Crime Dallas doctor sentenced to 190 years in prison for tampering with IV bags - In April, Raynaldo Ortiz was found guilty of tampering with IV bags by injecting them with Bupivacaine, an anesthetic drug.

A Dallas anesthesiologist who was convicted of tampering with IV bags has been sentenced this Wednesday to 190 years in prison.

In April, Raynaldo Ortiz was found guilty of tampering with IV bags by injecting them with Bupivacaine, an anesthetic drug. Jurors said they were left with no doubt of his guilt and convicted Ortiz on all 10 counts against him. Sentencing was set to begin on July 22, then was pushed back to Sept. 16 and again on Sept. 18.

A total of 10 patients were rushed to nearby emergency rooms after problems during their procedures. Additionally, Dr. Melanie Kaspar died after bringing a tainted IV bag home to treat her dehydration. Ortiz was only charged in four of the cases, but all of the alleged incidents were included in the judge's sentencing decision.

Ortiz was not in the courtroom, having waived his right to sit in Wednesday's sentencing hearing. He chose to sit in another room in the courthouse, out of sight of the victims and their families.

Victim impact statements​

Seven people gave victim impact statements at the hearing.

The first was a letter that was read aloud from patient Jimmy Eller. He said the two years since Ortiz poisoned him had been the worst of his life, "my world was turned upside down."

He said the medical emergency caused by the tainted IV bag has led to long-term complications, heart problems, kidney stones, depression and a loss of independence that has impacted his relationships. "Now I feel stuck in this body, a prisoner in my home," he said.

Patient Kelly Pfeiffer gave the next impact statement. She was immediately emotional and cried as she began speaking about "being poisoned by Dr. Ortiz." She called the experience terrifying and traumatic and asked the judge to impose a sentence lengthy enough to ensure "we are his last victims."

The father of Jack Adlerstein then spoke, detailing the terror he and his wife went through watching their 18-year-old son struggle to survive. He said the fact that Ortiz premeditated and planned the poisonings was "mind-boggling." He asked the judge to impose the maximum sentence.

The next person to speak was Juan Martinez, a patient who had a cardiac emergency. A native Spanish speaker, he said through a translator that when he was discharged he was "not the same person, that the ordeal turned off his life." He also spoke of wanting to see Ortiz face-to-face at the sentencing, saying that was the only reason he came today. He seemed upset that Ortiz was not in the room.

Nelly Naylor, the first person to experience a cardiac crisis, also spoke. She said that she no longer trusts the medical community and that she suffers from anxiety.

"I feel Ortiz had no remorse or regret, he did not stop until he was stopped by others," she said. Naylor also asked for the longest sentence possible.

Next was a man named Ryan, who said his father was poisoned by Ortiz. Ryan said that his 10-year-old son, the patient's grandson, does not trust doctors anymore. He testified that at one point, his son told him "a doctor tried to kill Pop."

The last to speak was Melanie Kaspar's husband, John, who watched his wife die from the drugs that were unknowingly in her IV bag. John Kaspar said he thought about asking to play the 911 call he made when his wife was dying because he didn't think that Ortiz had heard firsthand the pain he caused.

Kaspar said he would be forever haunted by his wife's eyes, which were open and lifeless as she waited for the ambulance to arrive. "Grief consumed me more than I thought possible," he said. Kaspar also commented on Ortiz saying, "he should be sitting here listening to this, but he's a coward. He killed my wife. Not with malice, but with sheer calculation."

After all of the statements, Chief U.S. District Judge David C. Godbey told the victims "you were heard." He also spoke at length about the concept of preparation, pointing out that Ortiz did not poison all the bags at once, but over time.

"He saw what happened and that he wasn't suspected, and so he did it again and again and again. " Godbey said that he considers Ortiz responsible for all of the cases, including those he was not indicted on, for the purpose of sentencing. He handed down the maximum allowed under federal guidelines: 2,280 months or 190 years.

The charges against Ortiz​

Just over two years ago, Ortiz was arrested in connection to the tampered IV bags at Baylor Scott & White Surgicare Center in North Dallas. His anesthesiologist license was suspended and the center was forced to close its doors.

Ortiz was seen on surveillance footage in the surgical center depositing single IV bags into the warmer in the hall outside the operating rooms and "shortly thereafter a patient would suffer a serious complication."

Lab tests on IV bags taken from the same warmer found "visible tiny holes in the plastic wrap around the bags." The tests also revealed those bags contained Bupivacaine, a local anesthetic used to numb specific areas of the body, but were not labeled as such.

Melanie Kaspar, also an anesthesiologist and Ortiz's coworker, got sick in June 2022. Her husband said she brought an IV bag home to rehydrate. Minutes after inserting the needle, Kaspar suffered a fatal heart attack.

Test results showed Kaspar was poisoned with Bupivacaine.

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Why? Why would you do that? You're a doctor man.
I read up on the psychology of this at some point in the distant past. It can be a sense of loathing for patients, the thrill of having absolute power over another helpless life, or take your pick. Racking up 10 kills must have been thrilling for this sack of shit, until his capture.
 
Let this fucker rot in prison until he dies. And may he have nightmares where the people he killed haunt his dreams every single night for the rest of his life. May he wake up screaming several times a night, every night.
Assuming he even has a concience guilty enough to allow that to occur, which I somewhat doubt tbh. It's likely he doesn't give a shit and won't for some time. Maybe when he's finally facing his own mortality he'll reflect and potentially (:optimistic:) feel a pang of regret, but I'd say he's too soulless even for that
 
It's rare that you hear about a man doing this sort of thing. Usually, Angel of Death killers turn out to be unhinged nurses. I could understand some overworked, underpaid nurse killing a few patients because they're getting on their nerves. What I can't understand is a guy making fat dough as an anesthesiologist risking it all to play god with people he probably never even sees. (Or only sees for a short time during an operation.) I hope word of what he's done gets out in the prison he's at and all of the bubba-rapers decide to perform their own little "operation" on him.
 
Why? Why would you do that? You're a doctor man.
There's a reason why Wikipedia bizzarely keeps people in the medical profession separate from people who aren't in their deadliest serial killers article.
If you're a fucked in the head monster, the job where you have near unlimited means to make the helpless suffer appeals quite a bit I imagine.
 
Where's the damn television opening to Dallas? But seriously medical malpractice is awful and terrifying. I cannot imagine going in for something routine only to just die or suffer permanent lifelong complications because of a soulless medical personnel.
 
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He chose to sit in another room in the courthouse, out of sight of the victims and their families.

These serial/mass murderer types are always the biggest fucking cowards. I would support some form of violent or exotic capital punishment for people exactly like this guy who abuse the trust of their peaceful communities in order to inflict damage on them and then try to run and hide like little wimps when they eventually get caught. There's never any sort of warped reasoning behind these types of killings that you can at least look at and say, "well it happened because he is insane and holds some crazyperson belief". This is just some little twerp hurting other people for no reason other than that he thinks he can get away with doing it.
 
Whatever assets he owns should get absolutely ass blasted by the victims families. I wonder if they could get something from the hospital as well.

The IV bag producers must be pissed, and relieved he got caught at the same time. There was probably initial confusion in the first cases where people thought the manufacturer was at fault until the autopsies came back. He's an absolute retard of a serial killer if he thought this wouldn't be inevitably traced back to him because those billion dollar drug manufacturers investigate this shit very seriously.
Additionally, Dr. Melanie Kaspar died after bringing a tainted IV bag home to treat her dehydration. Ortiz was only charged in four of the cases, but all of the alleged incidents were included in the judge's sentencing decision.
That was one of his coworkers. I mean come the fuck on. If she was using it for dehydration it was just a standard saline bag. Did he not think that a saline bag causing heart attacks wouldn't raise any eyebrows?

I'm just shocked he was able to do it so many times over a period of a few months. After the 3rd time you would think the surgical center would stop surgeries to figure out what the hell is causing sudden unexplainable deaths.
 
Why? Why would you do that? You're a doctor man.
When you see completely irrational behavior from an established rational actor who clearly has the ability to be trained and act as a professional?

The sad truth is?

They do it because it gives them a stiffy.

Maybe on the inside, maybe on the outside, maybe both.

But they do it because they get a thrill being a secret Mr Hyde.
 
There is no punishment severe enough for this subhuman sack of shit that we could ever inflict. It's up to God to provide that punishment. I almost feel bad for him, knowing what he'll face one day.
“Doctor” up several IVs the same way he did. Mix them into a group of regular ones. Make him pick a random IV he wants that day.

Maybe he lives. Maybe he gets to enjoy what his victims did. He’ll never know until the saline starts flowing.
 
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