1. the people are represented
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2. by two separate yet equally
important groups,
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3. the police,
who investigate crime
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4. and the district attorneys,
who prosecute the offenders.
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5. These are their stories.
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6. Horton, H-O-R-T-O-N.
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7. That's the guy
you should have brought in here.
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8. Miss, I've been here
40 minutes.
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9. I just need to know
where she is.
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10. I told you
before, sir—
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11. I have to check
with Admitting.
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12. This is ridiculous.
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13. Get a doctor, stat!
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14. I need some help
in here please! Now!
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15. She's turning blue.
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16. She can't breathe.
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17. Get the ambu-bag.
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18. No pulse. Call a code!
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19. Come on, let's go, move!
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20. I need a line in!
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21. Get the defibrillator.
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22. You knew that wasn't right.
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23. You can't go in there, sir.
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24. Call a guard.
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25. Sir!
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26. No pulse.
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27. Curette the I.V.
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28. No response.
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29. Get me adrenaline.
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30. Excuse us, please,
wait outside.
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31. We're doing everything
we can.
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32. What's going on?
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33. That's my daughter.
Please.
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34. Please, you can't
come in here.
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35. This is off limits.
Don't even try!
What's going on?
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36. The last blood gases.
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37. Let's call it.
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38. 23:17.
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39. Oh, my God,
what the hell happened?
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40. Your daughter
had cardiac arrest.
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41. Well, resuscitate her!
Defib her!
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42. Please, please,
your daughter is dead.
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43. Where you going?
I don't get this.
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44. She only had
a sore throat.
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45. This is insane!
Some help, please.
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46. Come on, pal...
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47. No, guys, she only
had a sore throat!
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48. She didn't even have a fever!
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49. She only came in
for a prescription!
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50. I don't understand, guys...
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51. Captioning sponsored by
NBC/UNIVERSAL
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52. Where was
she murdered?
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53. I told you—
Urban Medical Center.
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54. I'm sorry, Mr. Morton.
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55. I'm a little confused.
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56. Your daughter was killed
at the hospital?
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57. Yeah, in the emergency room.
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58. And I want to swear
out a murder complaint
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59. against the resident
in charge of it.
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60. This resident was treating her?
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61. No, killing her.
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62. But she was
at the hospital
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63. for treatment.
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64. Yeah, a sore throat,
muscle aches.
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65. She only went in
to get a prescription
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66. for some antibiotics.
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67. Well, sometimes people
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68. are a lot sicker than they look.
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69. Listen to me—
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70. I was a medic in Vietnam.
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71. I know who's dying
and who isn't.
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72. My daughter was not that sick.
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73. Somebody in that emergency room
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74. did something
that killed her.
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75. Who does he want
to bring charges against?
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76. The resident in charge
of the emergency room.
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77. Oh, come on, Max.
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78. People die
in hospital emergency rooms
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79. every hour of every day.
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80. Now that may indeed be tragic,
but it is not criminal.
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81. Unless somebody was
criminally negligent.
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82. And how the hell
would Mr. Morton know
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83. if that had happened?
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84. He was a medic
in Vietnam.
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85. He says she wasn't
sick enough to die.
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86. He was very convincing.
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87. I'm not saying no.
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88. I just had my first day off
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89. in two weeks.
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90. There is a world out there.
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91. You're the intern who
treated a young girl
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92. named, uh, Suzanne Morton.
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93. Yeah, she's the last patient
I admitted before I took off.
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94. Bronchitis. She dramatized her
symptoms a bit.
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95. So I ordered a chest x-ray
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96. and put her aside
to wait for a bed.
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97. Why?
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98. Right now we're doing
a routine investigation
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99. of her death.
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100. Death?
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101. Why, she died?
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102. You sound surprised.
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103. Don't people croak
here every day?
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104. Well, she wasn't that sick.
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105. You don't die from bronchitis.
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106. Suzanne Morton,
she had pneumonia.
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107. The sputum examination
and blood culture
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108. were indicative.
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109. We discussed it
during rounds.
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110. Pneumonia, huh?
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111. Lot of people die
of that these days?
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112. When it's complicated
by chemical pneumonitis.
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113. Sometimes.
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114. The patient was feverish
and fell unconscious.
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115. She must have aspirated
some of the contents
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116. of her stomach.
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117. Stomach acid and lungs
do not mix well.
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118. This can happen fast?
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119. Yes, it can.
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120. Excuse me.
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121. Hmm. Busy woman.
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122. Yeah, so busy she can't
even make eye contact.
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123. Suzanne Morton.
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124. Yes, if you see Mr. Morton,
please extend my condolences.
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125. Dr. Raza, were you on rounds
when they reached her?
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126. Yes, yes, that is right.
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127. I came right away.
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128. Why?
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129. I didn't think
she was that sick.
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130. We've heard bronchitis,
maybe pneumonia.
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131. No, no, no,
she was very sick.
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132. She should have been
in the intensive care unit.
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133. Unfortunately,
there were no beds.
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134. In my country,
we accept death.
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135. But here, you're expected
to live forever.
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136. You ever hold a human heart
in your hands?
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137. Only mine.
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138. What year are you in?
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139. Third.
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140. We go hands on.
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141. Did you ever lay your hands
on Suzanne Morton?
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142. The pneumonia.
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143. I spent 40 minutes
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144. trying to find an orderly
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145. to take her to
intensive care.
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146. On the way back, I passed a
gunshot wound through the neck
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147. with a six-inch exit.
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148. You ever see
one of those?
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149. Yeah, well, they're
not so exciting
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150. when you run into one
in a crack house.
