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John Curran, who said he got the degrees through Stephen J. Arnett of Magoffin County, treated hundreds of patients before he was convicted of wire fraud and money laundering in connection with his practice. Two other men, one in Nevada and one in Kentucky, who said they got their medical educations through Arnett have been convicted of practicing medicine without a license. Here at USAT, we get many inquiries about a person called Dr. Stephen J. Arnett...We need to first officially and publicly state the following :
For further clarification, please read on...the following are actual newspaper articles recently published:
With medical credentials, it's patient beware: In Kentucky, No Agency Oversees Online Schools' Authenticity and Graduates <http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/15651694.htm>,
Valarie Honeycutt Spears, Lexington, KY Herald-Leader, October 1, 2006.
(This is one article in the series Degrees of Harm)(<http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/special_packages/degrees_of_harm/>.)
No one knows how many "doctors" are practicing with a degree from one of the online medical schools that Stephen J. Arnett of Falcon, Ky., has operated or promoted over the years.
Even if someone did know, there's no agency in Kentucky that oversees the authenticity of online degrees.
But three men who did seek medical diplomas online -- John Curran, Andrew Michael and Larry Lammers -- have been convicted of charges associated with practicing medicine without a license. Michael and Lammers, who both turned up in Lexington hospitals and clinics, served jail time. Curran was sentenced in August to 12 1/2 years in federal prison.
Over the last decade, local, state, and federal officials have all been aware of Arnett's medical activities, records show.
But no action was ever taken against him. Arnett has never been charged in connection with the schools.
Todd Leatherman, the executive director of consumer protection for the state Attorney General's office, said he was not aware of the Kentucky connection to the three convicted men until he was contacted by the Herald-Leader.
He acknowledged, however, that he was familiar with Arnett. Both men served on a legislative commission to craft new alternative medicine laws for Kentucky in 1999. That task force met 13 times...
Both Lammers and Michael were students at St. Luke School of Medicine, an online school whose legitimacy has been questioned in the United States and abroad. Because they said they were medical students, they were able to observe medical procedures or work with patients in Kentucky.
Officials at Kentucky's Board of Medical Licensure say its primary focus is on physicians who are already licensed by the state...
For the last three years, State Rep. Susan Westrom, (D-Lexington), has unsuccessfully introduced a bill that would make the use of bogus credentials a Class D felony, punishable by a prison sentence of up to five years.
"It's a no-brainer piece of legislation," Westrom said. "When you have people who have lives in their hands and they have a diploma on the wall, you want to be careful that they are legitimate. But people in the general population have no idea how to go about checking credentials."
The bill has always passed the House, Westrom said, but has never been heard by the Senate Judiciary Committee...
Related information:
Doctored Diplomas: For Some Medical Degrees, It's Log On, Pay Up--A trail of bogus claims and life-threatening consequences <http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/15651692.htm>, Valarie Honeycutt Spears, Lexington, KY Herald-Leader, October 1, 2006.
When prosecutors here talked about the cruelty of John E. Curran, it was the face of Taylor Alves they saw.
Her mother as “born with wings” described the young woman, who, at 18, was a filmmaker, photographer and model. She was also dying of ovarian cancer.
Curran, who billed himself as a natural healer and physician, told her he could make her healthy with a green drink, a concoction of powdered vegetables in water. The promise of recovery led her to spend her final weeks refusing other food.
"He did so much harm on so many levels," Rhonda Alves, Taylor's mother, said recently. "I don't blame John Curran for Taylor dying. What I blame John Curran for is the anguish he brought to her life."
In August, Curran, who charged most patients a standard fee of $10,000 for his treatments, was sentenced to 12 1/2 years in prison on charges of wire fraud and money laundering.
Curran, 41, followed the same course of study as two men who appeared on the Kentucky medical scene: Andrew E. Michael and Larry Lammers.
Michael was welcomed to Lexington's Central Baptist Hospital in 2003 and briefly observed heart specialists there treating patients.
In 2004, Lammers cared for patients at several accident injury clinics in the state. Lammers and Michael have also been convicted of practicing medicine without a license and have received jail sentences.
Curran, Michael and Lammers all worked toward medical degrees from online schools that were promoted from the remote mountain community of Falcon, KY. There, sitting at a computer, was the man behind the schools -- Stephen J. Arnett, 47, who had been a Free Will Baptist minister before becoming involved in the medical field, court records say.
