Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2016 11:07 AM
    STOCKHOLM — A disgraced stem cell scientist is facing preliminary charges of involuntary manslaughter in connection with two patients who died after windpipe transplants, Swedish prosecutors said Wednesday.
     
    Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, who was fired earlier this year from the Karolinska Institute, is also being investigated in two cases of causing bodily injury. One of those cases was related to a windpipe transplant, and the other to a different type of operation, prosecutor Anders Tordai told The Associated Press.
     
    Once considered a pioneer in regenerative medicine, Macchiarini was part of the team that conducted the world's first transplant using a windpipe partly made from a patient's own stem cells in 2008.
     
    But since last year he has faced accusations of falsifying his resume, scientific misconduct and misrepresenting his work. Karolinska fired him in March for various reasons, including breaching the institution's "fundamental values" and damaging its reputation.
     
    Tordai said investigators questioned Macchiarini last week and informed him of the criminal investigation against him. In Sweden that's the first step in a legal process that may or may not lead to formal charges.
     
    Macchiarini denies the allegations.
     
    "Of course with the accusations that were made against me last year the prosecutor has to investigate, and I have been very happy to give them any information that they need for that investigation," Macchiarini told The Associated Press in an email.
     
    Numerous concerns have been raised about his work, including whether he misrepresented the condition of his patients and whether consent was properly obtained. A Swedish documentary that suggested some of Macchiarini's patients were "tricked or talked into undergoing surgery" was described by Karolinska as "truly alarming."
     
    Macchiarini is suspected of aggravated involuntary manslaughter, a crime punishable in Sweden by between six months and six years in prison.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Teen Suspects Arrested In Assaults At Manitoba Addiction Treatment Centre

    Selkirk RCMP say a 16-year-old boy was taken into custody Monday evening and a 17-year-old boy was arrested early Tuesday morning.

    Teen Suspects Arrested In Assaults At Manitoba Addiction Treatment Centre

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending
      Carol Bellringer looked at six of the eight recommendations and says B.C. Community Corrections has taken steps to implement only one of them.

    B.C. Audit Says More Work Needed On Community Programs To Reduce Reoffending

    Chamber Of Commerce AGM Backs Wineries, Eyes AirBnb, B.C. Real Estate

    Chamber Of Commerce AGM Backs Wineries, Eyes AirBnb, B.C. Real Estate
    British Columbia's business leaders have adopted a list of policies they want addressed by government including more equitable taxation for wineries and Airbnb-style rentals and protection for old-growth forests.

    Chamber Of Commerce AGM Backs Wineries, Eyes AirBnb, B.C. Real Estate

    Ontario Woman Wakes Up To Find Large Snake In Apartment: Police

    Ontario Woman Wakes Up To Find Large Snake In Apartment: Police
    Brockville police say that by the time officers arrived around 1 a.m. Monday, the snake had slithered into an air vent and disappeared.

    Ontario Woman Wakes Up To Find Large Snake In Apartment: Police

    Man's Sudden Death Prompts RCMP Search For Watercraft In Maple Ridge

      Police confirm they were called to the Haney Bypass, about 45 kilometres east of Vancouver, just after 3 a.m.

    Man's Sudden Death Prompts RCMP Search For Watercraft In Maple Ridge

    Early Estimates Disappointing For 2016 Fraser River Sockeye Returns

    Early Estimates Disappointing For 2016 Fraser River Sockeye Returns
    Fisheries and Oceans Lower Fraser area director Jennifer Nener says about 2.27-million sockeye are expected this year.

    Early Estimates Disappointing For 2016 Fraser River Sockeye Returns