EMS impersonater has court date in Va.
By Calvin R. Trice
Daily Press
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GOOCHLAND COUNTY, Va. — A Goochland County man accused of impersonating an emergency-services worker while tending to a heart attack victim is scheduled to appear in court this month to face two misdemeanor charges.
Police said Adam V. Tatum, 33, offered services as an advanced life-support technician twice this year and even rode in an ambulance with Goochland EMS workers transporting a cardiac-arrest victim.
Tatum was turned down when he offered life support services in May, but he raised suspicions during the second incident, an ambulance run in June. Investigators with the Goochland Sheriff's Office interviewed Tatum when he returned and arrested him the next day, Sheriff James L. Agnew said.
Each count of impersonating a public-safety worker is punishable by up to 12 years in prison or a $2,500 fine. Tatum apparently listened to local dispatch calls seeking advanced life-support workers when basic life-support responders needed someone with the higher level of training to treat a patient, the sheriff said. Sometimes, dispatchers have to make several calls to get a volunteer rescue worker to a scene.
On May 19, a call for advanced life support went out from a correctional center, and Tatum called the dispatcher to offer his services, Agnew said. Eddie Ferguson, deputy EMS chief of Goochland County Volunteer Fire-Rescue, was on duty and declined the offer.
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