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Dr. Charles J. Akoda Sexual Assault Lawsuit

Dr. Charles Akoda, whose real identity is Oluwafemi Charles Igberase, deceitfully worked as an OB/GYN at Prince George’s Hospital Center (PGHC), treating thousands of women and delivering babies under forged credentials.

This fraudulent doctor arrived in the U.S. on a nonimmigrant visa in 1991 and began using multiple fake social security numbers and aliases to obtain medical certifications fraudulently. Between 1992 and 1995, he acquired two certifications from the Education Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, which allowed him entry into medical residency programs at various institutions, including one in New Jersey and later at Howard University. Somehow, incredibly, he secured medical licenses to practice in Maryland and Virginia.

PG County Hospital Was Asleep at the Wheel

Dr. Akoda was caught using false identities, Prince George’s Hospital Center failed to perform thorough background checks, leaving their patients vulnerable to unqualified care. His deceit went undetected for five years at Prince George’s County Hospital Center until he pleaded guilty to fraud charges in November 2016.

How did Prince George’s Hospital not know this?  Former patients subjected to assault and unwanted touching are now brining sexual assault lawsuits.

Doctor Sex Abuse Lawsuits in Prince George’s County

Doctor sex abuse lawsuits involve cases where patients allege they have been sexually abused or assaulted by their healthcare provider during medical treatment.
These cases can have significant settlement value.  Victims often suffer significant emotional and psychological distress, alongside any physical harm incurred. The legal claims in these cases typically center on sexual misconduct, battery, and breach of fiduciary duty, where the doctor has exploited their position of authority and trust to take advantage of a patient.
Collecting a jury verdict can be a challenge in these cases against individual doctor. So in addition to individual claims, hospitals or medical institutions can also be held liable under the legal theories of negligent hiring, supervision, or retention if it is proven that they failed to take reasonable steps to prevent such misconduct. You see it with the Dr. Akoda debacle.  Hospitals and other other healthcare providers and sometimes shocking oblivious to the awfulness staring them right in the face.

Our doctor sex abuse attorneys realize that handling these cases requires a sensitive and informed approach. It is painful for victims. The  details are distressing and the victims often feel vulnerable. Legal proceedings in doctor sex abuse cases not only focus on compensating the victims through damages for pain and suffering, medical costs, and sometimes punitive damages but also aim to ensure such abuses are less likely to occur in the future.

Real changes has come from these lawsuits.  Hospitals are changing how they vet and monitor their staff. For attorneys like us working on these cases, it is crucial to provide a supportive environment for the clients, ensuring their stories are heard and validated while protecting their privacy and dignity throughout the legal process.

Example Dr. Charles Akoda Sex Abuse Lawsuit

At 39-weeks pregnant, a 17-year-old woman was admitted to Prince George’s Hospital Center for labor and delivery. The woman hadn’t had any prenatal education, and her healthcare providers never fully informed her about the medical procedures she might undergo before they gave her consent forms to sign. Additionally, her exam form failed to document that she had diabetes and anemia.

A doctor, Dr. Charles Akoda, entered the woman’s room without introducing himself. The doctor instructed the woman’s mother to move to a corner of the room, away from the bed. Then, he conducted a very inappropriate and invasive exam, placing his ungloved hands up the woman’s gown, staring into her eyes rather than looking at what he was doing, massaging both of his hands up her thighs, and penetrating her vagina with one of his ungloved hands. Can you imagine what is in your heart to do this to a pregnant teenager?  (This is why our lawyers started handling sex abuse lawsuits.  You couldn’t be more on the side of justice.) When the doctor left the room, the woman, a minor, told her mother that the exam hadn’t felt right.

Approximately two and a half hours later, the doctor re-entered the room and again instructed the mother to move away from her daughter. Still without gloves, the doctor violently penetrated one of his hands into the woman’s vagina with such force that the woman screamed in pain. The doctor repeated the jabbing motion several times, even though the woman was in obvious agony, attempting to writhe her body up the bed and away from the doctor. The woman waited approximately two and a half more hours before she was seen by another member of the medical staff.

When the Dr. Aokda entered the woman’s room for a third time, he violently penetrated the woman again with ungloved hands. He said that she was nine centimeters dilated and entered an order entitled “Induction or Augmentation of Labor.” A nurse noted heavy vaginal bleeding, but there was no indication that she notified a doctor. The woman was also experiencing abnormal contractions and fetal heart rate patterns at that time.

Seven hours later, a nurse noted that the woman was experiencing 9/10 lower abdominal pain. The pain escalated to 10/10 over the next hour, but the nurse never notified a doctor. A new doctor called for an anesthesiologist when he discovered that the woman was difficult to arouse, and her baby was delivered an hour later. The baby had blue extremities and abnormally pink body, and the woman’s pain assessment was still 10/10.

Three and a half years later, the woman received a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder based on the negligent and abusive medical care she received while delivering her child.

Additional Comments

  • The medical care and treatment provided during labor and delivery was such a negligent mess, this claim could qualify as a lawsuit in a number of categories. The statement of claim lists exclusively psychological damages, so it seems as though the claimant is focusing on sexual misconduct as her central complaint.
  • The statement of claim provides extensive details about the mistreatment the claimant suffered at the hospital, but it makes only two references to the health of her baby. The claim first mentions that the baby had abnormal fetal heart rate patterns hours before delivery, and then after birth, it describes the baby as unusually pink with blue extremities. Based on this minimal information, it seems possible that the baby could have suffered a birth injury as a result of medical negligence; in which case, the baby’s mother could file a separate claim on her child’s behalf.
  • The doctor, Charles J. Akoda, who allegedly sexually abused the claimant is not named as a defendant in this case, but he has appeared in many other medical malpractice claims in recent months because he does not have an active medical license (and was later convicted of social security fraud). You can read about another case filed against this doctor in Prince George’s County.
  • Plaintiff’s fear in the case is that a jury blames just the doctor who is not a defendant in the lawsuit and lets the defendants off.

Jurisdiction

  • Prince George’s County

Defendants

  • Javaka Moore, MD (not the doctor accused of the assault)
  • Moore & Associates Obstetrics & Gynecology
  • Dimensions Healthcare Corporation d/b/a University of Maryland Prince George’s Hospital Center
  • Dimensions Healthcare System
  • Three nurses

Hospitals Where Patient was Treated

  • Prince George’s Hospital Center

Negligence

  • Failing to fully inform the claimant of the risks, benefits, alternatives, or probable outcomes of her medical treatments.
  • Failing to appropriately prevent and timely treat the complications from an aggressive, vulgar, and sexually suggestive vaginal exam.
  • Failing to appreciate the claimant’s vaginal bleeding, pain, and medical history including anemia and diabetes.
  • Failing to properly investigate, credential, qualify, select, and supervise competent physicians and other medical staff.
  • Allowing the claimant to rely on false representations of her physicians.

Specific Counts Pled

  • Lack of Informed Consent
  • Medical Negligence
  • Grossly Negligent Credentialing
  • Constructive Fraud

More Malpractice Claim Information

Getting a Lawyer for Your Doctor Sex Abuse Claim

Have you been sexually abused by a Maryland doctor?  Miller & Zois can help you. Call us at 800-553-8082 and speak to one of our medical malpractice attorneys who can help you or get an online case review.

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