and blamed his crime on his
drinking. Mauney said none of the acts that got him into trouble ever
involved a patient.
"I've taken care of a lot of people over the years," he said. "I've tried to be a good, caring doctor."
Asked if CMS knew that Mauney had lied on his application, CMS
spokeswoman Susan Adams repeatedly evaded reporters' questions.
CMS's chief medical officer, Dr. Louis Tripoli, said: "CMS believed that
Dr. Mauney was a satisfactory candidate to provide inmate health care
services.''
In his application, Mauney informed CMS that he had
quit drinking in 1991. But in October 1994 he was admitted to a drug
abuse treatment center in Alabama because of an addiction to pain
medication, which he said was due to "messed up" knee surgery.
Mauney left the treatment center in February 1995. That same month, he applied to CMS and was hired shortly after.
Dixon, the spokesman for the Alabama board of medical examiners, said
that before granting Mauney a license the board carefully considered
the many testimonials from doctors, his psychotherapist, a judge and
others who gave him strong support.
Mauney left CMS in 1997 and now works at a Birmingham hospital.
Reprinted with permission of the St Louis Post-Dispatch, copyright 1998