Arnett first opened several medical clinics in Eastern Kentucky, where he worked without a license as an assistant to the very doctors he hired. When the clinics closed, he moved on to promoting various online schools that offered degrees in medicine and naturopathy -- a system of healing with natural substances. The schools were neither accredited nor licensed.
Yet the people who received degrees from the schools that Arnett promoted opened real clinics, practiced in real offices and treated real patients...
Arnett has been investigated by state officials for more than a decade but never prosecuted. He has been free to open clinics, assist physicians and place would-be doctors in hospitals and clinics...
The most prominent of the schools Arnett has been associated with is St. Luke School of Medicine, which has had a number of incarnations. St. Luke and its Southern Graduate Institute -- a division that focused on naturopathy -- are central to the criminal cases against Curran, Michael and Lammers.
Arnett was also tied to Lady Malina Memorial Medical College; the University of Sciences, Arts and Technology, with an address on the volcanic island of Montserrat in the Caribbean; and the Asian-American University.
Prosecutors say that the degrees that Lammers, Curran and Michael received while Arnett was involved with St. Luke were bogus.
St. Luke President Jerroll Dolphin, contacted in Liberia, West Africa, said Arnett had been affiliated with the school and that, at one point, the two planned to establish a school in Kentucky. However, when Dolphin received calls from people he didn't know were students, he suspected that Arnett was granting St. Luke diplomas without the appropriate course work.
In 2003, the two men severed their relationship and Dolphin said he revoked Arnett's honorary medical degree...
By 2002, Arnett was forming new Internet medical schools, according to state records.
He incorporated a company called Foreign Alternative Medical Education, as well as St. Luke School of Medicine. Both had a Falcon, Ky., address that Arnett used.
Not long afterward, Robert Irving, a student from one of Arnett's online schools, was warned by the state medical licensing board to close a medical practice he had begun in Elizabethtown, according to board documents.
Irving said he received a doctor of naturopathy degree from Southern Graduate Institute, a division of St. Luke, in 2001. His contact was Arnett. Irving did six-week rotations for orthopedics, physical rehabilitation and anesthesiology at an Accident Injury Center in Lexington where Larry Lammers worked.
In 2005, Irving said he was still studying at St. Luke and was pleased with the education he received.
Irving, Curran, Lammers and Michael have all said they thought they were receiving a legitimate medical education from schools Arnett was promoting.
Michael's use of his so-called education was particularly egregious. He practiced medicine without a license for two years in Las Vegas before he came to Kentucky. He supervised potentially dangerous injections for MRI patients and told patients he had trained at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
Last year, when Las Vegas District Judge Valorie Vega sentenced Michael to six months in jail, she had another way of describing the way he had used that education:
"This was a time bomb ticking," she said.
Credentials Arnett has claimed <http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/special_packages/degrees_of_harm/15651697.htm>, Valarie Honeycutt Spears, Lexington, KY Herald-Leader, October 1, 2006.
Stephen J. Arnett of Magoffin County has presented himself as a man of many degrees and titles. This is a description posted on the St. Luke School of Medicine Web site around 2002-2003:
M.D., N.M.D. (Medical Doctor, Naturopathy Medical Doctor)
Vice president, St. Luke School of Medicine
Director, public relations, student loan programs at St. Luke
Director of alternative education and research at St. Luke
President, Southern Graduate Institute of Naturopathic Medicine, Kentucky
Doctor of Medicine, Far Eastern University, Manila, Philippines
M.D. (M.A.), Open International University for Complementary Medicine, Sri Lanka
Diplomat, National Board of Naturopathic Examiners
Senior Professor of Naturopathic Medicine: Alternative Medicines Research Institute, Vancouver, B.C., Canada; Clayton College of Natural Health, Birmingham, Alabama
Indian Board of Alternative Medicine, Calcutta, India MD (AM)
The St. Luke School of Medicine was declared to be an illegal entity <http://www.embassyofliberia.org/news/item_a.html> by the Liberian National Commission of Higher Education in 2004. This announcement, posted to the Embassy of Liberia's web site, also named St. Regis "University." See other material in this page concerning St. Luke and St. Regis.
Med schools scrutinized: State Board Opens Investigation <http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/15682184.htm>, Valarie Honeycutt Spears, Lexington, KY Herald-Leader, October 5, 2006.
The Kentucky Board of Medical Licensure has opened an investigation into whether a Magoffin County man who promoted online and foreign medical schools has broken any state laws, C. Lloyd Vest, an attorney for the board, said yesterday.
