Disguised GP poisoned man in will row, court hears

· BBC News
Thomas Kwan created a fake ID using the name Raj Patel which included a picture of himself wearing a false beard, moustache and wigImage source, Northumbria Police

Duncan Leatherdale
BBC News, North East and Cumbria

A GP disguised himself and injected his mother's partner with a poison in a row over an inheritance, a court has heard.

Thomas Kwan, 53, went to "extraordinary" lengths to plan and carry out the "audacious" attack by pretending he was giving a coronavirus booster jab to Patrick O'Hara, prosecutors told Newcastle Crown Court.

Mr O'Hara, 71, was lucky to survive after the toxin caused a "rare and life-threatening flesh-eating disease," the court heard.

Kwan admits injecting Mr O'Hara with a poison, but denies attempted murder, claiming he meant to inflict "no more than mild pain and discomfort".

He also denies wounding with intent but has admitted administering a noxious substance.

Opening the case, prosecutor Peter Makepeace KC said Kwan was a "respected and experienced" GP with an "encyclopaedic knowledge" of toxins who worked at the Happy House Surgery in Sunderland.

He was estranged from his mother, Wai King also known as Jenny Leung, having fallen out with her over her plans to leave her home in Newcastle to Mr O'Hara - her partner of more than 20 years.

"The effect of the will was that the property would not go to Ms Leung's children until after Mr O'Hara's death," Mr Makepeace said.

The prosecutor said Kwan was "obsessed with money and his anticipated inheritance".

On 22 January, Kwan, who lived in Ingleby Barwick near Stockton, went to the couple's home on St Thomas' Street pretending to be a community nurse on a home visit to give a Covid-19 booster, the court heard.

Mr Makepeace said: "It was an audacious plan. It was a plan to murder a man in plain sight."

Kwan had previously sent the victim letters with a "chilling authenticity" purportedly from the NHS scheduling the visit so he was expected, the court heard.

Wearing a hat, surgical mask, gloves and tinted glasses and speaking in a broken English Asian accent, Kwan did a medical questionnaire and checked both Mr O'Hara's and Ms Leung's blood pressure before saying he would administer the jab, the court heard.

As soon as he had been injected in his left arm, Mr O'Hara felt a "terrible pain" with Kwan hastily packing up his medical supplies and leaving, Mr Makepeace said.

As he left, Ms Yeung remarked that he was the same height as her son causing Mr O'Hara to become suspicious, the court heard.

The victim contacted his GP and the Freeman Hospital to ask about the visit.

Staff said they had never heard of the NHS organisation that arranged the visit so Mr O'Hara went to A&E at the Royal Victoria Infirmary.

After initially being baffled by his symptoms, doctors eventually diagnosed necrotising fasciitis - a "rare, life-threatening flesh-eating disease", the court heard.

Mr O'Hara had to have multiple surgeries to remove "very considerable portions" of his arm.

He remained in intensive care for several weeks and doctors failed to identify what the toxin was, the court heard.

Mr Makepeace said it was an "extraordinary" and "intricate" plot which included Kwan:

Mr Makepeace said while Kwan was on remand in prison awaiting trial, he told his wife he had "been stupid in not disposing of evidence prior to his arrest".

'Back-up plan'

The prosecutor said Kwan, a married father of one, had "a deeply disturbing" interest "bordering on obsession" with poisons and chemical toxins and "their use in killing human beings".

Searches of his Brading Court home revealed extensive research material, including:

Kwan also had a "back-up plan" and had created a letter from a fake charity offering Mr O'Hara free drinks and meals, the court heard.

He had also installed spyware on his mother's computer so he could monitor the couple's activity and watch them through the in-built camera, Mr Makepeace said.

The trial continues.

Related topics

Related internet links