This sounds like a horror movie plot.

Doctor John Henry Hagmann, U. S. Army, retired, has trained thousands of soldiers and medical personnel in treating battlefield wounds. Animal rights activists have long said that Hagmann's use of live, wounded pigs to replicate battle injuries was cruel and unnecessary. Now, it appears that what he did to the pigs was just the tip of the iceberg. According to an article at AOL.com, Hagmann:

gave trainees drugs and liquor, and directed them to perform macabre medical procedures on one another.

The report, issued by the Virginia Board of Medicine, also accuses Hagmann of providing at least 10 students with a hypnotic drug known as ketamine. He then, allegedly, told the students to:

insert catheters into the genitals of other trainees and that two intoxicated student were subjected to penile nerve block procedures. Hagmann also is accused of conducting "shock labs," a process in which he withdrew blood from the students, monitored them for shock, and then transfused the blood back into their systems.

Wait, there's more.  The report also alleges that Hagmann "exploited, for personal gain and sexual gratification" two participants. Hagmann says "all courses and procedures in question were reviewed and approved" by officials at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.

The university disputes that however with spokeswoman Sharon Holland saying:

"The procedures used during the training were not authorized by USU faculty."

Talk about truth being stranger than fiction, huh?

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