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Former VA Pathologist Charged In Patient Deaths Denied Bond Or Release

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KFSM) — A former pathologist at the heart of a scandal in which he is accused of working while impaired at the Veterans Healthcare System of...

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KFSM) — A former pathologist at the heart of a scandal in which he is accused of working while impaired at the Veterans Healthcare System of the Ozarks was denied bond on Wednesday.

Dr. Robert Morris Levy, 53, was arraigned Aug. 20 on three counts of manslaughter, 12 counts of wire fraud, 12 counts of mail fraud and four counts of making false statements. On Wednesday, he was denied bond in Federal Court of the Western District of Arkansas.

Levy will continue to be held at the Washington County Detention Center until his hearing, which has been delayed at the defense's request until Sept. 8, 2020.

His actions, which included accessing patient records and falsifying diagnoses, lead to the deaths of three patients, according to Dak Kees, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Arkansas.

Levy concealed his impairment by taking 2-methyl-2-butanol (2M-2B), a chemical substance that enables a person to achieve a state of intoxication but is not detectable in routine drug and alcohol testing methodology, Kees said.

Reviews showed 3,007 of those cases showed an error or misdiagnosis.

Earlier this month another family accused Levy of a misdiagnosis that led to a veteran's death.

Kees said the investigation is ongoing but couldn't comment further.

Levy first had a complaint of working while intoxicated in October 2015. Levy denied the allegation to a VA "fact-finding panel," according to his indictment.

The VA subsequently suspended Levy's privilege to practice medicine and issued him a written notice of removal and revocation of clinical privileges, according to the U.S. attorney's office.

Levy later acknowledged that he once showed up drunk in 2016 to work at the Fayetteville clinic, but denied working while impaired.

However, prosecutors said a drug and alcohol test from that incident revealed Levy had a blood-alcohol content of .396. The legal limit in Arkansas to operate a vehicle is .08.

Levy agreed that the punishment was "due to unprofessional conduct related to high blood alcohol content while on duty," and in July 2016, he voluntarily entered a three-month in-treatment program. He completed the program in October 2016.

Levy was fired from the VA in the spring of 2018.

Levy told the Associated Press that the VA fired him as Chief of Pathology because of a DUI which was ultimately dismissed.

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