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Neurosurgeon wrote of becoming a killer before intentionally botching spinal operations

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Christopher Duntsch intentionally hurt patients during spinal surgeries. Photo: SCMP Picture

Long before he faced lawsuits and criminal charges, a North Texas neurosurgeon emailed one of his employees.

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“I am ready to leave the love and kindness and goodness and patience that I mix with everything else that I am and become a cold blooded killer,” Christopher Duntsch wrote.

To authorities, the December 11, 2011, email shows Duntsch’s mind-set in the months before he “intentionally, knowingly and recklessly” botched spinal surgeries, severely injuring four people and killing one, Floella Brown, who died in July 2012.

The email was among new evidence Dallas County prosecutors presented against Duntsch at a hearing in which Criminal District Judge Carter Thompson refused to reduce Duntsch’s $600,000 bail.

“I am very well-pleased that he will remain in jail and that justice will eventually be served for the crimes that he has committed,” said Philip Mayfield, 45, who awoke paralysed from the neck down in April 2013 after Duntsch operated on his spine.

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Duntsch, 44, was arrested July 21 on five counts of aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury and a count of injuring an elderly person. He performed those surgeries at Dallas Medical Centre, South Hampton Community Hospital and University General Hospital.

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