PDA

View Full Version : Ex-con doctor



molecularfire
11-16-2002, 01:34 PM
I'd like to thank student for bringing this article to my attention.



Krist now works as a general practioner in Chesney, Ind., about 10 miles north of the Kentucky line. He was upset when confronted with questions about his criminal past.
"Ambush journalists inflicting pain on people who are trying to do the right thing are almost as shameful as Osama bin Laden," Krist said after being approached by a reporter from ABCNEWS affiliate WRTV.

He declined to comment further.

Three decades ago, Krist was sentenced to life in prison for the 1968 kidnapping of Barbara Jane Mackle, a college student from a wealthy family.

Authorities said Krist, then 23, and a female accomplice abducted Mackle, a student at Emory University in Atlanta, at gunpoint from a motel and drugged her with chloroform. They put Mackle in a wooden box with food and other provisions, and buried her in a remote area in Georgia.

Police rescued Mackle 3½ days later, after her father paid a $500,000 ransom. Krist was captured off the Florida coast in a speedboat he had purchased with the ransom money.

The crime became the subject of a movie of the week, and Krist himself wrote a book about it, as did his victim.

In her book, Mackle described her reaction as she was buried inside the box.

"I screamed and screamed," she wrote. "The sound of the dirt got farther and farther away. Finally, I couldn't hear anything above. I screamed for a long time after that."

Medical License Granted, With Restrictions …

After serving 10 years in prison, Krist was released and went on to study at medical schools in Grenada and Dominica, eventually earning a medical degree. The state of Alabama rejected his attempt to get a license, but the Indiana Medical Licensing Board approved him in December 2001.

Indiana law does not prevent convicted felons from obtaining a medical license, and the state medical board put a number of restrictions on his ability to practice medicine. He remains on indefinite probation, and he must appear before the board every six months. He was required to submit to psychiatric evaluation, and he is not allowed to prescribe certain drugs.

Though Krist was upset by questions about his past, the state medical board said the public had a right to know.

"The fact that they gave him a probationary license, I think, is an indication that maybe there were some reservations," said Lisa Hayes, the executive director who oversees the Indiana Medical Licensing Board.

"I think it is important for the public to know — whether they're getting a physician or a plumber — to try to know who they're dealing with and making that decision for themselves," Hayes said.



ABCNEWS affiliate WRTV in Indianapolis contributed to this report.
link (http://64.4.8.250/cgi-bin/linkrd?_lang=EN&lah=696d6cc8b9853c8b23bc67d515081f0c&lat=1037477603&hm___action=http%3a%2f%2fwww%2eabcnews%2ego%2ecom%2fsections%2fus%2fDailyNews%2fdoctor021115%2ehtml)

Nija
11-16-2002, 03:01 PM
Originally posted by molecularfire


"The fact that they gave him a probationary license, I think, is an indication that maybe there were some reservations," said Lisa Hayes, the executive director who oversees the Indiana Medical Licensing Board.

"I think it is important for the public to know — whether they're getting a physician or a plumber — to try to know who they're dealing with and making that decision for themselves," Hayes said.


I think those last two sentences say everything.

Grimm
11-16-2002, 03:06 PM
He did his time, that's it. Let the man have a life. It's only reasonable that the board keep an eye on him, it's a fair compromise.

Windsor
11-16-2002, 05:21 PM
Originally posted by Grimm
He did his time, that's it. Let the man have a life. It's only reasonable that the board keep an eye on him, it's a fair compromise.

I tend to agree, if the man served his time, his punishment is done, right? Nothing says he's supposed to be eternally punished even after his official sentencing. I don't think there's a better solutions, seems like a good compromise.

whitak24
11-16-2002, 10:55 PM
Originally posted by Grimm
He did his time, that's it. Let the man have a life. It's only reasonable that the board keep an eye on him, it's a fair compromise.
right, but i have no interest in going to a doctor who once buried someone in a box so he could get half a mil.

so i think there's nothing wrong with publicizing it.

molecularfire
11-17-2002, 02:28 PM
I'm not judging him. Just thought that it was an interesting story.

