By VERENA DOBNIK
NEW YORK (AP) — A man who worked in the admissions department at a
prestigious Manhattan hospital has been charged with stealing and
selling information on nearly 50,000 patients.
Dwight McPherson, 38, a former worker at New York-Presbyterian
Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, was arrested Friday night,
shortly after the hospital announced the security breach.
McPherson was arraigned Saturday in federal court in Manhattan. He is
charged with computer fraud, identity document fraud, transmission of
stolen property and sale of stolen property. U.S. Magistrate Judge
James C. Francis IV ordered McPherson not to leave the New York area
before his next scheduled court appearance May 12.
Prosecutors said McPherson exploited his access to the hospital's
computer registration system to acquire lists of patient names, phone
numbers and Social Security numbers over a two-year period.
Authorities became aware that something was amiss when printouts of
patient records were discovered in Atlanta during an investigation by
postal inspectors, according to a complaint filed by prosecutors
Saturday.
McPherson confessed to a role in the identity-theft scheme when he was
interrogated by agents on Friday, an inspector said in the complaint.
McPherson told agents that in 2006 he was approached by someone
offering money in exchange for the names, addresses and other
identifying information of male patients born between 1950 and 1970.
The complaint said McPherson sold a batch of 1,000 records in December
or January for $750, and another batch for $600 a short time later.
Prosecutors didn't reveal Saturday who had purchased the data or why,
but the court complaint said the buyers intended to use the information
"in connection with illegal activity."
McPherson didn't address the charges during his brief court appearance
and wouldn't speak to reporters after he was released on bond.
"He is a hardworking, honest man," said his lawyer, Bob Walters.
New York-Presbyterian suspended McPherson in February after being
contacted by federal investigators.
Hospital spokeswoman Myrna Manners said Friday evening that none of the
stolen data contained private health information, and that the hospital
was unaware of any instance where the information had been used to scam
individual patients.
The hospital is in the process of contacting thousands of patients,
setting up a hot line for them and offering credit monitoring services.
It is also examining its procedures to prevent future thefts, Manners
said.
Original
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Man Charged in ID Theft at NY Hospital
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