A former gynecologist
was sentenced to 18 years in prison Tuesday for raping his pregnant patient
while performing an exam on her in his South Side office.
“How do I describe the
feeling of nasty and dirty, never being able to wash that feeling away, never
being able to wash him away?” the victim said of the actions of Bruce Sylvester
Smith.
The woman said since
the Aug. 2, 2002 incident, she is afraid to go to the doctor’s office, the Chicago
Sun-Times is reporting.
The sexual assault and
its nightmarish aftereffects have “left an endless knot in the pit of my
belly,” the woman said as Smith, 60, looked down in Cook County Judge Clayton
Crane’s courtroom.
“It never goes away.”
“ . . . I am afraid
and paranoid all of the time . . . Bruce Smith was my doctor, my obstetrician,
my gynecologist and I trusted him. I put the health and care of myself and the
health and care of my unborn child in his hands, but he violated that trust and
he abused his position. He violated me in the worst way possible.”
Smith, who testified
early last year that the sex was consensual, is a “liar,” prosecutors said.
“He blamed her for
it,” Assistant State’s Attorney Annette Milleville said.
All rapes are
horrible, but the this attack was more horrendous given that Smith was the
victim’s doctor and was in his care when she was assaulted, Milleville said.
Smith, of the 500
block of West Cullerton Avenue, hid behind the aura of being a professional and
violated the trust the victim had in him.
“He shattered [that
trust] into a million pieces in the most despicable manner,” the prosecutor
said.
Smith chose not to say
anything in court before he was sentenced.
But Assistant Public
Defender Armando Sandoval spoke on Smith’s behalf describing how the father of
five grew up poor and enlisted in the U.S. Army and worked as a teacher before
putting himself through medical school.
Because of his legal
troubles, Smith’s second marriage ended, Sandoval told the judge in hopes of Smith
avoiding the maximum 30-year sentence.
Although the rape took
place in 2002, Smith wasn’t arrested in the case until 2010, when prosecutors
admitted “mistakes were made” in the investigation; Smith’s DNA sample was
never taken after the woman immediately reported the attack to police.
Smith’s medical
license was suspended for nine months in 2009 after several women came forward,
accusing him of sexual misconduct.
One woman said he
acted inappropriately toward her, hugging her and telling her she was attractive
and was confused why her husband wouldn’t have sex with her, said Lisa
Stephens, the former chief of medical prosecutions with the Illinois Department
of Financial and Professional Regulation.
Another woman said
Smith had penetrated her while performing a vaginal exam in 2000.
Ultimately, Smith’s
license was revoked in 2011, according to the Illinois Department of Financial
and Professional Regulation.
Smith was never charged in any other case.
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