logo
Fake Doctor Is Charged After ‘Butt Lift' Surgery Leaves Woman Near Death

Fake Doctor Is Charged After ‘Butt Lift' Surgery Leaves Woman Near Death

New York Times03-04-2025

A Queens man posing as a doctor was charged with assault and practicing medicine without a license after a woman went into cardiac arrest during a botched cosmetic surgery at a makeshift home clinic, according to an internal police report.
The man, Felipe Hoyos Foronda, 38, tried to flee the United States after the woman became unresponsive, according to the report. Officers caught up with him at Kennedy Airport last Friday, just hours after the operation, as he waited to board the first leg of a flight to Colombia, the report said.
The woman, 31, was taken to a hospital by emergency medical workers, where she was intubated, according to a criminal complaint filed on Saturday by the Queens district attorney. She had 'no brain activity,' the complaint said, 'and she is not likely to survive.' (It was unclear who called 911 to report her condition.)
The woman, who has not been publicly identified, had come to the clinic to have her buttock implants removed, according to the internal police report. Prosecutors said Mr. Hoyos Foronda used a syringe to inject her with lidocaine, an anesthetic, and that her condition appeared to be consistent with lidocaine toxicity.
New York City has seen a surge of illegal clinics and 'medical spas' offering discounted rates to people who want to change their appearance, in ways both large and small.
In January, an aesthetician in Manhattan was charged with injecting patients with counterfeit Botox that caused physical injuries, including botulism. And in recent years, at least two unlicensed practitioners of 'butt lift' procedures were charged with manslaughter after their clients died.
Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.
Thank you for your patience while we verify access.
Already a subscriber? Log in.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Picture Begins to Emerge of Gunman Who Killed 10 at Austrian School
Picture Begins to Emerge of Gunman Who Killed 10 at Austrian School

New York Times

time10 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Picture Begins to Emerge of Gunman Who Killed 10 at Austrian School

The Austrian authorities on Thursday were attempting to piece together a full portrait of the apparently troubled young man who they say killed 10 people in the course of a shooting rampage at his former school this week, with scattered clues emerging in the course of their investigations. Those details amplified concerns about how the man had been allowed to buy the guns he used to kill nine high school students and a teacher in the rampage, which has struck Austria to its core. The law requires prospective handgun owners to take a psychological test, which the gunman had passed. A picture of the 21-year-old attacker, whose identity has not been revealed because of privacy laws in Austria, has been slowly emerging in the past two days from details provided by the authorities and from reports in local media. Numerous news reports suggested that the assailant had been a loner with few friends, that he had been born in Austria and that he had been living with his Austrian-born mother in Kalsdorf, a small bedroom community just south of the Graz airport. The police have confirmed that they searched his mother's house there on Tuesday. The police said that the gunman had failed twice to graduate from the high school he attacked on Tuesday. When officers stormed his apartment on Tuesday afternoon, they found a nonfunctioning pipe bomb and plans for another attack, the police said, without providing further details about any other targets. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

ICE is using a tracking app to identify people who can easily be deported
ICE is using a tracking app to identify people who can easily be deported

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

ICE is using a tracking app to identify people who can easily be deported

ICE agents are reportedly using a new mapping app to track down migrants living illegally in the U.S who can be easily deported to meet Donald Trump's aggressive quotas. The app, an early version of which was known as Alien Tracker or ATRAC, allows agents and officers to view areas around the country with higher concentrations of people under deportation orders, making them more vulnerable to detention. Information about more than 700,000 individuals is recorded on the app and is available in a 'baseball-card-style format,' according to documents obtained by The New York Times. The Times reports that the app was launched with the help of Elon Musk and DOGE, before the billionaire's exit from the department late last month. According to documents seen by the outlet and accounts from ICE officials in Florida, the app also allows officers to identify immigrants with criminal convictions, further increasing the chances of a swift removal. 'The heat map shows where there are executable final orders of removal around the nation. And that officer then can just zoom in on those areas,' Garrett Ripa, head of the Miami ICE office, told The Times. To increase its reach, the tracker reportedly draws on data from multiple government agencies, including the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the Social Security Administration. The agency reportedly plans for the tracker to ultimately consolidate data from all interior agencies, including housing and labor departments, the Human Services Department and the IRS. It comes as the administration continues to push forward with its aggressive targets, spearheaded by senior White House advisor Stephen Miller. Miller, the architect of Trump's anti-immigration agenda, pushed ICE officials to ramp up arrests after falling short of the president's ambitions for record-breaking daily deportations, according to a recent report in The Wall Street Journal. More than 200,000 people in the U.S. without authorization have been sent back to their home country, according to internal government data obtained by The Times. Miller told Fox News late last month that ICE would set a goal of a 'minimum' of 3,000 arrests a day. He reportedly asked top ICE officials last month if they believed it was possible to reach one million deportations by the end of the year, according to people with knowledge of the meeting. To achieve this, he told law enforcement to 'just go out there and arrest illegal aliens,' per the WSJ, adding that he had told agents to target Home Depot parking lots and 7-Eleven convenience stores to find suspects. It was these instructions that reportedly lit the fuse for the raids in Los Angeles County, which have since devolved into violent clashes between demonstrators and police – and prompted Trump to summon 4,000 members of the state national guard. Alongside stakeouts of clubs, restaurants and other community hubs, internal administration documents reviewed by The Washington Post instructed ICE agents in more than 20 states to arrest people at courthouses, immediately after their cases are dismissed by a judge, or if they are given orders for their removal. Following that, immigrants who have been in the country for less than two years are placed into a fast-track removal process, which does not involve a hearing before a judge. Alongside the internal tactics of the agency, ICE has also sought help from members of the public, with a phone number for people to call and report on potential illegal immigrants. 'When you call our Tip Line, we listen!' the agency wrote in the caption of a video posted to X last month. The somewhat graphic footage showed the arrest of several men outside a home improvement store in Baltimore, Maryland. For those wanting an end to the hunt and a chance of future return to the U.S., the government has offered yet another solution. On Monday, the DHS announced on X that any immigrants who self-deported through its 'CBP Home App' would receive 'forgiveness of any failure to depart fines,' as well as cost-free travel and even a $1,000 'exit bonus.' 'By self-deporting, illegal aliens take control of their departure and may preserve the opportunity to come back to the U.S. the right and legal way in the future,' it added.

Chair of L.A. County sheriff oversight commission says he is being forced out
Chair of L.A. County sheriff oversight commission says he is being forced out

Los Angeles Times

time15 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Chair of L.A. County sheriff oversight commission says he is being forced out

The top official on the watchdog commission that oversees the Los Angeles Count Sheriff's Department is being terminated from his position, according to correspondence reviewed by The Times. Robert Bonner, chair of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission, wrote in a Wednesday letter to L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger that he received a letter from her on May 13 that said he was being replaced. Bonner wrote in the Wednesday letter that he had contacted Barger's office to request 'an opportunity to meet with you and to express 'my personal wish to be able to finish out the year.'' Barger's office said on May 15 that a scheduler would reach out to set up a meeting, but that never happened, according to Bonner's Wednesday letter. He added that he is 'involuntarily leaving the Commission' and that he would prefer to stay on to finish work that is underway. 'Given the length of time that I have been on the Commission, and that I am the current Chair of the Commission with another possible year as Chair, I expected as a matter of courtesy that you would want to speak with me and hear me out,' Bonner, 83, wrote. Bonner and Barger, who chairs the County Board of Supervisors, did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday morning. Bonner's Wednesday letter did not say when he will serve his final day as a member of the commission. A former federal judge, Bonner began his second stint as chair of the commission in July 2024. He previously served as its first chair for two years between 2016 and 2018. Chairs and officers of the oversight commission are elected to one-year terms each July and can only serve two consecutive years in those roles. Bonner's letter stated that he has been working on several important issues that he was hoping to see through. The initiatives included revisions to the Los Angeles County Code to help ensure the commission can serve as an independent oversight body; legal action to ensure the commission can review confidential documents in closed session; the shepherding of AB 847, a bill passed by the state Assembly on June 2 that would ensure civilian oversight commissions can review confidential documents in closed session; and efforts to eliminate deputy gangs and cliques. 'Hopefully,' Bonner wrote in his Wednesday letter, his colleagues on the commission 'will be able to implement these goals while I am attempting to improve my tennis game.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store