Explosion Brings Police to Ex-Doctor’s Apartment
December 8th, 2009Author: Door WackoCited: Associated Press
On November 22, bomb explosions led police to arsenal at ex-doctor’s apartment where they found 35 bombs that were unexploded according to police. The police also discovered an assortment of firearms and ammunition in the former doctor’s apartment after two explosions rocked the building. Authorities stated they did not know why he had the weapons or whether he planned to use them after they were discovered on the 22nd.
Mark Campano, 56, was charged Wednesday with one count of unlawful possession of a pipe bomb, according to assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Edwards. Campano appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Benita Pearson, waived a preliminary hearing and was held on the charge by federal marshals. The charge carries a possible penalty of 10 years in prison, Edwards said.
Donald Hicks, the attorney appointed to represent Campano, said after the court hearing that it was too early to comment on the case. Earlier in the day, FBI agents dressed in head-to-toe white protective hazardous materials coveralls and plastic gloves carried bags of materials out of Campano’s apartment. It wasn’t clear what they took from the ground-floor apartment, which sits next to a park in a residential area in this city about 20 miles southeast of Cleveland.
Apartment Complex Shaken
The explosions that shook the apartment complex the evening of November 22 “sounded like someone hit the window as hard as you could once and it reverberated throughout the building,” said Rob Clancy, 27, who lives upstairs and two doors down from the blast scene. “It happened twice about 35 seconds apart.”
Campano told an officer that he was attempting to load shotgun shells when one blew up in his hands, according to a police report. He was taken to an Akron hospital with severe injuries to his left hand and arm and taken into custody after he was released from the hospital Wednesday.
Handguns were strewn about the apartment, police said, and one gun had a silencer and a pistol was found in Campano’s car, the police report said. A large amount of elements used to make various types of weaponry were also taken from the apartment, according to the report. Police also found chemicals used to make drugs in the apartment, Sgt. Gary Merton Jr. said.
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Lost His License
Citing a history of drug dependency, the Medical Board of Ohio removed Campano’s license in 2006. The board said in its decision that his continued practice of medicine would be a danger of immediate and serious harm to the public.
Campano has a history of substance abuse dating to 1987, according to state medical board records. He completed a drug treatment program in the late 1980s, records showed. He moved to West Virginia and practiced medicine there until he gave up his license in 1993 when he had a relapse involving drugs and alcohol. Campano sought treatment again and was diagnosed with major depression, alcohol dependency, and drug abuse, records show.
He returned to Ohio and was allowed to practice medicine in 1995 under probationary terms that included random drug tests. He also was required to continue meeting with a psychiatrist. Campano sought treatment for chemical dependence in 2005 and admitted that he had been self-prescribing a high blood pressure medicine for six years, according to state medical records. The medical board then moved to permanently revoke his license.
The 30 unit apartment complex was evacuated after the explosions to ensure safety of the tenants. According to a neighbor, Robert Cogdeill, 45, that has lived across the street from the complex’s whole life, the apartment complex attracts a lot of police attention.
“It’s always been a problem. There’s always police activity there, cars running in and out,” he said.
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My Take: I do not understand something. If he was so un-balanced, why did they keep giving him his medical license back? Why was he not in a mental institution? Are you going to try to tell me that they could not see he had big problems? On the other hand, if the apartment complex had so much police activity around it, why did not management or the owners provide something similar to Sacramento CA unarmed security guard to protect the tenants.
I am sure that they have security guards just like they have California security guards. A security guard might have noticed this guy’s activities and been able to prevent the explosions. I am sure that the owners are going to regret not doing anything when they get contacted by NC personal injury lawyers. If they do get sued for injuries resulting from the explosions, they just might be contacting NC bankruptcy lawyers.
The question I would like to rest the medical board is simply, why are you so easy on doctors? I would not want a Pensacola FL hair transplant surgeon working on me who was higher than a kite on drugs. I could just imagine where the hair would end up! I am sure that many people have heard horror stories about Panama City Florida breast implants that went wrong for any number reasons other than the doctor being on drugs. But if the doctor will were on drugs, just imagine how it would look.
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