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151. Financial advisor needed in E.R.
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152. Tell me some more.
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153. This guy in the
emergency room—
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154. must have been his
daughter was sick—
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155. he's going nuts, yelling,
"Why didn't they do this?
Why didn't they do this?"
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156. Sounded like he knew
his way around.
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157. Around the hospital?
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158. Around sick people.
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159. Those doctors...
something wasn't right.
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160. The way they looked.
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161. Worried? Excited?
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162. Embarrassed.
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163. Embarrassed.
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164. Does this make sense
to you, Max?
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165. Sure, she had bronchitis.
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166. She had pneumonia.
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167. She was fine
when she got here,
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168. she was dying
when she got here.
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169. God-like pronouncements
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170. sound like normal
medical procedure to me.
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171. So, Max, what's your problem?
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172. Meaning?
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173. Meaning your attitude.
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174. '82.
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175. My partner and I
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176. go into this fleabag S.R.O.
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177. to pick up
some junkie bank robber.
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178. I'm putting the cuffs on him.
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179. His girlfriend comes from
out of nowhere, jumps me.
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180. We're rolling around, I hit my
head against the radiator.
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181. You know, it hurt like hell,
but it's no big deal.
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182. Week later,
I start slurring words.
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183. I go see a neurologist—
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184. quote, "Top guy in Manhattan."
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185. He looks at me, he says,
"I want you in the hospital.
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186. I'm going to do a C.A.T. scan."
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187. Yeah, well,
I would definitely freak.
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188. Next day,
Dr. God comes in
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189. says, "you have
an inoperable brain tumor
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190. in your cerebellum."
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191. He said it like
he was telling me
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192. they'd be serving chicken
for dinner.
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193. We decided to get
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194. a second opinion.
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195. I go see
another "top" neurologist.
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196. He does another C.A.T. scan.
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197. He comes in and says
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198. "You don't have a brain tumor
in your cerebellum.
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199. You have
a subdural hematoma here."
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200. A month later, I was fine.
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201. Hey, at least he caught
the mistake.
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202. All right?
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203. Yeah.
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204. And when they don't,
they just bury them.
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205. Dr. Auster will see you now.
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206. Let's go see
the chief of medicine.
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207. I'm sure he'll be godlike too.
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208. A diagnostician
is like a detective.
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209. As a matter of fact,
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210. Conan Doyle
modeled Sherlock Holmes
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211. on Dr. Joseph Bell.
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212. You solve every case
you work on?
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213. We can tell a felony
from a traffic ticket.
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214. A patient walks in
with a headache.
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215. Does she have
a subarachnoid hemorrhage,
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216. a berry aneurysm,
a retro-orbital tumor
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217. or does she just have
a headache?
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218. Do you give here an aspirin,
or do you saw open her skull?
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219. You make this speech
at funerals?
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220. I saw that girl in
the emergency room on rounds.
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221. She was in the hands
of competent staff.
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222. The girl is dead.
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223. Well, people like
to believe that medicine
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224. is pure science.
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225. Medicine is a science.
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226. But doctors know
it's also a lottery.
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227. See what I mean?
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228. The guy is chief of medicine
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229. and all he could
come up with is
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230. "It's a lottery."
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231. Proceed, Sherlock.
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232. What do you do
when you make a mistake—
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233. use Wite-Out?
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234. Uh-uh, you cross it out
and initial it.
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235. This ain't no
letter to Dear Abby.
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236. These charts got
to show everything
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237. or there could be
serious legal repercussions.
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238. Serious legal repercussions,
that's what we have here.
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239. Somebody used Wite-Out
on Suzanne Morton's chart.
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240. Now, on top
of the Wite-Out
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241. it says "acetaminophen,"
a common every day painkiller.
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242. But underneath
the Wite-Out...
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243. it said "meperidine."
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244. That's a narcotic.
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245. Big difference.
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246. Third-rate cover-up.
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247. Whoever did it
probably wasn't expecting
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248. an investigation.
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249. Whoever wrote merpidine
also wrote acetaminophen.
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250. Look at the "e's"
in acetaminophen.
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251. See, italic,
cursive penmanship
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252. an English style,
popular in the colonies.
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253. See the shape and the angle
of the loop?
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254. Now, it matches notations
that were here,
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255. here,
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256. and here,
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257. all of them
initialed "E.R."
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258. Emergency room?
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259. Eqbal Raza.
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260. and a low-grade fever.
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261. Nothing more.
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262. I gave her an antibiotic
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263. and an antihistamine.
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264. No doctor would have done
anything more.
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265. Sounds like you're
on solid ground.
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266. Her psychiatrist had her
on phenelzine sulfate.
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267. She was seeing a shrink?
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268. She'd been depressed
since her mother's death.
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269. When did that happen?
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270. Last year.
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271. She developed peritonitis
after a hysterectomy.
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272. This, uh... fenal...
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273. what is it?
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274. Phenelzine...
Doctor?
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275. Miss Rossi is ready.
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276. Thank you.
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277. Phenelzine sulfate,
an antidepressant.
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278. A strong one.
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279. The patient died,
but don't worry.
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280. The doctor is doing just fine.
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281. Okay, the tox screen
shows acetaminophen.
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282. It shows aspirin,
and it shows an antihistamine.
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283. So there's no sign
of meperidine?
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284. We ran the standard
gas and chromatography.
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285. We know the girl
was on something
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286. called phenelzine.
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287. Not a trace.
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288. Meperidine, phenelzine,
recreational drugs—
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289. do another tox screen.
