| 
				
				Doctor sues over sex charges involving his twin
			 
 (gg)
 SEATTLE (Reuters) - A U.S. doctor has sued a
 Seattle-area newspaper for defamation after it
 reported he posed as his twin, a gynecologist, to have
 sex with his brother's patients.
 
 Dennis Momah said the King County Journal defamed him
 in 2003 when it published an article that said: "Two
 twin brothers were taking turns having sex with
 patients on a regular basis without the patients'
 knowledge that they were two different people."
 
 Momah, who filed the lawsuit in King County Superior
 Court this week, also sued Harish Bharti, an attorney
 quoted in the paper who represents six female patients
 of Charles Momah, Dennis Momah's twin and a
 gynecologist.
 
 Charles Momah is being sued by some of his former
 patients, who say that he switched places with Dennis,
 giving him access to his gynecological patients.
 
 In February, six patients said in a lawsuit that they
 were sometimes deceived into being seen, examined,
 operated on and sexually fondled by Dennis Momah, a
 general practitioner who is not certified in
 obstetrics and gynecology.
 
 Charles Momah, who had medical practices in two
 suburbs south of Seattle, has pleaded not guilty to
 criminal charges of rape, indecent liberties and
 insurance fraud. That trial is scheduled for October
 4.
 
 Dennis Momah, who has not been charged with any crime,
 said in his lawsuit that the article was "published
 negligently and with reckless disregard for the
 truth."
 
 Barbara Morgan, executive editor of the King County
 Journal, said the newspaper had not been served and
 did not know the details of Momah's lawsuit.
 
 Dennis Momah's lawyer, Timothy Ford, said the media
 coverage had ruined his Nigeria-born client's career.
 
 "Right now he's looking for work," Ford said.
 
 Bharti was not immediately available for comment, and
 phones to Charles Momah's practices were disconnected.
 |