February 3, 2009
King sues lawyer he hired to sue his previous lawyers
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Dr. John A. King, the osteopathic surgeon who generated 124 medical malpractice lawsuits while on the staff of Putnam General Hospital between November 2002 and June 2003, filed a $50 million lawsuit against Morgantown lawyer Lance Rollo on Jan. 28.

Representing himself, King sued Rollo in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia in Wheeling, asking for a jury trial.

King claims Rollo is guilty of "negligence/legal malpractice" and "breach of contract" in representing him in lawsuits against three other West Virginia law firms he hired previously.

In the new lawsuit, King reports his address at his mother's home in Birmingham, Ala.

King asks for $25 million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages, claming Rollo failed to represent him properly in suits Rollo filed against lawyers from three Charleston law firms and the Hospital Corporation of America, which owned Putnam General while King was on its staff.

King sued lawyers from McQueen & Murphy, Giatris & Webb, and Steptoe & Johnson.

King has an extensive history of suing hospitals who terminated his privileges, medical boards who took away his licenses and lawyers he hired to represent him.

In his new lawsuit, King states Rollo, as well as lawyers from the three other law firms, "did not act in good faith for a competent court to rule" on his legal claims "after a full airing and maturity of the facts."

King alleges he was the victim of "an adverse peer review process with suspension of privileges on June 5, 2003," at Putnam General Hospital.

Putnam General partially suspended King's privileges after Dr. Edward G. Dawson, the late UCLA physician, completed an independent peer-review report that called King "a snake-oil salesman" and a "criminal."

King left West Virginia shortly after Putnam General restricted his privileges.

In his new lawsuit, King alleges Charleston lawyers Robert Coleman, with Steptoe & Johnson, and Jim McQueen failed to defend him properly during a July 2, 2003, peer-review hearing at Putnam General.

King claims Putnam General made "no finding of imminent danger to the health of any individual and the suspension of spinal clinical privileges was not substantiated."

But after King left Putnam General, 124 medical malpractice suits were filed against him, Putnam General and HCA. Many of those suits alleged King's surgeries caused permanent physical damage.

Last year, HCA and Putnam General settled those lawsuits against them for about $100 million.

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Posted By: Monroe (9:48pm 02-03-2009)
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