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290. I think you're wasting
your nickel.
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291. Nobody takes meperidine
and phenelzine,
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292. unless they want to risk
ending up here.
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293. It can be
a fatal combination.
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294. I was exhausted.
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295. I just came off
the cancer ward.
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296. I wrote meperidine
without thinking,
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297. but I gave her acetaminophen.
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298. What about the Wite-Out?
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299. There is paperwork required
when you write a narcotic,
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300. and I did not have time
for that.
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301. Dr. Raza,
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302. you just confessed
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303. to falsifying
hospital records.
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304. That's a Class E felony.
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305. When they look at me here,
they see an Indian or a Paki.
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306. They don't even know
the difference.
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307. We're all supposed
to be bad doctors.
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308. You ask anybody.
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309. I have to be twice as good
as everybody else
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310. just so they will think
I am as good as everybody else.
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311. My children want
to stay in this country,
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312. my wife wants
to stay in this country,
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313. and to stay,
all I have to do
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314. is to be perfect
all the time.
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315. Well, you fell a little
short of perfection
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316. on Suzanne Morton's chart.
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317. It was a simple mistake.
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318. Really?
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319. If the toxicologist
finds meperidine
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320. in Suzanne Morton's body,
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321. you'll be lucky if
you're only deported.
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322. please report to Admitting
Dr. Fleming,
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323. Cancer Care Center.
in the Comprehensive
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324. Have fun.
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325. Thanks.
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326. Max, dig this.
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327. Now, here's a guy
who swallowed his false teeth,
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328. and then they bit through
his intestines.
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329. What did Dr. Raza prescribe—
a good flossing?
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330. Oh, here we go.
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331. Mistake, crossed out,
initialed.
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332. Same here.
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333. You know, look at this.
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334. We could be holding in our hands
the evidence to a mass murder
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335. and we wouldn't even know it.
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336. All these have
evening rounds
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337. at 6:00 to 6:30,
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338. and the night that
Suzanne Morton died,
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339. rounds were after 9:00.
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340. If you hear hoof beats,
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341. it's probably a horse,
not a zebra.
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342. Old medical school saying.
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343. Students tend
to find exotic diseases
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344. in ordinary symptoms.
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345. They need to be reminded
Copy !req
346. that most things are
what they appear to be.
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347. You, gentlemen,
are on a zebra hunt.
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348. Well, either a zebra
or a horse using Wite-Out.
Copy !req
349. Maybe Dr. Raza made
a mistake on the chart.
Copy !req
350. Maybe he made a mistake
in the emergency room.
Copy !req
351. You trust Dr. Raza,
don't you?
Copy !req
352. Offered him a job.
Copy !req
353. Wrote a letter
to immigration this morning.
Copy !req
354. Strange time
to be hiring the guy.
Copy !req
355. A good doctor is a good doctor.
Copy !req
356. What time were rounds
that night?
Copy !req
357. Sometime after 6:00.
Copy !req
358. They stand around gabbing,
and we're trying
Copy !req
359. to keep some poor jerk
from bleeding to death.
Copy !req
360. So what happened that night?
Why were rounds so late?
Copy !req
361. We waited
for the chief of medicine.
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362. Dr. Auster?
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363. God on high descending.
Copy !req
364. Well, he descended late.
Copy !req
365. He said he'd been delayed
at some retirement party
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366. for one of the service chiefs.
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367. had a good time.
Seemed like Dr. Auster
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368. What do you mean?
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369. It smelled like
he had been drinking.
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370. a hospital blood drive
There will be
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371. we need volunteers.
beginning next Monday;
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372. The hospital wanted
to lay out cheese in a can
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373. and white wine from Bulgaria.
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374. So, I had the party catered.
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375. Duck-liver pate,
beluga malossol caviar.
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376. Oh, yes, anesthesiology
has been very good to me.
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377. Did Dr. Auster
have a good time?
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378. Oh, I hope so.
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379. The caviar cost
400 bucks a pound.
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380. Did Dr. Auster
have a drink?
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381. Oh, yes, that's
why I had a bar.
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382. Happy Hour Catering,
25 bucks a head.
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383. You guys just
supply bartenders?
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384. We supply bartenders,
barmaids if you want them,
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385. ice, glasses, napkins, mixers.
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386. Booze?
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387. You supply, you save.
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388. You work the hospital job?
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389. I was there, two waitresses,
and Rory, another bartender.
Copy !req
390. You remember this guy?
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391. Yeah, Jim.
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392. No, Ed—
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393. Edward Auster.
Copy !req
394. No, no, Jim... Green.
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395. The bourbon?
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396. That's what he drank—
Copy !req
397. on the rocks,
one every five minutes.
Copy !req
398. I can smell it.
Copy !req
399. Somebody gave her
the wrong drugs.
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400. I don't know if it
was Gunga Din or Auster,
Copy !req
401. but one of them
screwed the pooch.
Copy !req
402. Mike, you look like
you got a problem.
Copy !req
403. All I know about hospitals
Copy !req
404. is that my father
is still walking today
Copy !req
405. because he had
a heart transplant in one
Copy !req
406. seven years ago.
Copy !req
407. I'm not saying
all doctors are bad.
Copy !req
408. 99% of them
are solid pros.
Copy !req
409. It's the rotten
one percent—
Copy !req
410. to quote our friend Auster—
Copy !req
411. that make it a lottery.
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412. You bet your life.
Copy !req
413. Come on, Max, you ain't exactly
a fan of the profession.
