CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 30, 2008

Doc's Liposuction Death Guilty Plea Nixed

Case Exposed Underground Cosmetic Surgery Network Used By Brazilian Immigrants In Mass.

  • Brazillian plastic surgeon Luiz Carlos Ribeiro, 51, left, listens to court interpreter Stephen Sanford, center, during Ribeiro's attempt to plead guilty to the charge of involuntary manslaughter in a courtroom in Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2008. A judge refused to accept the plea on charges stemming from the death of Brazilian immigrant Fabiola DePaula, 24, after a liposuction procedure which Ribeiro performed. Photo

    Brazillian plastic surgeon Luiz Carlos Ribeiro, 51, left, listens to court interpreter Stephen Sanford, center, during Ribeiro's attempt to plead guilty to the charge of involuntary manslaughter in a courtroom in Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2008. A judge refused to accept the plea on charges stemming from the death of Brazilian immigrant Fabiola DePaula, 24, after a liposuction procedure which Ribeiro performed.  (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

  • Video Nips And Tucks

    Video Archive: People around the world are changing their looks with plastic surgery.

(AP)  A Brazilian doctor charged with manslaughter in an immigrant's liposuction death tried to plead guilty Wednesday, but the judge instead set the case for trial after the doctor contradicted prosecutors.

Luiz Carlos Ribeiro appeared in Superior Court to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter in a case that exposed an underground cosmetic surgery network used by Brazilian immigrants.

Prosecutors were giving a standard recitation of the facts they could have proved at trial when Ribeiro, 51, told the judge he didn't agree with many of them, insisting he had a sterile surgical area and the proper resuscitation equipment when he performed the fat-removal surgery on Fabiola DePaula in the basement of a suburban condominium in July 2006.

DePaula, a 24-year-old Brazilian immigrant, died of complications from the surgery, including pulmonary fat emboli, or fat particles in the lungs.

Ribeiro insisted there was nothing that could have saved the woman.

"If I had 100 years, I would swear that I didn't kill anybody because I would never kill," Ribeiro told the judge. "Fabiola's death was sudden. I had no chance to do anything."

Prosecutors say Ribeiro performed liposuction, nose jobs and Botox injections for several years in the Framingham area, mostly for the town's large Brazilian immigrant population.

The procedures were performed on a massage table, under unsanitary conditions and without any emergency oxygen in place, authorities allege. Prosecutors maintain that if the procedure had been monitored in a hospital, DePaula's death could have been prevented.

Judge Wendie Gershengorn scheduled the trial for April 3.

In September, Ribeiro's ex-wife, Ana Maria Miranda Ribeiro, was sentenced to one year in prison when she pleaded guilty to manslaughter and admitted acting as a nurse for her husband.

Quote

He's horrified as any doctor would be about the death of somebody. But he is a good doctor, has practiced medicine for many years in Brazil.

Jean Earley, Ribeiro's lawyer
Luiz Ribeiro was a licensed doctor in his native Brazil, but neither he nor his ex-wife was licensed to practice medicine in the United States, authorities said.

His lawyer, Jean Earley, said after the hearing she was stunned the plea was not accepted. She was going to ask for a 2- to 2½-year prison term. Prosecutors had planned to seek 6 to 8 years. He's already served about 18 months since his arrest.

"He's horrified as any doctor would be about the death of somebody. But he is a good doctor, has practiced medicine for many years in Brazil," she said.

Prosecutors had no immediate comment Wednesday.



© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Video and Galleries from U.S.

Add a Comment
by rushlimpdrug January 30, 2008 1:25 PM PST

Gotta love that brazilian basement medicine.

Reply to this comment
by taddles-2009 January 30, 2008 1:39 PM PST
"Ribeiro insisted there was nothing that could have saved the woman."

Except perhaps competence.
Reply to this comment
by apdepetris January 30, 2008 1:41 PM PST
If he is such a good doctor why didn''t he get a license to practice medicine in the US? I don''t care how good he is. I can''t see any self respecting surgeon regularly performing surgery in the basement of a condo.
Reply to this comment
by runningralph January 30, 2008 4:50 PM PST
The Brazilian economy is doing so well, what with the ethanol fuel and all. You know, they''ve been doing it for years and it works really well. I just wonder why a well educated man and his nurse or anyone else would want to the US where our dictator has taken over the 3 branches of the government and is running the country into the ground. Could it be that the US government and economy is really pretty good, despite all the whining and ********?
Reply to this comment
by libsluvsuvs January 30, 2008 6:58 PM PST
I wonder who promotes, sells and instigate superficial beauty????

LIBERAL HOLLYWOOD..
Reply to this comment
by jkhagemann January 30, 2008 10:12 PM PST
I am married to a Brazilian woman. Most of the uneducated Brazilians that came to the US looking for good jobs and the "American Dream", are now going home. Brazil is now a stonger economy than the US. As far as "basement medicine" I find that really offensive, I have been to a hospital and clinic in Brazil and the service was fast, professional, and free! Yes, fast and free. No charge and the doctors and staff really care for you.

I feel the US is a third world country compared to Brazil.

Thanks God I have a safe and stable country to retire too... BRAZIL!
Reply to this comment
by runningralph January 31, 2008 11:58 AM PST
jkhagemann,
I''m glad to hear Brazil is doing well. I had heard years ago that Rio had slums that made New Orleans look well kept and law abiding. Was it the ethanol fuel that made Brazil prosperous? Do they still have those infamous gold mines? Could Brazil take over some of the US''s foreign aid load? Maybe the UN could relocate to Sao Paolo. A man I used to know that worked in Brazil for a while said the Brazilians must kill all the ugly girls when they were babies because all the prostitutes were so beautiful. When you retire to Brazil make sure you leave your Social Security money here, because we need it more than Brazil. Carmen Miranda was the best!
Reply to this comment
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs