in Re Vijay Kumar P T

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 2018
Docket336712
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Vijay Kumar P T (in Re Vijay Kumar P T) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re Vijay Kumar P T, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re VIJAY KUMAR, P.T.

DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND UNPUBLISHED REGULATORY AFFAIRS, May 8, 2018

Petitioner-Appellee,

v Nos. 336712 and 341081 LARA Bureau of Professional Licensing VIJAY KUMAR, P.T., LC No. 15-047709

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and O’BRIEN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In these consolidated appeals,1 respondent, Vijay Kumar, P.T., appeals by right the final order and amended final order of the Michigan Board of Physical Therapy Disciplinary Subcommittee. In Docket No. 336712, Kumar appeals the subcommittee’s final order concluding that he violated MCL 333.16221(a) (negligence), MCL 333.16221(b)(i) (incompetence), and MCL 333.16221(b)(vi) (lack of good moral character) of the Public Health Code, MCL 333.1101 et seq., and suspending Kumar’s license to practice physical therapy for a minimum of two years. In Docket No. 341081, he appeals the subcommittee’s amended final order, entered following a rehearing, reducing his suspension to a minimum of 18 months. Because there are no errors warranting reversal, we affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS

This case began after Kumar was accused of sexually assaulting a 15-year-old patient, TC. In July and August 2013, TC sought treatment from a physical therapy clinic in Rose City that was owned and operated by Kumar. TC alleged that the first (and last) time she received

1 In re Kumar, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered November 28, 2017 (Docket Nos. 336712 and 341081).

-1- treatment from Kumar, he touched her breasts twice. The first time, she was lying face down on “the table” and Kumar touched her breasts underneath her clothing. Then, when she was sitting in a chair, he began massaging her shoulders and eventually touched her breasts again underneath her clothing. TC said that Kumar then gave her $20 and told her not to tell anyone. She explained that she and Kumar then went to “the exercise room” and that Kumar took three pictures of her on his cellphone.

TC did not return to Kumar’s clinic because she felt “uncomfortable.” She said she told her mother, her grandmother, and three cousins of what had occurred. However, the matter was not reported to law enforcement until May 2014. Sergeant Peter McNamara, then a detective for the Michigan State Police, met with TC and attempted to set up a “pretext call” between TC and Kumar, whereby TC would initiate communications with Kumar on Facebook. TC made a “friend” request but Kumar did not immediately respond. However, eventually, Kumar and TC began communicating through “Facebook messenger.”2

In June 2014, McNamara interviewed Kumar. McNamara indicated that when he asked Kumar if he inappropriately touched TC, Kumar merely repeated that he had “policies in place.” McNamara obtained a search warrant for Kumar’s phone, where he located a photograph of TC. He also reviewed the Facebook messages between Kumar and TC, and stated that he was concerned by the messages because he believed Kumar was “grooming” TC.

In July 2015, Kumar was charged with second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-II). Petitioner then filed an administrative complaint against Kumar alleging violations of the Public Health Code. A summary order of suspension was entered, and petitioner filed a superseding administrative complaint, setting forth the events leading to the CSC-II charge as well as “Prior Incidents” of sexual misconduct involving Kumar’s former patient, KS, and two former employees, JR and SM.

2 In one Facebook message to TC, Kumar asked, “[D]id you get your glasses[?]” TC responded, “Yeah I got my glasses finally with the help from the 20 dollars you gave me that one day. Thank you for the money.” In another message, Kumar asked TC to “come to see me when you get some time” and proposed that they could “meet right there in RC [Rose City].” Kumar also asked for TC for her “new number.” TC asked Kumar if he “still [had] the pictures we took together of me on your phone” and asked him to send one picture. Kumar eventually sent the picture, which was taken on the last day TC had physical therapy, followed by “a smiley face with heart-shaped eyes,” and a comment stating, “[I]sn’t she gorgeous.” TC informed Kumar that she has not started “drivers training” because “im really low on money,” and Kumar answered, “[W]ell I can help you with that.” TC then inquired why Kumar previously gave her money, specifically asking, in part, “But im just curious how come you handed me the money after when I let you felt [sic] my breast? I mean was it for not having me not to tell anyone because I didn’t.” Kumar responded that he gave TC money “to get the glasses.”

-2- At a September 2015 hearing held at Kumar’s request to dissolve the summary suspension, KS testified that she was referred to Kumar for physical therapy in September 2002. The first two or three times KS visited his clinic, she received massage therapy from a physical therapist assistant. On her “last visit,” Kumar performed the massage, which KS described as follows:

He had me lay on the bed and lifted my shirt and undid my bra and started to do the massage therapy. And as he was doing the massage, I felt him kind of put his hand around my—the edge of my sides more, and I pulled my arms tight to my side. And he still kept putting his hands down further my sides.

KS clarified that when she said her “sides” she was referring to the sides of her breasts. KS said that she “just didn’t feel comfortable with where he had been trying to massage, the way—where his fingers felt like they were touching my breasts and not my back or my shoulders.” KS felt that Kumar intentionally touched her breasts. She explained she was “trying to keep my sides— my arms close to me so that he couldn’t fit his fingers, but they kept goin.’ ” At her prior visits, the physical therapist assistant did not undo KS’s bra or “come anywhere near” touching her breasts. KS explained that she told her referring physician that she would not be returning to Kumar’s clinic, and she indicated that the physician reported the matter to the Michigan State Police.

JR testified that she worked for Kumar for a couple of weeks in 2011. She explained that Kumar “used to go up behind me and touch my thighs and rub the side of my legs,” and that he would make sexual gestures to her. When JR informed Kumar that his actions made her uncomfortable, he said she was “a liar.” Kumar told JR that if she reported him to the police she “would be in trouble, not him.” JR stated that she quit working for him at that time, and she filed a police report with the Michigan State Police.

SM testified that she was formerly employed by Kumar as a physical therapist assistant. SM also performed massages and, in the winter of 2013 or 2014, she went to Kumar’s home to give him a massage. The first massage occurred without incident. However, SM explained the second massage as follows:

I started massaging, and he had a towel wrapped around him. And then he wanted to show me how to do it right. So, he jumped up and he took my shirt off, and he laid me down and started massaging me. And he had no underwear on.

SM “screamed” and was “very upset.” She put her shirt back on and “ended up going in the bathroom to shave [Kumar’s] back,” which she was “fine” with. She indicated that she continued working for Kumar because she “needed the job.” Approximately two weeks later, SM returned to Kumar’s home to perform another massage. SM explained that on that occasion Kumar pushed her down on the bed “[a]nd he was just like on me. And it was awful. He was kissing my neck and everything . . .

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