Ivan Golde sues Novato school district for boy injured in fall

By Katie Utehs

The family of a Novato boy who survived a fall through a school’s skylight says the school district should be held liable for his injuries.

An attorney for 9-year-old William Wells Jr.’s family filed a claim with the district. The boy’s attorney, Ivan Golde, says it’s far too easy to get on the school’s roof. He says district leaders knew children climbed up there and they didn’t do enough to stop it.

The 9-year-old boy is now home from the hospital recovering from the injuries he received about three weeks ago.

“He’s in a brace. This is a serious injury. Surgery is possibly upcoming,” Golde said. He explained William fell “right on his back, fractures his back and then as he hits his back, I think he hits his head.”

William suffered seven spinal fractures and head trauma. Doctors at Oakland’s UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital treated Wells for four days before releasing him to his mother’s home.

“All things considered, his family knows that he’s lucky to be alive,” Golde said.

But luck isn’t enough says Golde.

“Unfortunately, sometimes it takes a lawsuit. It takes something like this for the school to wake up and say, ‘Hey maybe we should do something here,'” Golde said.

Golde filed a claim with the Novato Unified School District alleging that Hamilton School’s roof is an attractive nuisance.

“This roof was very easy to climb up on. There was a ladder right there, the shed that was open. All the boys go on this roof,” Golde said.

The suit raises several questions about whether a 9-year-old is old enough to know it is not safe to climb onto a roof. It also calls into question if the district did enough to protect children from themselves, even if they were trespassing.

The day after the fall, a district spokesperson said they were looking into the incident.

In response to the claim, the Novato Unified School District released a statement saying, “We recently received this claim and it is currently being reviewed by our insurance carrier, Keenan & Associates.”

The school district has 90 days to respond to the claim before a lawsuit can be filed.

 

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Contra Costa Times

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OAKLAND — A San Leandro-based doctor’s office that primarily catered to patients suffering injuries from car accidents and workers’ compensation claims was shut down this week by the state insurance commissioner and the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office.

As Soon As Possible Medical Center, which was based in San Leandro but also had offices in three other Bay Area cities, was forced to close after a two-year-long investigation found its owners were defrauding insurance companies and illegally prescribing drugs to patients.

In addition to the closure, the District Attorney’s office filed both civil and criminal complaints against the two owners of the company.

The actions against the medical center and its two owners, Dr. Sultan Said Hamid and Thomas Vamvouris, were announced Wednesday by District Attorney Nancy O’Malley and state Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones.

The legal claims came after a two-year-long joint investigation which found that the medical center lied on its business license, filed false insurance claims and billed customers for services it never provided.

Vamvouris, who created the business in 2004, has already agreed to a civil settlement in which he agreed to pay $400,000 in penalties, and $50,000 in restitution to an insurance company. Vamvouris is also banned from associating with or operating a similar type of clinic in the future.

Hamid, however, faces stiff penalties as prosecutors filed a criminal complaint against him accusing him of insurance fraud, perjury, filing false documents and conspiracy to dispense prescription drugs and controlled substances by nonauthorized personnel.

Hamid’s attorney, Ivan Golde, questioned the investigation Thursday and wondered why no patients have been listed as victims.

Golde said the investigation against his 75-year-old client was prompted by insurance companies and he said he does not believe Hamid should be the fall guy.
“This notion where the insurance companies are paying to have undercover cops go in and pose as patients to try to get doctors to do something irregular is wrong,” Golde said. “That is what this case is all about.

“Are there going to be any patients who testify or is it just going to be the vice squad?” Golde asked.

State business records show that Vamvouris and Hamid jointly owned the company with Hamid controlling 51 percent and Vamvouris 49 percent. But the investigation found that the business is actually fully controlled by Vamvouris, a fact that made its business license illegal.

In addition to the San Leandro location, As Soon As Possible Medical Center operated satellite offices in Fairfield, Vacaville and Hayward. All offices have been shut down.

“Ensuring safe and ethical medical practices in our community is a priority of my office,” O’Malley said in a statement.

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Contra Costa Times

Ivan Golde Defends San Leandro Doctor for multiple Felonies

OAKLAND — A San Leandro-based doctor’s office that primarily catered to patients suffering injuries from car accidents and workers’ compensation claims was shut down this week by the state insurance commissioner and the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office.

As Soon As Possible Medical Center, which was based in San Leandro but also had offices in three other Bay Area cities, was forced to close after a two-year-long investigation found its owners were defrauding insurance companies and illegally prescribing drugs to patients.

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