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Victim claims mistreatment in Mass. ambulance

Victim in gay bar attack files complaint

By MARK JEWELL
The Associated Press

BOSTON — One of the men attacked in a gay bar by a hatchet-wielding teenager filed a complaint with the state alleging paramedics gave him substandard treatment because he is gay.

Robert R. Perry was hit in the head with the hatchet and shot in the back by 18-year-old Jacob D. Robida, who later killed himself during a police chase. Two other men also were injured in the attack early Feb. 2 in Puzzles Lounge.

In a complaint filed with the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Perry says the New Bedford paramedics took too long taking him to a hospital, were physically and verbally abusive, and shared private medical information with his family without his permission.

Perry, 52, of Dartmouth, is clinical services director at an ambulance service in Boston. He said in a separate complaint letter to New Bedford’s mayor that he could not recall any action by an ambulance crew “so cruel and hate-filled” in his 29 years in medicine.

Mayor Scott Lang said the city would take the allegations “very seriously.”

Steve Arruda, acting deputy director of New Bedford’s emergency medical services, declined to comment because of an ongoing investigation into Perry’s complaint.