Copy !req
414. I just want them held
to the same standards
Copy !req
415. that cops are
when somebody gets shot
Copy !req
416. or pilots when there's a crash.
Copy !req
417. Yeah, and that's
what bothers me.
Copy !req
418. Listen, say I'm out with Maggie.
Copy !req
419. We're having dinner;
I have a few pops, okay?
Copy !req
420. Mm-hmm. Go on.
Copy !req
421. I look out the window;
I see someone getting mugged.
Copy !req
422. I run out,
pull my service revolver
Copy !req
423. out of my sock,
I yell, "halt!"
Copy !req
424. Now, one of the muggers
Copy !req
425. reaches into his pocket,
takes something out,
Copy !req
426. turns around...
Copy !req
427. I blow him away.
Copy !req
428. Yeah, but the something
ain't a weapon.
Copy !req
429. It's the victim's wallet.
Copy !req
430. It is still
a totally righteous shoot.
Copy !req
431. You know that.
Copy !req
432. I know that.
Copy !req
433. Internal Affairs smells
liquor on my breath—
Copy !req
434. they crucify me.
Copy !req
435. I got to tell you this,
that's how this feels to me.
Copy !req
436. Well, you know,
there's a difference
Copy !req
437. between a few pops and a bourbon
every five minutes.
Copy !req
438. Come on,
the kid's exaggerating.
Copy !req
439. Maybe he wasn't.
Copy !req
440. No one said Auster
looked or acted drunk.
Copy !req
441. They smelled it on his breath.
Copy !req
442. Now, you know looking
and acting drunk
Copy !req
443. don't mean squat.
Copy !req
444. What are you guys talking about?
Copy !req
445. Uh, back when Max and I
were partners,
Copy !req
446. I had a little bit
of a drinking problem.
Copy !req
447. So, finally,
Copy !req
448. he told me that he wouldn't
partner with me
Copy !req
449. unless I went to A.A.
Copy !req
450. And?
Copy !req
451. And I told him to mind
his own freaking business!
Copy !req
452. I was under control.
Copy !req
453. I knew what I was doing.
Copy !req
454. I was just a social drinker.
Copy !req
455. He made me so damn mad,
Copy !req
456. I went out and I had
a few social drinks.
Copy !req
457. Couple of hours later,
Copy !req
458. I was standing in the middle
of Lexington Avenue,
Copy !req
459. not looking or acting drunk,
Copy !req
460. but I had my gun pointed
at a taxi driver
Copy !req
461. because I didn't like the way
he was honking his horn.
Copy !req
462. That night, I went
to my first meeting,
Copy !req
463. and I been sober ever since.
Copy !req
464. So, get back to the hospital
and twist a few people, huh?
Copy !req
465. I'm begging you,
don't make me torpedo my career.
Copy !req
466. We need
a second witness.
Copy !req
467. Hmm?
Copy !req
468. Look...
Copy !req
469. Auster forgets more
every week than I know.
Copy !req
470. I came to New York
because of him.
Copy !req
471. Do you know what it means
Copy !req
472. to be able to say I studied
under Dr. Edward Auster?
Copy !req
473. He could destroy
the rest of my career.
Copy !req
474. What career?
Copy !req
475. He was drunk.
Copy !req
476. The girl had muscle pains.
Copy !req
477. The doctor ordered meperidine.
Copy !req
478. The resident said something
about phenelzine.
Copy !req
479. I didn't...
Copy !req
480. I don't even
think he even heard.
Copy !req
481. He took the meperidine,
and he injected it himself.
Copy !req
482. No one tried
to stop him?
Copy !req
483. What are we going to do?
Copy !req
484. Wrestle Dr. Edward Auster
to the floor?
Copy !req
485. I didn't even know he was wrong.
Copy !req
486. You know now.
Copy !req
487. Now we have to get approval
Copy !req
488. from an executive
assistant D.A.?
Copy !req
489. Stone's the boss.
What do you want me to do?
Copy !req
490. This case is
politically sensitive.
Copy !req
491. It gets tougher
all the time, Mike.
Copy !req
492. The Davids kid already
made the term once.
Copy !req
493. He said flat out,
Auster was drunk.
Copy !req
494. D.A.:
I want to go in with more
than a nervous resident.
Copy !req
495. The bartender says Auster
drank like a fish at the party.
Copy !req
496. If the resident testifies,
there's a good chance,
Copy !req
497. we get the rest
of the E.R. team to follow suit.
Copy !req
498. Pick him up.
Copy !req
499. Dr. Dematthews to C.C.U.
Copy !req
500. Dr. Dematthews to C.C.U. please.
Copy !req
501. We did a procedure
called balloon angioplasty.
Copy !req
502. Oh, but the pain?
Copy !req
503. I don't think
it will come back.
Copy !req
504. Look, I'm not saying
you can take up racquetball,
Copy !req
505. but you will be able to walk,
climb stairs, and swim.
Copy !req
506. Oh, thank you.
Copy !req
507. Guess we won't
need our guns.
Copy !req
508. Edward Auster?
Copy !req
509. We have a warrant
for your arrest.
Copy !req
510. Practicing medicine drunk—
it's not prosecuted much.
Copy !req
511. First in his class
at Harvard Medical School.
Copy !req
512. Residency and fellowship
at Mass General.
Copy !req
513. Say hello
to Philip Nevins—
Copy !req
514. Dr. Auster's attorney.
Copy !req
515. Author of the classic
Copy !req
516. textbook on cardiology.
Copy !req
517. Winner of the Lasker
Award for medical research.
Copy !req
518. Published
175 journal articles.
