The doctor pleaded guilty to attempted murder after injecting his mother’s partner with what was most likely a pesticide in January, while pretending he was a nurse there to administer a COVID-19 jab
A doctor in the UK has pleaded guilty to attempting to kill his mother’s long-term partner by injecting the man with poison disguised as a COVID-19 vaccine.
Thomas Kwan pretended to be a nurse delivering booster shots and injected Patrick O’Hara with a toxic substance, likely a pesticide. O’Hara, 72, developed a rare flesh-eating disease that left him in intensive care.
Kwan initially denied attempted murder but changed his plea to guilty after prosecutors laid out their case at Newcastle Crown Court in northeast England.
The doctor wore a wig and fake facial hair, according to Northumbria Police, so that his mother and her partner would not recognise him.
‘Impediment’ to Kwan’s inheritance
Prosecutor Thomas Makepeace told the court that Kwan was a “respected and experienced” family doctor based in Sunderland, about 24 kilometres from Newcastle.
The lawyer said Kwan used his “encyclopedic knowledge” of poisons in his plot to kill O’Hara, who was “a potential impediment to the doctor inheriting his mother’s estate upon her death”.
Makepeace said Kwan forged documentation, used a vehicle with fake license plates and disguised himself with head-to-toe protective clothing, tinted glasses and a surgical mask to visit the home in Newcastle that O’Hara shared with Kwan’s mother, Jenny Leung, in January.
“As I suspect, would any of us, Mr O’Hara fell for it hook, line and sinker,” the prosecutor said.
The next day, in pain and with a blistered arm, O’Hara went to a hospital, where he was diagnosed with necrotising fasciitis. Part of his arm was cut away to stop it spreading, and O’Hara spent several weeks in intensive care.
He had presented letters for the medical appointment where he received the injection, but hospital staff saw they were fake and contacted the police.
Kwan was identified with the help of surveillance camera footage. Police who searched his home found an array of chemicals, including arsenic and liquid mercury, as well as castor beans, which can be used to make the chemical weapon ricin.
Police have not been able to confirm what substance was used.
Christopher Atkinson of the Crown Prosecution Service said Kwan had refused to identify the poison, “allowing the victim’s health to further deteriorate”.
“While the attempt on his victim’s life was thankfully unsuccessful, the effects were still catastrophic,” he said. Kwan will be sentenced later.
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