Terrifying video shows a supposedly brain dead man being wheeled into organ donation surgery… only for him to wake up on the operating table.
Thomas ‘TJ’ Hoover II, 36, had been declared brain dead after an overdose when surgeons went to remove his organs at Baptist Health Richmond Hospital in Kentucky in October 2021.
Hoover’s sister Donna Rhorer told Fox56 family was told he ‘had no reflexes, no responses, no brainwaves, no brain activity’ before they decided to remove him off life support.
The hospital staff even did an honor walk for Hoover – a tradition that sees nurses and other employees line up to show respect for organ donors as they are wheeled into surgery.
Harrowing footage shows Hoover being pushed in a hospital bed as his heartbroken relatives say their goodbyes ahead of what they believed would be a final procedure.
A chilling video shows Thomas ‘TJ’ Hoover II, 36, who had been declared brain dead, being wheeled into surgery, where he woke up as his body was being prepped for organ donation
Harrowing footage shows Hoover being rolled to surgery in a hospital bed as his heartbroken relatives say their goodbyes
Thomas ‘TJ’ Hoover II, 36, had been declared brain dead when surgeons went to remove his organs at Baptist Health Richmond Hospital in Kentucky in October 2021, but later became reanimated
‘We had his honor walk, but almost as soon as his honor walk started, his eyes started to open, and not just open, he was checking around, looking to see what was going on,’ Rhorer said.
‘And we were told that was just reflexes, just normal instinct, and he’s not there.’
But once on the surgical table, Hoover started thrashing around, crying and trying to pull his teeth out as surgeons prepared to harvest his body parts, according to former Kentucky Organ Donor Affiliates employee Nyckoletta Martin.
Then, as the surgeons prepared to remove his organs, Hoover began ‘moving around’ and ‘was crying visibly,’ according to Natasha Miller, another former employee.
Miller said that when her colleague called KODA – which had coordinated the transplant- the supervisor told them they were ‘going to do this case’ anyway and the hospital needed to ‘find another doctor.’
He had been rushed to the hospital following a drug overdose
The hospital insists ‘the safety of our patients is always our highest priority’
Ultimately, the organ retrieval was canceled, and several employees quit in the aftermath.
Rhorer says her brother has had issues with his memory, walking and talking ever since, and she has had to become his legal guardian.
‘I do feel angry,’ she said.
‘I feel betrayed by the fact that the people that were telling us he was brain dead, and then he wakes up.
‘They are trying to play God,’ she claimed. ‘They’re almost, you know, picking and choosing – they’re going to take this person to save these people.
‘And you kind of lose your faith in humanity a little bit.’
Baptist Health President Greg Gerard. Baptist Health Richmond has also since insisted ‘the safety of our patients is always our highest priority
Nyckoletta Martin has since become a whistleblower, submitting a letter to the House Energy and Commerce Committee about the incident as it held a hearing investigating organ procurement organizations
Former hospital employee Martin added that several of the employees who worked on the transplant had to seek therapy in the aftermath.
‘It took it’s toll on a lot of people,’ Martin said, ‘especially me.’
She has since become a whistleblower, submitting a letter to the House Energy and Commerce Committee about the incident as it held a hearing investigating organ procurement organizations.
Donna Rhorer, his sister, has become his legal guardian
Rhorer says her brother has had issues with his memory, walking and talking ever since, and she has had to become his legal guardian
‘It’s very scary to me now that these things are allowed to happen, and there’s not more in place to protect donors,’ Martin said.
But Julie Bergen, the president and chief operating officer for Network for Hope – which was formed by a merger between KODA and LifeCenter Organ Donation Network – has denied the incident.
‘No one at KODA has ever been pressured to collect organs from any living patient,’ she told NPR.
‘KODA does not recover organs from living patients. KODA has never pressured its team members to do so.’
Baptist Health Richmond has also since insisted ‘the safety of our patients is always our highest priority.
‘We work closely with our patients and their families to ensure our patients’ wishes for organ donation are followed,’ a spokesperson for the hospital told NPR.
The Kentucky Attorney General and US Health Services Resources Administration are now investigating the terrifying incident.