Copy !req
519. Does he walk on water?
Copy !req
520. The trash that you people
usually prosecute
Copy !req
521. can't murder fast enough
Copy !req
522. to kill as many people
as Edward Auster has saved.
Copy !req
523. Now I'm just trying to save you
from a mistaken perspective.
Copy !req
524. Failing to perceive a
substantial and unjustified risk
Copy !req
525. that might cause
Suzanne Morton's death—
Copy !req
526. criminally negligent homicide.
Copy !req
527. Consciously disregarding
Copy !req
528. that substantial,
unjustified risk—
Copy !req
529. manslaughter two.
Copy !req
530. See you in court, Stone.
Copy !req
531. Nevins is gonna flood
the witness stand
Copy !req
532. with famous doctors
swearing that
Auster's a cross
Copy !req
533. between Albert Schweitzer
and Albert Einstein.
Copy !req
534. And we've got a father
Copy !req
535. who was a medic
25 years ago?
Copy !req
536. Morton took on heavy odds.
Copy !req
537. Maybe we can
even them out.
Copy !req
538. I want you
Copy !req
539. to interview people
who know Auster.
Copy !req
540. So, you're the dipstick
who's prosecuting Bud Auster.
Copy !req
541. Is that what you call Dr. Auster
around the fishing hole?
Copy !req
542. It's what I've called him
since the second grade.
Copy !req
543. Some people do things
Copy !req
544. and others...
Copy !req
545. What do you and Auster do?
Copy !req
546. We catch trout in Maine.
Copy !req
547. Last time was in June.
Copy !req
548. We sleep in the woods.
Copy !req
549. Tell each other we're
just as young as we used to be.
Copy !req
550. And drink?
Copy !req
551. Somebody pass a law
against drunk fishing?
Copy !req
552. I first admired America
Copy !req
553. when I saw
Judgment at Nuremberg.
Copy !req
554. Everybody pays for their crimes.
Copy !req
555. I never thought
it would be me.
Copy !req
556. There will be no prosecution
if you testify against Auster.
Copy !req
557. And no job.
Copy !req
558. I get to love America
and leave it.
Copy !req
559. Two or three times each month
he calls and says he's coming.
Copy !req
560. He's always late
because he's drunk.
Copy !req
561. Do you know
what they call those rounds?
Copy !req
562. Liver rounds.
Copy !req
563. Everyone knew.
Copy !req
564. Suzanne Morton
did have pneumonia.
Copy !req
565. Dr. Auster did
tell you to lie.
Copy !req
566. I have flexible hours
in my training.
Copy !req
567. Do you know
how important that is
Copy !req
568. when you're raising a child?
Copy !req
569. That's non-responsive, doctor.
Copy !req
570. Auster didn't act drunk.
Copy !req
571. He never acted drunk.
Copy !req
572. But he was drunk,
wasn't he?
Copy !req
573. He was always drunk
on liver rounds.
Copy !req
574. Wasn't he?
Copy !req
575. And he did tell you to lie,
Copy !req
576. didn't he?
Copy !req
577. That poor girl.
Copy !req
578. All she needed was some aspirin
and an antibiotic.
Copy !req
579. Am I going to lose my license?
Copy !req
580. That's not my decision, Doctor.
Copy !req
581. However, I will give you
Copy !req
582. immunity from prosecution
for conspiracy
Copy !req
583. if you testify.
Copy !req
584. You suspect. You know.
Copy !req
585. What are you going to do?
Copy !req
586. Contact the medical society?
Copy !req
587. Sure. Intern Steven Simonson
wishes to file a complaint
Copy !req
588. against the leading cardiologist
in the United States?
Copy !req
589. Look, I admitted Suzanne Morton.
Copy !req
590. It looks like
I blew the diagnosis.
Copy !req
591. Is that what's
bothering you?
Copy !req
592. Six months ago,
I get this guy.
Copy !req
593. He's 25 years old.
Copy !req
594. He's basically healthy, right?
Copy !req
595. He walks in
Copy !req
596. with the worst headache
in his life.
Copy !req
597. His neck is sore,
but that's ambiguous.
Copy !req
598. And Auster showed up?
Copy !req
599. He prescribes meperidine
for the headache,
Copy !req
600. without a patient workup.
Copy !req
601. It's the worst thing
he can do.
Copy !req
602. It masks the symptoms
of meningitis,
Copy !req
603. which is what the guy had.
Copy !req
604. We saved him...
barely.
Copy !req
605. Now every time I see Auster
walk into the E.R.,
Copy !req
606. I want to grab
whoever I'm treating
Copy !req
607. and hide him in a closet.
Copy !req
608. Good afternoon, Dr. Simonson.
Copy !req
609. Sir.
Copy !req
610. That will be all,
thank you.
Copy !req
611. So, are we early?
Copy !req
612. from Dr. Simonson.
We got what we needed
Copy !req
613. An intern, Mr. Stone.
Copy !req
614. Are you planning on
asking the cleaning lady
Copy !req
615. to testify, too?
Copy !req
616. About the time
I threw the tissue
Copy !req
617. into the waste paper
basket and missed?
Copy !req
618. Ed, please.
Copy !req
619. Every doctor
in this country
Copy !req
620. has to worry about
some shyster lawyer
Copy !req
621. suing for malpractice.
Copy !req
622. Now we've got a prosecutor
looking over our shoulder.
Copy !req
623. The next time
I write a prescription,
Copy !req
624. am I supposed
to ask the Supreme Court
Copy !req
625. to vote on the dosage?
Copy !req
626. Look, Stone, you haven't got
a chance to convict.
