SA国际传媒

SA国际传媒

Prosecutors: Ill. EMS providers charged with murder lied to investigators

Peggy Finley also is accused of trying to improperly influence a police officer

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Photo/Sangamon County Sheriff Dept.

Body camera footage has been released in the case of two Illinois EMTs charged with first-degree murder following the death of a 35-year-old patient in their care.

This is not the first high-profile case of charges filed against EMS providers in recent years. In 鈥淢alpractice or murder: When do EMS providers cross the line from negligence to crime?鈥, Page, Wolfberg & Wirth attorneys Doug Wolfberg, Esq., and Steve Wirth, Esq., break down the facts of the case and the important lessons to be learned for EMS professionals nationwide, and explain why bodycam footage carries substantial weight in determining criminal charges. The two also discuss how a guilty verdict comes down to a 鈥済uilty state of mind.鈥

Are first-degree murder charges warranted in this case? Should EMS providers be protected from criminal charges when caring for patients? Share your thoughts with us at editor@ems1.com to be included in our ongoing coverage of this case.

By Leila Merrill
SA国际传媒

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. 鈥 The EMS providers charged with first-degree murder after strapping patient face-down on a stretcher made multiple false statements to investigators, and one of them 鈥渋mproperly attempted to influence鈥 a police officer, according to prosecutors.

Moore died during on Dec. 18 following an ambulance ride from his home to St. John鈥檚 Hospital in Springfield.

EMS Providers Peggy Finley and Peter Cadigan were treating the patient. An autopsy report listed Moore鈥檚 cause of death as positional asphyxia caused by being restrained in a prone position.

The two EMS providers were denied a bond reduction Monday, . They remain in Sangamon County Jail, and their bond is set at $1 million each.

In a court filing, Sangamon County State鈥檚 Attorney Dan Wright alleged that Finley initially lied to hospital staffers and that both Finley and Cadigan lied to Illinois State Police investigators.

Finley described Moore as 鈥鈥 in her patient care report, but the police body cam video showed no combative behavior by Moore, and 鈥渢o the contrary, showed a man in a weakened and confused state of medical distress,鈥 Wright said.

The documents also show that Finley told investigators that the ambulance鈥檚 lights and siren were on while she and her partner transported Moore, but surveillance footage showed no lights and no siren.

In a text message to Cadigan and another EMS provider hours after Moore died, Finley wrote, 鈥淢Y f***up was not having SPD flip him over on his back, and transporting him prone. And that was MY f***up!!!鈥

A Springfield police officer who saw the two EMS providers treat Moore at his home said he got a call from Finley shortly after Moore鈥檚 death, Insider reported. She explained that the officer would likely need to provide a statement saying that Moore was responsive while at the residence and 鈥渨as a 鈥榙ifferent patient鈥 from the time he was picked up by EMS to when he arrived at the hospital,鈥 according to the documents.

Cadigan told investigators he had never received training on the risks of positioning and transporting a patient facedown, the court documents said. But investigators later learned that he received training on the subject fewer than six months before Moore鈥檚 death.

The EMS providers鈥 attorneys did not respond to the Insider鈥檚 request for comments.


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Teaching points from the 鈥榤alpractice or murder鈥 case: Action steps for EMS practitioners

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