Gold Coast strippers say goodtime doctor got them hooked on Xanax
A DOCTOR is being investigated after staging sex parties where he allegedly gave cocaine to strippers and got them hooked on prescription drugs.
A GOLD Coast doctor is being investigated over sex parties amid claims he gave cocaine to strippers and wrote prescriptions that led to them becoming hooked on anti-anxiety drugs.
An official complaint has been made to the Office of the Health Ombudsman after affidavits were provided by a private investigator hired by the women, who became regular Xanax users.
The sensational claims include the specialist administering the anxiety disorder drug and later having sex with a stripper who was asleep in his luxury apartment.
The complaint to the OHO outlines how the private eye was hired to investigate a trust set up seven years ago by the doctor and a stripper who had a sexual relationship with him.
“Investigations led me to believe that the doctor may be what is known as a Sugar Daddy to several girls, all of whom worked as showgirls and strippers,” the complaint said.
After interviewing up to eight showgirls and waitresses, the investigator discovered the women could access the trust with a debit card but were unaware they could have to pay tax on the money used.
Two statements provided by strippers say the doctor, who was in his 60s, would provide them with drugs by writing prescriptions on his personal prescription pad in his high rise apartment unit on the Glitter Strip.
“Allegations of sex parties held by the doctor at his home included alcohol, prescription drugs and large amounts of cocaine,” the investigator wrote in the complaint to the OHO.
A stripper who had been in a relationship with the doctor said she was sodomised by the medico after being administered Xanax.
“It is alleged the woman woke distressed and panicked and threatened the doctor, who paid her $6000 in cash,” the investigator wrote.
The women said the doctor was a regular visitor to strip clubs where he sought to befriend young staff and sought sexual favours for gifts, drugs and cash.
The investigator said the women he spoke to ranged in age from 19 to 33 years.
The trigger for the complaint was the Australian Taxation Office contacting one of them about the trust, he said.
A spokesman for the Office of Health Ombudsman yesterday said it did not comment on complaints.
But the Gold Coast Bulletin has seen correspondence confirming a triage and assessment officer has sought to “undertake an assessment of the complaint”.
“Your complaint raises concerns that fall within the jurisdiction of the Health Ombudsman,” the ombudsman’s office said in the letter.
“The purpose of the assessment is to obtain and analyse further information relevant to your complaint to be able to decide the most appropriate way to deal with it.”
An assessment of the complaint is expected to take 30 days, when a decision will be made either to obtain further information or take action.
The OHO can refer a complaint to police or to the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency for it to be resolved.
Serious complaints involving professional misconduct remain with the OHO which can determine future registration of medical officers.
Originally published as Gold Coast strippers say goodtime doctor got them hooked on Xanax