Copy !req
627. But this trial alone
can stain
Copy !req
628. Dr. Auster's reputation.
Copy !req
629. Are you proposing we give him
the Nobel Peace Prize
Copy !req
630. and call it even?
Copy !req
631. No. Adjournment with
an eye toward dismissal.
Copy !req
632. Because of Dr. Auster,
a young woman is dead.
Copy !req
633. A doctor, Mr. Stone,
is not a magician.
Copy !req
634. drove drunk,
If you
Copy !req
635. this would be
an open-and-shut case.
Copy !req
636. When you practice medicine,
Mr. Stone,
Copy !req
637. sometimes a patient dies.
Copy !req
638. And when you're
a lawyer, Dr. Austin,
Copy !req
639. some of the people
you prosecute are convicted.
Copy !req
640. Defendant's Index, 1983.
Copy !req
641. Where are computers
when you need them?
Copy !req
642. Here's a little job for you.
Copy !req
643. Keyboard every lawsuit
ever filed in New York County
Copy !req
644. into a computer.
Copy !req
645. Most malpractice
doesn't result in lawsuits.
Copy !req
646. You got any better ideas?
Copy !req
647. Go door to door?
Copy !req
648. Ask if anybody saw
Auster kill the person?
Copy !req
649. We're going
to do that next.
Copy !req
650. Oh...
Copy !req
651. I just saved us
a lot of shoe leather.
Copy !req
652. "Stivic versus Auster.
Copy !req
653. In re: The death
of Angela Stivic, age 11."
Copy !req
654. When Dr. Auster's attorney
Copy !req
655. told us they'd offer us
a settlement,
Copy !req
656. my husband said, "Take it.
Copy !req
657. "It will be over.
Copy !req
658. "We can stop
thinking about Angela
Copy !req
659. all the time."
Copy !req
660. We bought the apartment
and the furniture.
Copy !req
661. My husband
sat in the recliner once.
Copy !req
662. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
663. When Dr. Auster
came out of Angela's room
Copy !req
664. to say
they couldn't stop the bleeding,
Copy !req
665. I smelled liquor on his breath.
Copy !req
666. Bourbon.
Copy !req
667. All I wanted
was for Dr. Auster to say,
Copy !req
668. "I killed Angela Stivic—
Copy !req
669. the beautiful daughter
of George and Melanie Stivic."
Copy !req
670. Excuse me.
Copy !req
671. You know the difference
Copy !req
672. between Auster
and a serial killer?
Copy !req
673. The weapon.
Copy !req
674. You objected to
administering meperidine?
Copy !req
675. I suggested
acetaminophen,
Copy !req
676. but Dr. Auster grew angry.
Copy !req
677. He said if I didn't like
Copy !req
678. the way the hospital
was being run,
Copy !req
679. that I should continue
to do my training elsewhere.
Copy !req
680. Thank you, doctor.
Copy !req
681. Do you know how long Dr. Auster
Copy !req
682. has been practicing medicine
Dr. Reesah?
Copy !req
683. Raza.
Copy !req
684. I don't know.
Copy !req
685. 25 years, maybe?
Copy !req
686. And do you know
where he went to medical school?
Copy !req
687. Harvard, I believe.
Copy !req
688. That's correct.
Copy !req
689. How long have you been
a doctor?
Copy !req
690. Two years, sir.
Copy !req
691. I see.
Copy !req
692. Where did you go
to medical school?
Copy !req
693. At the University
of Peshawar.
Copy !req
694. Thank you.
Copy !req
695. Dr. Mills, were you
present on March 15,
Copy !req
696. when Suzanne Morton
was admitted?
Copy !req
697. Yes.
Copy !req
698. And what was your reaction
Copy !req
699. when Dr. Auster prepared
to inject Suzanne Morton
Copy !req
700. with meperidine?
Copy !req
701. I said her chart showed
she was taking phenelzine.
Copy !req
702. Meperidine was contraindicated.
Copy !req
703. And where do you go
to medical school?
Copy !req
704. Harvard.
Copy !req
705. Thank you.
Copy !req
706. So, in your expert opinion,
Copy !req
707. the administration of meperidine
Copy !req
708. in conjunction with phenelzine
Copy !req
709. killed Suzanne Morton?
Copy !req
710. That's correct.
Copy !req
711. No further questions.
Copy !req
712. But isn't it true
Copy !req
713. that you had to run
a second toxicological screen
Copy !req
714. to even find meperidine
Copy !req
715. and phenelzine in Suzanne
Morton's body?
Copy !req
716. That's because both drugs
are unusual unto themselves...
Copy !req
717. Thank you, Doctor.
Copy !req
718. and would not be found
unless specifically requested...
Copy !req
719. Thank you, Doctor!
Copy !req
720. which they were.
Copy !req
721. Isn't it possible that pneumonia
killed Suzanne Morton?
Copy !req
722. It's possible that death rays
from Mars killed her...
Copy !req
723. but I don't think so.
Copy !req
724. Dr. Auster must have
spoken to you
Copy !req
725. during the course of the party.
Copy !req
726. Every five minutes.
Copy !req
727. "Fill 'er up."
Copy !req
728. Was his speech slurred?
Copy !req
729. Not so I remember.
Copy !req
730. Did he seem drunk in any way?
Copy !req
731. I never saw anyone
hold his liquor better.
Copy !req
732. During your years of research
Copy !req
733. into alcoholism, Dr. Walters,
Copy !req
734. have you observed people
who appear to be sober
Copy !req
735. but are in fact drunk?
