Make this page my home page
  1. Drag the home icon in this panel and drop it onto the "house icon" in the tool bar for the browser

  2. Select "Yes" from the popup window and you're done!

Get FREE CEU’s at Bound Tree University
The One Resource for EMS, EMTs and Paramedics
Home  >  EMS News  >  Combat-vet EMT is convicted of fondling patient
November 15, 2012

Combat-vet EMT is convicted of fondling patient

Served two tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, diagnosed with PTSD; victim was immobilized to backboard after injured in domestic violence dispute

By Natalie Caula
The Post & Courier

CHARLESTON COUNTY, S.C. — An emergency medical technician accused of fondling a patient aboard an ambulance will spend one year in jail.

Anthony Louis Green, 46, of Goose Creek, pleaded guilty to third-degree criminal sexual conduct Wednesday in a Charleston County Circuit Court.

Judge Thomas L. Hughston sentenced him to five years, with a suspended sentence, reducing it to one year with two years of probation. He also will remain on the sex-offender registry for life.

Green, who served two tours as a combat medic in Iraq and Afghanistan shortly after 9/11, is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, according to an evaluation.

Green's defense attorney, Megan Ehrlich, asked the judge to sentence him to treatment rather than incarceration.

"Even the strongest individual would be impacted by those experiences," Ehrlich said in court. "I think he's a good man who made a terrible mistake."

Hughston commended Green for the service to his country, but said his sentence dictated the "seriousness of the offense" that occurred June 11, 2011.

The victim, who will remain unidentified, was being taken to Roper Hospital in Charleston from Mount Pleasant after she was injured in an alleged domestic violence dispute, according to prosecutors.

She was strapped to a backboard, a precaution for potential back injuries, and placed in an ambulance for the trip to Roper. Green was the EMT treating her in the back of the ambulance.

EMS workers had given the patient a medication to ease the panic from the domestic violence assault, said Assistant Solicitor Debbie Herring-Lash.

"She was immobilized," she said.

Green reached down her shirt and shorts and fondled the patient, according to prosecutors. When they arrived at the hospital, the patient told hospital staff what happened.

After tests were positive for DNA, Green confessed to police and "stated he knew she was physically helpless at the time," according to Herring-Lash.

The victim was not at the hearing because she is out of the state, but her attorney, Sam Allen, released a statement that read in part: "It's disturbing that the sentence is so light relative to the violation of trust that was committed by Mr. Green. He was entrusted with my client's care at a most vulnerable time and violated that trust in the most inappropriate fashion one could possibly imagine."

Reach Natalie Caula at 937-5594 or Twitter.com/ncaula

LexisNexis Copyright © 2013 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.   
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy
Copyright 2012 The Post and Courier

Comments
The comments below are member-generated and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of EMS1.com or its staff. If you cannot see comments, try disabling privacy and ad blocking plugins in your browser.
No comments

Expert Columns

Breaking EMS News

Get the #1 EMS eNewsletter

Fire Newsletter Sign up for our FREE email roundup of the top news, tips, columns, videos and more, sent 3 times weekly
Enter Email
See Sample

Connect with EMS1

Mobile Apps Facebook Twitter Google+

EMS1 on Facebook



Online Campus Both

EMS Videos