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Malicious prosecution is a common law intentional tort.Like the tort of abuse of process, its elements include (1) intentionally (and maliciously) instituting and pursuing (or causing to be instituted or pursued) a legal action (civil or criminal) that is (2) brought without probable cause and (3) dismissed in favor of the victim of the malicious prosecution.
A medical billing company owner, Elaine Lovett, of Wayne County, Michigan, was convicted in 2017 for her role in a multimillion-dollar scheme to defraud Medicare using false billing claims, in a ...
Kurt Walter Donsbach (December 1, 1935 – August 29, 2021) [1] was a convicted felon and controversial alternative medicine figure who was twice convicted of practicing medicine without a license. At other times he also faced charges of misbranding drugs for sale, unlawfully dispensing drugs as a cure for cancer, tax evasion, practicing ...
People convicted for health fraud, the promotion of fraudulent or ignorant medical practices. Note that persons known to have engaged in such practices (especially historically), but not legally convicted, can be listed at Category:Health fraud people.
A New York-area doctor was convicted Wednesday in the yearslong sexual abuse of multiple patients, including four children. Darius A. Paduch of North Bergen, New Jersey, was convicted by a jury in ...
Kimberly Clark Saenz [2] (born November 3, 1973), [3] also known as Kimberly Clark Fowler, is a former licensed practical nurse and a convicted serial killer. [4] She was convicted of killing several patients at a Texas dialysis center by injecting bleach into their dialysis lines.
An executive at a medical device company has been convicted in Minnesota of insider trading for a scheme involving negotiations for the acquisition of the firm that was valued at $1.6 billion ...
Robert Hadden is an American former gynecologist and convicted sex offender. Between the late 1980s and 2012, Dr. Hadden was found liable of sexually assaulting hundreds of women who were his patients at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and New York-Presbyterian Hospital. [1]