Copy !req
736. It happens all the time.
Copy !req
737. It could happen to Dr. Auster?
Copy !req
738. Objection.
Copy !req
739. It could happen
to my Aunt Minnie,
Copy !req
740. but it doesn't.
Sustained.
Copy !req
741. I'll rephrase the question.
Copy !req
742. If a 55-year-old man,
weighing 185 pounds,
Copy !req
743. having consumed ten shots
of bourbon in two hours,
Copy !req
744. appears to be
stone-cold sober,
Copy !req
745. does that mean
he is in fact
Copy !req
746. in full possession
of his faculties?
Copy !req
747. No.
Copy !req
748. Now, if that same 55-year-old,
man weighing 185 pounds
Copy !req
749. has several drinks, and he
appears to be quite sober,
Copy !req
750. but makes a mistake,
Copy !req
751. would that mistake
Copy !req
752. necessarily be caused
by his drinking
Copy !req
753. or might he have made
that mistake anyway?
Copy !req
754. Obviously,
that's impossible to say.
Copy !req
755. You'd have to be
that 55-year-old man to know.
Copy !req
756. We've got Auster drunk
at Suzanne Morton's bedside,
Copy !req
757. prescribing the medicine
that killed her.
Copy !req
758. Why do I feel like
we're on the ropes?
Copy !req
759. We're going back over
every shred of evidence
Copy !req
760. and find out what we missed.
Copy !req
761. Just because
Auster's brilliant
Copy !req
762. doesn't mean he didn't do
something dumb.
Copy !req
763. And, cheer up,
we got all weekend.
Copy !req
764. Over the past five years,
Copy !req
765. the state health department
has been notified
Copy !req
766. of six adverse occurrences
Copy !req
767. in the Urban Medical Center
emergency room.
Copy !req
768. "Adverse occurrences."
Nice phrase.
Copy !req
769. They were people who died
Copy !req
770. for reasons
not immediately clear.
Copy !req
771. In all six cases,
no fault was found.
Copy !req
772. Five of the cases
happened on nights
Copy !req
773. Dr. Auster happened to be
in the emergency room.
Copy !req
774. Interesting.
Copy !req
775. Not evidence.
Copy !req
776. Suzanne Morton,
Angela Stivic,
Copy !req
777. a 25-year-old guy
with meningitis.
Copy !req
778. Now statistical anomalies.
Copy !req
779. This is beyond
coincidence.
Copy !req
780. In the case
of the Morton girl,
Copy !req
781. you cannot prove
that he crossed the line
Copy !req
782. between criminal recklessness
and unfortunate mistake.
Copy !req
783. If he knew he was an alcoholic,
Copy !req
784. then drinking before work
was criminally reckless.
Copy !req
785. The crime
did not take place
Copy !req
786. in the emergency room.
Copy !req
787. It took place
at the cocktail party.
Copy !req
788. Excellent.
Copy !req
789. Okay, okay, I'm an alcoholic,
and I know I'm an alcoholic.
Copy !req
790. What do I do, buy liquor?
Copy !req
791. We've got charge receipts
for enough bourbon to prove...
Copy !req
792. It proves he drank.
Copy !req
793. It doesn't prove
he knew he was a drunk.
Copy !req
794. Go to A.A. meetings?
Copy !req
795. We can't canvas hundreds of A.A.
meetings for tomorrow afternoon,
Copy !req
796. and there are no A.A. meetings
Copy !req
797. in his calendar.
Copy !req
798. Whoa.
Copy !req
799. What?
Copy !req
800. Whenever he left town,
Copy !req
801. he called the office
every day, collect...
Copy !req
802. except on
his last fishing trip.
Copy !req
803. Where did you spend the week
of June 10, Mr. Hoffman?
Copy !req
804. In Maine, fishing.
Copy !req
805. Was Edward Auster with you?
Copy !req
806. Was Edward Auster with you?
Copy !req
807. No.
Copy !req
808. Did he ask you to tell people
that he had been
Copy !req
809. with you on that trip?
Copy !req
810. Yes.
Copy !req
811. Why was that, Mr. Hoffman?
Copy !req
812. He didn't want anyone to know
where he was.
Copy !req
813. Why was that?
Copy !req
814. He was embarrassed.
Copy !req
815. And why was that?
Copy !req
816. He checked himself
into a clinic.
Copy !req
817. What clinic?
Copy !req
818. The Colson Clinic.
Copy !req
819. What kind of clinic
Copy !req
820. is the Colson Clinic?
Copy !req
821. Mr. Hoffman?
Copy !req
822. It's a substance abuse clinic.
Copy !req
823. Thank you.
Copy !req
824. In his first group sessions at
the clinic, Dr. Auster told us
Copy !req
825. he had gone through college
in three years,
Copy !req
826. and he became
chief of medicine
Copy !req
827. at a major New York hospital
in only ten years.
Copy !req
828. Anything else?
Copy !req
829. I believe
he also mentioned
Copy !req
830. that he skipped
fifth grade.
Copy !req
831. Dr. Auster had
very little patience
Copy !req
832. with our program.
Copy !req
833. How long does
your treatment program last?
Copy !req
834. 28 days.
Copy !req
835. How long did
Dr. Auster stay?
Copy !req
836. Six days, he left
against our advice..
Copy !req
837. Would you say
Copy !req
838. that Dr. Auster knew
he was an alcoholic
Copy !req
839. by the time he left?
Copy !req
840. He would never have come in
the first place if he hadn't.