The only thing that I do judge him on is his use of Osama bin laden. IMO, it makes no sense and is just a ploy to pin a name that nobody likes on someone who is bothering him without any logic or reason. Pathetic IMO. :rolleyes:

QuantumKicker
11-17-2002, 04:45 PM
Reminds me of the movie "Spitfire Grill." I don't know if anybody has seen it, but it's about a woman who was in prison for five years for manslaughter, and then goes to a town and works in a restaurant. Kinda the same situation.. I guess :P

Showtime
11-18-2002, 01:13 AM
I dont believe in continually punishing someone.
I do believe we are a little soft when it comes to stuff like this though.

In the old days a thief was often put to death, hands were cut off or they'd be marked. It wasn't just the crime, it was a question of that persons character and integrity.

Unforgivable that he buried her alive. This guy could have killed that poor innocent girl. Many places would have put him to death for that stunt. Just cuz he's a Dr. now doesn't mean he's a decent person. He wants a clean slate. I say make him earn every ones trust and prove he's a changed man.

-jel:halo:

Cubsfan
11-18-2002, 07:48 AM
The first thing that kills me is that his "life" term lasted 10 years. I hate when that kind of stuff happens.

Also, there are just some professions that people who have committed crimes shouldn't be in. If a man is convicted of rape, should he ever work at a woman's shelter? If a guy is convicted of taking pictures of naked childern, then should he ever work at a daycare?

I wouldn't want my 24 year old girlfriend going to this guy. I mean, a doctor is someone that you basically need to trust totally, and I couldn't trust this guy.

molecularfire
11-18-2002, 10:27 AM
The first thing that kills me is that his "life" term lasted 10 years. I hate when that kind of stuff happens.

I completely agree. I think if we are going to put someone into jail for life, they should be in there for life. Heck, it's a waste of money and jail space. If we're going to put someone in jail for life, we should just kill them by the most cost-effective way possible. That way, we wouldn't have the jail overcrowding problem. :)

mojo
11-18-2002, 10:53 AM
prison is supposed to rehabilitate people. so if we have faith in the system (yeah right), then we should allow the possibility that he could be rehabilitated. i guess in light of this kinda thing, one should know what their physicians credentials are and their background and stuff. there are more stories like this out there, so i guess we just gotta notice this stuff.

Originally posted by molecularfire
I completely agree. I think if we are going to put someone into jail for life, they should be in there for life. Heck, it's a waste of money and jail space. If we're going to put someone in jail for life, we should just kill them by the most cost-effective way possible. That way, we wouldn't have the jail overcrowding problem. :) there's a difference between life in prison and life without the possibility of parole. if they can be paroled, then why should they be put to death?

molecularfire
11-18-2002, 05:11 PM
I don't agree that prison is a place where people are rehabilitated. If you look at how many people break laws after getting out of prison, then its time we accept the fact that as far as rehabilitation, the prison system is a failure. I'm not saying that it doesn't rehabilitate some... but a very small percentage. The main purpose that prison serves in our society is to remove the deviants from society so that they can't cause more harm... and as a deterrent for people who are on the fence and are considering a career in crime. Now, if we say that if someone kills someone, we will put them in prison for 10 years, then so be it. If we say that we are going to put them in jail for life, then we should do so. How can we expect people to take us as a society seriously if we don't even keep our words. If you tell a child that you'll punish him if he does something and sometimes punish him and sometimes not, all you're succeeding in doing is confusing him. I think the parole system is completely retarded. That being said, the parole system unfortunately exists and I can't do anything about that. As a result, I agree with you. We should kill everybody in jail that has a sentence of death, life without parole, or life with the possibility of parole if the age at which they'll receive parole is not a reasonable age that we would expect them to be still alive for (let's say 100 years just to make it a nice round number).

gear02
11-18-2002, 08:20 PM
I'd say let the guy have a life. But being a doctor in the US isn't the way to go. Doctors need to be trusted, and why he may be a good guy now, I doubt he would get the trust of very many people.

He should go and do humanitarian work or something.