AUSTRALIA, JULY 10, 2005
                            Hedley Thomas and AAP
                            The courier mail.
                          
                            ROGUE surgeon Jayant Patel should be charged with 
                            murder, the head of a commission of inquiry has recommended.
                          In an interim inquiry report presented to the Queensland 
                            government today, inquiry head Tony Morris, QC, also 
                            recommends Dr Jayant Patel be charged with a negligent 
                            act causing harm, fraud, and making false representations. 
                          
                          The former Bundaberg Hospital director of surgery 
                            has been linked with 87 deaths at the hospital. 
                          The proposed murder charge relates to Dr Patel's 
                            actions regarding patient James Edwards Phillips. 
                            Mr Morris said in his report an alternative charge 
                            of manslaughter could be considered. 
                          "We consider that a prima facie case of manslaughter 
                            (at least) is made out in relation to patient capital 
                            P34 (James Edward Phillips)," Mr Morris said 
                            in the report. Dr Patel's exact whereabouts is not 
                            known, but he could be in Oregon in the United States, 
                            where he practised previously, or in India where he 
                            has relatives. 
                           Dr Patel is a 55-year-old citizen of the US, which 
                            has an extradition arrangement with Australia. 
                          The fraud charges relate to his lies to Queensland 
                            Health in 2003 to cover up US findings against him 
                            for botched surgery in Oregon, shortly before he took 
                            the $200,000-a-year Bundaberg job. 
                          A Queensland Police Service spokesman confirmed last 
                            night detectives were on standby to investigate matters 
                            referred to them by the inquiry. 
                          He said police needed a brief of evidence before 
                            they could launch extradition proceedings to get Dr 
                            Patel back to Australia. 
                          Dr Patel fled Queensland in early April, just 10 
                            days before The Courier-Mail discovered his shocking 
                            US background. He was last seen in Portland, Oregon, 
                            where he has retained a criminal lawyer to follow 
                            evidence emerging from the inquiry led by Mr Morris. 
                          
                          In a brief statement from the health inquiry last 
                            night, the interim report by Mr Morris was said to 
                            contain "certain matters arising out of the existing 
                            terms of reference of the commission of inquiry and 
                            the evidence received . . . to date". 
                          News of today's interim report follows a meeting 
                            between Premier Peter Beattie and Mr Morris on Wednesday 
                            afternoon. Senior counsel assisting the inquiry, David 
                            Andrews, SC, also attended the briefing. 
                          The pair told Mr Beattie there was "no present 
                            need to amend the terms of reference". 
                          The statement released last night said Mr Morris 
                            "remains optimistic that no extension of time 
                            will be necessary" beyond the scheduled September 
                            30. 
                          The interim report has been produced after just two 
                            weeks of public sittings and only six weeks after 
                            the commission of inquiry was announced. 
                          Mr Beattie congratulated Mr Morris for moving so 
                            quickly, and said the Government would "move 
                            quickly on the recommendations as the people of Bundaberg 
                            and the people of Queensland would expect us to". 
                            This morning he gave a special cabinet briefing on 
                            the interim report before releasing it to state parliament. 
                          
                          The health inquiry's public sittings in Brisbane 
                            were adjourned last Friday and will recommence in 
                            Bundaberg on June 20. The commission is expected to 
                            sit there for up to three weeks before returning to 
                            Brisbane for several more weeks of hearings. 
                          More than 100 of Dr Patel's former patients and family 
                            members have launched legal action against the State 
                            Government over the scandal.