Emory. What happened to Kuritzky?

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Ex-student sues Emory, claims unjust expulsion
University moves to dismiss lawsuit
By: By Drew Paul
News Editor
Issue date: 2/3/06 Section: News
PrintEmail Article Tools Page 1 of 1 A former student in the School of Medicine filed a lawsuit against Emory on Tuesday, charging that he was wrongfully expelled from the university in April 2005.

Emory responded Wednesday, filing a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, calling its claims "meritless."

The suit alleges that Emory expelled Kevin Kuritzky, a medical student who was expelled a month before he was set to graduate, after he tried to blow the whistle on safety and patient care violations at Grady Memorial Hospital and the Veteran's Administration Medical Center on Clairmont Road, both of which are associated with the medical school.

In its dismissal motion, the university defends the medical school's decision to expel Kuritzky.

"[He] was expelled ... for plagiarism, lying to his professors, and engaging in other unprofessional, dishonest, and unethical conduct," the motions states.

The suit and the motion to dismiss were filed in Dekalb Superior court.

Kuritzky claims that the medical school, by expelling him, ignored its own procedures for handling conduct cases, as outlined in its Medical Student Handbook, and is therefore in breach of contract.

But the university's response states that the handbook does not create "contractual rights."

The suit claims that the "first of what would be many retaliatory acts against Kuritzky" was committed on July 1, 2004, after Kuritzky - then a third-year medical student - expressed concerns about the quality of care at the VA Medical Center.

At the time, Kuritzky was told to retract his statements or face "internal charges of unprofessionalism," according to his complaint.

Kuritzky was later brought before the medical school's Conduct Committee twice on accusations of unprofessionalism and dishonesty.

After the second hearing, in Jan. 2005, the committee recommended expulsion.

Emory's motion outlines what it claims is a long history of problems with Kuritzky's academic performance and behavior that led to his expulsion.

Accompanying documents include e-mails and memoranda from medical school faculty members and classmates going back as far as Oct. 2000 that show a history of absences, and lackluster performance.

By contrast Kuritzky's motion called his career at Emory a "success," receiving high grades and several awards.

"Kuritzky received favorable reviews of his clinical rotations from over fifty different Emory faculty, attending physicians, and resident doctors," the complaint states.

Director of Media Relations for the Woodruff Health Sciences Center Richard Quartarone issued a statement on behalf of the university calling the suit "frivolous."

"Emory's School of Medicine expects each student to meet its standards of professionalism, honesty, and academic performance," the statement read.

The suit calls for Emory to award Kuritzky a medical degree and requests an unspecified amount of punitive damages for the "willfull, wanton, intentional, malicious and oppressive" actions of Emory and its co-defendents, Dean of the School of Medicine Thomas Lawley and Executive Associate Dean of the School of Medicine J. William Eley.

Lee Parks, the attorney representing Kuritzky, could not be reached for comment as of Wheel press time Thursday night.
 
I feel terrible. I don't care what he did. He made it that far, just give him the degree.
 
Pose said:
I feel terrible. I don't care what he did. He made it that far, just give him the degree.


Yeah totally agree. Can you imagine? All that work and the last yr you get expelled. Do you think what the student is saying is true or do you side w/ Emory?
 
Here's a different article, with a little more about why he was expelled (and some not-so-great things about Emory as well). The previously posted article was from the Emory Wheel, an undergrad paper.


Blowing the whistle?

An expelled student is the latest to allege retaliation Emory

By Alyssa Abkowitz

Published 02.08.2006

http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=20833


After studying medicine for more than three-and-a-half years, Kevin Kuritzky was 41 days away from graduating from Emory University when he received the news.

He'd been expelled.

Emory claims Kuritzky was dismissed for "plagiarism, repeatedly missing required clerkship training involving patient care, lying to his professors, and engaging in other unprofessional, dishonest and unethical conduct."

But according to a complaint filed Jan. 31 in DeKalb County Superior Court, Kuritzky believes something else was a factor in his expulsion.

Kuritzky claims in the lawsuit that Emory officials kicked him out after he complained about patient safety and possible health care violations at Grady Memorial Hospital and the Veterans Administration Medical Center. Both medical centers are associated with Emory's medical school.

The lawsuit alleges that Kuritzky was concerned about being left alone and unsupervised while caring for patients at the VA Medical Center for approximately nine hours, and that "persistent tension and hostility" by Grady's staff "negatively impacted patient care." It also states that an Emory official "demanded he retract his statements" about the VA hospital.

The day after the lawsuit was filed, Emory responded with a 43-exhibit motion to dismiss it, claiming the allegations were without merit.

Lee Parks, Kuritzky's attorney, says Emory has hired public relations firm Alisias to handle the Kuritzky case. The firm's clients include the Atlanta Housing Authority and MARTA, and it has a track record of aggressively working to improve companies' images.

Alisias wouldn't confirm that it was handling the case for Emory.

Regarding the allegations, Emory only would release the following statement: "Mr. Kuritzky's claims are frivolous. Emory will address the details of Mr. Kuritzky's claims more fully in court."

Kuritzky isn't the first to allege retaliation by Emory and substandard care at the hospitals. Several former Emory professors and a physician have filed similar lawsuits or have publicly complained in the past. What's more, a federal report has documented substandard conditions at Grady.

But according to documents filed by Emory, Kuritzky suffers from psychiatric issues and behaved in a way unbefitting a doctor -- including saying his mother recently had died when she had not. Attached to Emory's motion to dismiss are more than 150 pages of e-mails, evaluations and documents alleging that Kuritzky lied about absences on several occasions. Three affidavits state that Kuritzky, when confronted about his absences, said his mother had passed away.

Kuritzky denies the allegation. "Emory continued to harass Kuritzky by hiring a private investigator to question Kuritzky's seriously ill mother in California," the lawsuit states.

Emory claims it began receiving complaints about Kuritzky's conduct as early as October 2000. But it wasn't until March 2004 that one of Kuritzky's professors recommended he be referred to the student Honor Council. According to the Emory School of Medicine handbook, a student can be expelled only by the dean of the medical school and only after the school's Honor Council holds a hearing.

The council held two hearings on charges that Kuritzky was dishonest about his attendance at two clerkships and at an outpatient clinic, and that he plagiarized his final presentation for a radiology elective. After the second hearing, on March 14, 2005, the council found Kuritzky guilty of the plagiarism charge, because there was evidence he had downloaded the presentation from the Internet .

The council recommended that Kuritzky lose academic credit for a year, repeat the full fourth year of medical school, agree to a leave of absence, and submit to psychological counseling.

Yet the dean of the medical school, Thomas Lawley, opted for expulsion. "Based on the totality of the circumstances, however, I have determined that the appropriate penalty is expulsion from the School of Medicine," Lawley wrote in a letter to Kuritzky.

Interestingly, at the time of the second hearing, the council's chairman, medical student Gary Wayne Carriker, was absent because he had been arrested -- and is now serving prison time -- for engaging in unprotected sex without first warning his partners that he is HIV-positive. Yet Emory never expelled Carriker for his criminal behavior. Instead, Carriker took a leave of absence after his arrest in November 2004.

In addition to outlining Kuritzky's alleged misconduct, Emory's response to the lawsuit also describes his grade point average as totaling 2.8 -- "placing him in the bottom 12 percent of his class." Kuritzky's lawsuit states that he "consistently earned above-average grades, earned several awards," and had been "promised ... a glowing recommendation" by an Emory physician.

Parks says the university is attempting to make his client look bad. "Emory is trying really hard to cover their ass," he claims.

Over the past decade, Emory and Grady have been the focus of a fair amount of criticism, some of it consistent with Kuritzky's.

In 2000, Emory settled a highly publicized lawsuit with Goizueta Business School professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, who had wanted to leave Emory for Georgia Tech after being passed over as a candidate for the dean's chair. Sonnenfeld, who's now a professor at Yale, sued Emory in federal court, claiming his civil rights were violated when he was intimidated into resigning after allegedly vandalizing school property. Emory later admitted there was no proof that Sonnenfeld vandalized the school. But the damage to Sonnenfeld already had been done: Georgia Tech withdrew its $200,000-a-year offer for him to head its College of Management after then-Emory President William Chace called Tech's president and told him of Sonnenfeld's supposed vandalism.

In another case, Emory physician James Murtagh filed a handful of lawsuits in 1999 and 2000 against the university, alleging discrimination, retaliation for whistle-blowing, and breach of contract. Emory's insurance company paid for some of Murtagh's claims, but refused to cover Murtagh's allegation that he was retaliated against for whistle-blowing.

Dr. Samuel Newcom, a former Emory oncologist, caught heat for publicly criticizing Emory in the late 1990s. Newcom had claimed Emory provided inadequate supervision of beginning doctors at Grady, resulting in poor quality of care. Newcom subsequently was suspended, and he fought Emory's numerous efforts to fire him. In an article published in Ethics and Behavior in 2000, Newcom wrote, "I felt that I was being asked to defraud sick people and, as a teacher, to defraud physicians-in-training." Newcom wrote that the university ordered him off campus, terminated his tenured faculty position and changed the locks on his office.