Stephen J. Arnett, a former tombstone salesman and Free Will Baptist minister, promoted the St. Luke School of Medicine; an online school based in Liberia, from an address in Falcon, a small Magoffin County community, until 2003.
He held key titles at the school, including vice president, and helped recruit students and place them in Kentucky hospitals and clinics...
St. Luke President Jerroll Dolphin said in a recent interview that he stopped working with Arnett in 2003 and took away an honorary medical degree the school had given him because he thought Arnett was giving degrees without requiring proper course work.
Though some states have questioned the school's legitimacy, Dolphin said St. Luke offered an intensive curriculum and was not a diploma mill -- a school without accreditation that awards degrees for money and little work.
Note this June 4, 2002 Internet archive <http://web.archive.org/web/20020604045614/http://stluke.edu/graduates.html> of the SLSOM list of graduates:
Alumni
Peter Michael Kolosky, M.D.: August 10, 2001
Laurie Ann Luisi Kolosky, M.D.: August 10, 2001
Michael Hejazi, M.D.: August 24, 2001
Mary Anthony Julve, M.D.: August 24, 2001
Astara Sunrise Burlingame, M.D.: August 24, 2001
Ilene Susan Young, M.D.: December 14, 2001
Munawar Hussain Shah, M.D.: January 4, 2002
Rita Patangia, M.D.: January 18, 2002
Recent Graduates
Stephen J. Arnett, M.D.: March 22, 2002
Brenda C. Arnett, M.D.: March 22, 2002
Herbert W. Winstead, M.D.: March 22, 2002
Edwin Muniz, M.D.: March 22, 2002
Thomas J. Mulvi, M.D.: March 22, 2002
Egbert G. Phipps, M.D.: March 22, 2002
John E. Curran, M.D.: March 22, 2002
Doctoral Candidates
David A. Belshaw: June 2002
David Karam Wade: June 2002
Antwi Boakye: July 2002
Masilamony Pauliah: July 2002
Alfred Egedovo: August 2002
A May 29, 2004 Internet archive <http://web.archive.org/web/20040529133909/http://stluke.edu/faculty.html> of the St. Luke School of Medicine faculty roster includes these entries, among others: Stephen J. Arnett, M.D., N.M.D. Vice President, St. Luke School of Medicine; Dean, Department of Natural Medicine; Director, Public Relations, Student Loan Programs, and Director of Alternative Education and Research
President, Southern Graduate Institute of Naturopathic Medicine, Kentucky Doctor of Medicine, St. Luke School of Medicine
M.D. (M.A.), Open International University for Complementary Medicine, Sri Lanka Doctor of Naturopathy (N.D.), Clayton College of Natural Health, Birmingham, Alabama Diplomat, National Board of Naturopathic Examiners Professor of Naturopathic Medicine: Alternative Medicines Research Institute, Vancouver, and B.C., Canada Indian Board of Alternative Medicine, Calcutta, India MD (AM) Jerroll B. R. Dolphin, M.D., President of Medical School & Board Member Doctor of Medicine, Spartan Health Sciences University, St. Lucia Doctor of Naturopathy, Southern Graduate Institute BS Physics and Mathematics, San Jose State University ECFMG Certified, Chief Advisory Physician, African Development Foundation Responsible for school administration and program development and coordination. Primary curriculum developer r for USMLE Part 1, Part 2, and CSA examination contents.
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We at USAT sincerely hope that none of our past, present or future students will be affected by the dealings of Stephen J. Arnett. Please consider the foregoing matter informational and intended to clarify any confusion caused.
Please be advised that Dr. Stephen J. Arnett is no longer associated in any way with the University of Science, Arts, and Technology, Montserrat, or its affiliated Colleges and Schools, and is no longer authorized to correspond or communicate on behalf of the University of Science Arts and Technology in any form or manner, may not issue degrees, diplomas or certificates, may not collect payments, process student loans, or represent the University or its Colleges in any way whatsoever. Furthermore, neither Dr. Stephen Arnett nor any or his colleagues have ever held any shares or ownership of any part of USAT, nor have they held academic postions or administrative posts at USAT. All future communication should be made directly with the University at the main number (664-491-5364), at the USA Vonage number (727-388-2687), FAX (664-491-5362), or email: usat.edu@candw.ms. This memo is effective immediately.
Thanks for your continued support and cooperation.
Kindest Regards,
Orien L. Tulp, Ph.D., M.D., F.A.C.N., C.N.S. President,
University of Science, Arts, and Technology, Montserrat
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