Copy !req
841. I have no further questions.
Copy !req
842. Are you positive?
Copy !req
843. Now I am going to ask you
to limit your responses
Copy !req
844. to a simple "yes" or "no,"
Copy !req
845. so we can avoid the subjective
flights of fantasy
Copy !req
846. that your last statement
exemplified.
Copy !req
847. Do you understand my request,
Dr. Rasmussen?
Copy !req
848. Yes.
Copy !req
849. Good. Thank you.
Copy !req
850. Now, did Dr. Auster say to you,
"I am an alcoholic"?
Copy !req
851. No.
Copy !req
852. In fact,
didn't Dr. Auster say to you
Copy !req
853. "I am not an alcoholic"?
Copy !req
854. You must...
Copy !req
855. Yes or no, Dr. Rasmussen,
please.
Copy !req
856. Did he say
"I am not an alcoholic"?
Copy !req
857. Yes.
Copy !req
858. No more questions.
Copy !req
859. You may step down, Doctor.
Copy !req
860. Did Dr. Auster
discuss his drinking with you?
Copy !req
861. Anything that transpired
between Dr. Auster and myself
Copy !req
862. is protected
by patient-doctor privilege.
Copy !req
863. But as well as patient
and doctor, you're friends?
Copy !req
864. We are.
Copy !req
865. Where did you have lunch
with him on June 7th?
Copy !req
866. In your office?
Copy !req
867. No.
Copy !req
868. At the Four Seasons.
Copy !req
869. Did you conduct your physical
examination of Dr. Auster there?
Copy !req
870. Uh, no.
Copy !req
871. Did you bill him for your time?
Copy !req
872. No, it was a, uh...
Copy !req
873. A friendly lunch.
Copy !req
874. Yes.
Copy !req
875. So, privilege is not
Copy !req
876. an issue here.
Copy !req
877. Did you say
Copy !req
878. anything during
your friendly lunch
Copy !req
879. that upset him?
Copy !req
880. Doctor?
Copy !req
881. I... I...
Copy !req
882. I told him that, uh...
Copy !req
883. if he didn't stop drinking,
he'd be dead in five years.
Copy !req
884. Thank you.
Copy !req
885. Does the defense wish to begin
or do you prefer to break
Copy !req
886. for an early lunch, Mr. Nevis?
Copy !req
887. If it please the court,
Copy !req
888. the defense can bring its one
witness before noon.
Copy !req
889. Proceed.
Copy !req
890. The defense calls
Copy !req
891. Dr. Edward Auster.
Copy !req
892. and so the tragic death
of a six-year-old
Copy !req
893. led to sight for one child
and a new heart for another.
Copy !req
894. The boy who got the heart,
is now the star shortstop
Copy !req
895. for a little league
baseball team.
Copy !req
896. And finally, how many doctors
and immediately family members
Copy !req
897. have you treated
in the past ten years?
Copy !req
898. I... I really have no idea.
Copy !req
899. Well, I do.
I did some research.
Copy !req
900. Over 300.
Copy !req
901. So it seems that you're
the kind of doctor whose hands
Copy !req
902. other doctors
put their lives in.
Copy !req
903. I certainly hope
I've lived up to that trust.
Copy !req
904. Oh, brother.
Copy !req
905. The defense rests, Your Honor.
Copy !req
906. Mr. Stone, the hour's almost up.
Copy !req
907. Could you hold your
cross-examination
Copy !req
908. until after lunch?
Copy !req
909. Of course, Your Honor.
Copy !req
910. Good job.
Copy !req
911. Thanks a million.
Copy !req
912. That many?
Copy !req
913. So then you do think
patients should know
Copy !req
914. as much as possible
about the doctors
that treat them?
Copy !req
915. Yes, of course, where he was
trained and who trained him.
Copy !req
916. Personal habits?
Copy !req
917. I don't see why.
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918. Unless it impacts upon
his ability as a physician.
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919. Well, let's talk
about that.
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920. Have you had
a drink today?
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921. Objection, Your Honor,
relevancy.
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922. I'll allow it.
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923. Yes.
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924. More than one?
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925. Yes.
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926. How many more than one?
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927. I'm not sure.
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928. Do you recall, was it
between two and five drinks?
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929. I don't recall.
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930. Doctor, is it not a fact
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931. that you had six bourbons
on the rocks
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932. at Chances Pub
not 45 minutes ago?
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933. Objection, Your Honor.
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934. I'll allow it.
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935. Let's move on, Mr. Stone.
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936. the well, Doctor Auster?
Would you step into
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937. no need for Dr. Auster to stand.
Objection, Your Honor, there's
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938. Side-bar, please,
Your Honor.
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939. What's going on, Mr. Stone?
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940. Does Dr. Auster look
drunk to you, Your Honor?
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941. What the hell is that
supposed to mean?
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942. I must be allowed to show
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943. Dr. Auster is in the courtroom
and he's drunk.
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944. Your Honor,
I strenuously
object to this.
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945. Overruled.
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946. Proceed, Mr. Stone.
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947. Step into the well,
Doctor.
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948. This is the New York City
Police Department Manual.
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949. I'm going to administer
a standard test
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950. to determine whether a person
is operating a motor vehicle
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951. under the influence.
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952. This is an outrage.
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953. Do as Mr. Stone instructs you,
Doctor.
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954. Raise your arm
to the level of your shoulder,
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955. close your eyes,
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956. and point to your nose
with your index finger.
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957. Dr. Auster, will you
appeal the verdict?
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958. No, I'm sorry. Please...
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959. Congratulations.
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960. How did you know?
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961. Um...
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962. My father.
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963. Every day at lunch.
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