Surgeon and wife guilty of €730,000 breast cancer fraud

A consultant surgeon and his wife have been found guilty of defrauding insurance companies of more than €730,000 through a false…

A consultant surgeon and his wife have been found guilty of defrauding insurance companies of more than €730,000 through a false breast cancer claim in a case that was described as having "overwhelming" evidence.

Dr Emad Massoud (52) and his wife Gehan Massoud (45), a nurse, of Woodview, Brownstown, Ratoath, Co Meath, were convicted by a jury at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court.

Judge Patrick McCartan remanded Emad Massoud in custody and his wife on continuing bail for sentence in March.

It was day-15 of their trial during which they had pleaded not guilty to intent to defraud the insurance companies by falsely pretending that Ms Massoud had suffered breast cancer and that there was an obligation on them to settle serious illness claims.

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The Massouds were found guilty of defrauding Scottish Provident Ltd of €685,658 on March 25th, 2002 through having that amount made payable to Permanent TSB and €45,338 on February 22nd, 2002 from Lifetime Assurance Company Ltd by having that sum transferred to their account at the Bank of Ireland in Letterkenny, Co Donegal.

The jury of seven men and four women deliberated for two hours to return the guilty verdicts. The couple have four children and have dual Irish and Egyptian citizenship.

Dr Massoud had been working as a consultant surgeon with both the Wellman Clinic and the Nobel Clinic which operate out of the same building in Eccles Street near Dublin city centre.

Judge McCartan commended Det Sgt Declan Daly, who led the investigation, and his Garda colleagues on the way they compiled, presented and prepared the evidence, which he described as "frankly overwhelming".

"Certainly the work put in by the prosecution has greatly assisted justice being done," said Judge McCartan.

He excused the jury from ever doing service again if the members so wished "having regard to the amount of time and effort you've put in" in what he described as a very long, complex and technical trial.

Det Sgt Daly told the court he was concerned that Dr Massoud would leave the country before sentencing if he was allowed to remain on bail.

He said that there were still civil proceedings in the High Court against the Massouds in which Scottish Provident and Lifetime Assurance are looking for the €730,996 to be paid back.

If the case is successful, the Massouds will have to sell their remaining asset, their family home, which has been valued at €750,000.

Judge McCartan said he believed the garda's concerns to be well-founded in view of the "high mobility" of Dr Massoud's profession and his "considerable interest" abroad, particularly in Romania, and the fact that he has travelled extensively.

Dominic McGinn, prosecuting, told the jury in closing the case that the "ultimate issue" for it to decide was whether Ms Massoud had breast cancer as she claimed.

He suggested the only surgery that had taken place on Ms Massoud was the one that created a scar on her left breast and added "that given the stakes were €700,000 she may have been willing to undergo the pain of making such a mark".

Mr McGinn asked the jury to consider DNA evidence that concluded that the tissue sample provided to the Mater hospital in Ms Massoud's name for diagnosis could not have come from her but there was a 99.53 per cent chance it came from her mother.

Dr Massoud admitted, through his counsel John Peart SC, on the first day of the trial, that it was he who he had removed 237 grammes of tissue, including a tumour from his wife's breast, rather than a colleague, Dr Mohamed Hilal, as stated in the insurance claim forms.

This amount of tissue was later described by prosecution witness Prof Michael Kerin, a breast cancer surgeon who has dealt with 150 such operations a year, as equating to half the average sized breast.

Dr Mohamed Elsayed Attia, who claimed to be a friend and colleague of the Massouds, said he saw a jar of human tissue in their home a short time after he learned that Gehan's mother had been diagnosed with breast cancer.

He said he later spoke to a man who worked with the Massouds who described bringing something in a jar from Egypt to Ireland after being requested to do so by Dr Massoud.

Dr Maureen Smith, a DNA expert with the Department of Justice, told Mr McGinn during the trial that a DNA profile taken from a sample of Ms Massoud's blood did not match that of a tissue sample provided to the Mater hospital for diagnosis.

She said there was a 99.53 per cent chance that the tissue donor was Ms Massoud's mother.

Prof Kerin said a mammogram taken of Ms Massoud's left breast, a month after the alleged surgery, showed no signs of any surgery or tissue being removed.