A former anaesthetist has been jailed for life for intentionally poisoning 30 patients, 12 of them fatally. Frédéric Péchier, 53, was convicted Friday at the end of a four-month trial in the eastern city of Besançon. In one of France's biggest ever medical malpractice cases, Péchier was found to have introduced chemicals like potassium chloride or adrenaline into the infusion bags of patients.
His youngest victim, a four-year-old child, survived two cardiac arrests during a routine tonsil surgery in 2016. The oldest victim was 89. You are Doctor Death, a poisoner, a murderer. You bring shame on all doctors, said prosecutors last week. You have turned this clinic into a graveyard.
The chemicals Péchier added triggered cardiac arrest or hemorrhaging in patients, which required emergency intervention in the operating theatre. This was often provided by Péchier himself, who was then able to pose as the patient's savior. But in 12 cases he was unable to intervene, or it was too late, and the patient died.
The prosecution argued that Péchier acted in order to discredit fellow anaesthetists against whom he bore a grudge. In most of the operations, he was not the primary anaesthetist. It was alleged he came in early to the clinic to tamper with the infusion bags.
Then, when things went wrong, he was able to step in after diagnosing the problem and ordering an antidote. Péchier was first placed under investigation eight years ago, when he was suspected of poisoning patients at two clinics in Besançon between 2008 and 2017. The alert was raised in 2017 after a surfeit of potassium chloride was found in the infusion bag of a woman who had a heart attack while being operated on for a back complaint.
Investigators found a pattern of serious adverse events at the Saint-Vincent private clinic in Besançon. While the national average for fatal heart attacks under anaesthetic was 1 in 100,000, at the clinic it was more than six times that. And in most cases nationally, an explanation for the heart attack was subsequently found, whereas at Saint-Vincent the cause remained a mystery.
Péchier's first known victim, Sandra Simard, was 36 when she experienced a sudden cardiac arrest in the middle of spine surgery. She survived thanks to intervention by Péchier, although she went into a coma. Tests on her infusion bags showed concentrations of potassium 100 times the expected dose and the alarm was sounded with local prosecutors.
During the 15 weeks of the trial, Péchier sometimes acknowledged that some of the patients who fell ill or died may have been poisoned but he denied any wrongdoing. He will now spend a minimum of 22 years behind bars, having been at liberty throughout the trial. Survivors expressed relief after the verdict, marking the end of a 'nightmare' for many affected by the case.
His youngest victim, a four-year-old child, survived two cardiac arrests during a routine tonsil surgery in 2016. The oldest victim was 89. You are Doctor Death, a poisoner, a murderer. You bring shame on all doctors, said prosecutors last week. You have turned this clinic into a graveyard.
The chemicals Péchier added triggered cardiac arrest or hemorrhaging in patients, which required emergency intervention in the operating theatre. This was often provided by Péchier himself, who was then able to pose as the patient's savior. But in 12 cases he was unable to intervene, or it was too late, and the patient died.
The prosecution argued that Péchier acted in order to discredit fellow anaesthetists against whom he bore a grudge. In most of the operations, he was not the primary anaesthetist. It was alleged he came in early to the clinic to tamper with the infusion bags.
Then, when things went wrong, he was able to step in after diagnosing the problem and ordering an antidote. Péchier was first placed under investigation eight years ago, when he was suspected of poisoning patients at two clinics in Besançon between 2008 and 2017. The alert was raised in 2017 after a surfeit of potassium chloride was found in the infusion bag of a woman who had a heart attack while being operated on for a back complaint.
Investigators found a pattern of serious adverse events at the Saint-Vincent private clinic in Besançon. While the national average for fatal heart attacks under anaesthetic was 1 in 100,000, at the clinic it was more than six times that. And in most cases nationally, an explanation for the heart attack was subsequently found, whereas at Saint-Vincent the cause remained a mystery.
Péchier's first known victim, Sandra Simard, was 36 when she experienced a sudden cardiac arrest in the middle of spine surgery. She survived thanks to intervention by Péchier, although she went into a coma. Tests on her infusion bags showed concentrations of potassium 100 times the expected dose and the alarm was sounded with local prosecutors.
During the 15 weeks of the trial, Péchier sometimes acknowledged that some of the patients who fell ill or died may have been poisoned but he denied any wrongdoing. He will now spend a minimum of 22 years behind bars, having been at liberty throughout the trial. Survivors expressed relief after the verdict, marking the end of a 'nightmare' for many affected by the case.




















