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View Full Version : Suit: W.Va. police chief denied gay man CPR



sws4420
03-03-2006, 08:40 AM
Chief calls allegation ‘a boldface lie’; 43-year-old died after heart attack

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A small-town police chief was accused in a federal lawsuit Thursday of stopping a would-be rescuer from performing CPR on a gay heart attack victim because he assumed the ailing man had HIV and posed a health risk.

Claude Green, 43, died June 21 after being stricken yards from City Hall in Welch, a community of about 2,400.

The American Civil Liberties Union sued on behalf of his mother.

Police Chief Bobby Bowman called the allegations “a boldface lie.” He said that he called an ambulance and that Green was taken to the hospital in “no more than nine minutes.”

“No one refused him CPR as his sister and mom are saying. They can do what they want, but if they’re saying I refused him CPR, that is no way true,” Bowman said.

The lawsuit accuses Bowman of pulling off Green’s friend Billy Snead as Snead was performing chest compressions on the man. Snead was a passenger in Green’s pickup truck when Green collapsed; Snead had managed to pull over the vehicle.

Snead said in an interview that he didn’t realize at first it was Bowman giving the order and continued working on his friend. Bowman repeated his command to get away, saying that Green was HIV positive, then grabbed Snead by the shoulders and told him to sit on the curb, Snead said.

“He was a police officer so I got out the way. I assumed he would help. I didn’t want to be a hindrance,” Snead said. “He also told the ambulance drivers that he was HIV positive and to be careful.”

Green was pronounced dead at the hospital after about 30 minutes of attempts to revive him.

Rose Saxe, a lawyer with the ACLU’s AIDS Project, said Bowman’s alleged actions contributed to Green’s death and violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, equal protection laws and due process rights.

Saxe said Green’s death was “tragically senseless” because he did not have the AIDS virus, but added that he should have received lifesaving care even if he was HIV-positive.

“He was simply a gay man in Welch, West Virginia. And because of that we can only assume that Chief Bowman assumed he had HIV and it was unsafe to even touch him,” Saxe said.

When asked if he knew if Green was gay, Bowman would not answer and referred questions to McDowell County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Danny Barie, who also represents the City of Welch.

Barie said Thursday he had received a copy of the complaint but could not comment because he had not reviewed it or discussed it with Bowman.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11651307/from/RS.2/

trojanmiro
03-03-2006, 06:49 PM
this is why i will never get certified for cpr. that way i will never feel any responsibility for watching someone die in front of me thinking i coulda done something to intervene but couldnt bring myself to physical contact. its a proven statistic that certain races, genders and life styles are more likely to be diseased in some way shape or form.

sws4420
03-03-2006, 08:47 PM
I'd never give CPR to someone I didn't know. Especially if there was any remotely long shot of a chance that the person had any disease, let alone HIV. Call me shallow, but I'd rather be alove and shallow than taking AZT and struggling for my life as a thanks for being helpful.

MedicCook
03-03-2006, 09:46 PM
The nice thing about CPR now is that you don't need to do mouth to mouth. All you really need to do is push on the chest for a couple of minutes until EMS & Fire show up. I have been doing EMS for 14+ years now and have never done mouth to mouth breathing on anyone. There are family members (a certain soon to be ex comes to mind) that I would never give mouth to mouth to. As long as you do not intentionally try to cause harm to a person you will never get in trouble. If that Police Officer did in fact pull a would be rescuer off during CPR with out real threats to life (fire, traffic, ect) then that Police Officer caused intentional harm. If the guy might have had HIV or even if he did have HIV then the Police Officer still has no legal reason to pull a would be rescuer away. It is that rescuer's right to put themself in possible harm's way to perform CPR. Just like it is your right to say "fuck him I ain't gonna do CPR." It is so nice to have choices isn't it?