And just last summer, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, the federal agency that oversees the health care programs for the poor and elderly, threatened to cut off federal aid to Grady after an investigation found that the public hospital posed "an immediate or serious threat to patient health and safety."

William Loughrey, a Grady trustee who is familiar with Kuritzky's case, says Grady ought to try to set itself apart from Emory's alleged pattern of "sweeping things under the rug." Loughrey believes Grady could improve its reputation by reviewing complaints fairly -- something he believes the hospital doesn't adequately do.

Instead, Grady vehemently denies such criticism, Loughrey says.

"Whistle-blowers have been unfairly disciplined and maligned by Emory in the past," he claims. "There is a pattern in Emory's litigation of making outrageous allegations."
 
This is by far the most interesting thread topic I've seen on SDN.

From reading both articles it seems like both parties are at fault. But my guess is that, if this kid is really guilty of plagiarism, he has no shot of getting his degree.
 
Very interesting indeed.

The head of the Emory [irony]ethics council[/irony] has gay consensual sex but doesn't let his partners know that he has HIV...Bizarre.
 
Wow, it sounds like Emory has a history of sweeping things under the rug. It kind of puts a school with an otherwise very strong reputation in an unpleasant light.
 
the12thmd said:
Very interesting indeed.

The head of the Emory [irony]ethics council[/irony] has gay consensual sex but doesn't let his partners know that he has HIV...Bizarre.

"Interestingly, at the time of the second hearing, the council's chairman, medical student Gary Wayne Carriker, was absent because he had been arrested -- and is now serving prison time -- for engaging in unprotected sex without first warning his partners that he is HIV-positive. Yet Emory never expelled Carriker for his criminal behavior. Instead, Carriker took a leave of absence after his arrest in November 2004."

How did you know it was gay sex?
 
silas2642 said:
Wow, it sounds like Emory has a history of sweeping things under the rug. It kind of puts a school with an otherwise very strong reputation in an unpleasant light.
Ha..you really should read some random things from the Wheel. So often it just seems like the editors REALLY weren't happy they went there (although I think the past year really turned up towards the end). I really love Emory, but sometimes its fun to see just what screw-ups are made around campus (those of you who are interested in Emory, please take the time to look at www.emorywheel.com and see other stories as well that are positive. The definitely outnumber these types of stories. Also, a lot of these articles were rebuked/clarified by letters to the editor):

First, good news

and now for the other stuff

RHD scandal

Honors Thesis Trouble

Sorority Trouble

Parking for 07-08

Chimp Death

The aforementioned HIV scandal

This too

Sterilization Problems
 
browniegirl86 said:
"Interestingly, at the time of the second hearing, the council's chairman, medical student Gary Wayne Carriker, was absent because he had been arrested -- and is now serving prison time -- for engaging in unprotected sex without first warning his partners that he is HIV-positive. Yet Emory never expelled Carriker for his criminal behavior. Instead, Carriker took a leave of absence after his arrest in November 2004."

How did you know it was gay sex?
They are right...they probably read about it somewhere else
 
the12thmd said:
Very interesting indeed.

The head of the Emory [irony]ethics council[/irony] has gay consensual sex but doesn't let his partners know that he has HIV...Bizarre.

And that student didn't face any action from Emory?

Edited to add: oh that med student is an ex med student now. Guess can't do coursework in jail. 😛
 
fascinating read. i'm going to keep tabs on this and see how it turns out.
 
Fascinating what's on google.

Kevin Kuritzky apparently filed a claim vs. the city of atlanta for damage to his car from some pipes
02R1753(17) Claim of Kevin Kuritzky for damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of vehicular damage due to driving over unraised water valves in the roadway on June 21, 2002 at 10th and Fowler Streets.

went to warren college at UCSD

March 16, 2003

Dear Chancellor Dynes:

I must say that I am very proud of UCSD and the wonderful job you are doing there. I am extremely proud of the campaign, and I wish it the best of success. I am a 2000 graduate of Warren College and I am currently a medical student at Emory University. UCSD prepared me extremely well for not just medical school, but life as well.

Sincerely,
Kevin Kuritzky


Apparently he testified to a goverment panel on whistleblower retaliation

http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache...zky&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=9&client=firefox-a
 
browniegirl86 said:
"Interestingly, at the time of the second hearing, the council's chairman, medical student Gary Wayne Carriker, was absent because he had been arrested -- and is now serving prison time -- for engaging in unprotected sex without first warning his partners that he is HIV-positive. Yet Emory never expelled Carriker for his criminal behavior. Instead, Carriker took a leave of absence after his arrest in November 2004."

How did you know it was gay sex?
did a google search and read a lot of articles.
 
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