Meet The Man Who Faked Heart Attacks To Escape Dinner Bills And Cab Fares
Police arrested Robert Farnham for "habitual criminality" and "fraud on a restaurant" after his doctor reported him for faking heart attacks to avoid paying bills. The Wisconsin resident, who has been caught pulling the same routine five times this year, most recently keeled over in Applebees to avoid paying $22.66 for a "steak, salad, mashed potatoes, a soda, a strawberry smoothie and a brownie."
A doctor at the hospital, William T. Kumprey, was tired of seeing Farnam.
Farnam had been to the hospital several times in the last month or so. He had used his fake heart attack routine at Silk — an exotic lounge — at several restaurants and while getting out of various cabs.
The doctor told Farnam he would call the police the next time he caught him faking the clutch of death to avoid paying his bills.
Farnam let it slip that he had, earlier that very day, after a hearty meal for which he did not pay, absconded to Froedtert Hospital.
The doctor called police.
The 52-year-old faces nine months in jail and a $10,000 fine if convicted.
Cardiac arrest: Man faked heart attack when dinner bill arrived [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]
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Comments:
Yeah, we had one of those here 6-7 years ago who faked seizures on dates with the idea of ditching restaurant tabs...much bigger tabs than $22.76.
When called on it by a paramedic who'd seen him before on the same kind of gag, he belched "I...want...someone...else...you're...a... bitch..." between twitches.
@bobpence: I think presenting in the emergency room with a fake heart attack, thus denying other patients the ability to be seen quickly by attending physicians, qualifies.
There's a huge flap over secret shoppers and the AMA declined to allow them ([www.usnews.com]) because they might detract from seriously ill patients. This man is no different, and his presentation in emergency rooms as a heart attack patient is a huge issue.
@RodAox: Once care is initiated, it cannot be stopped without the patient signing a release else it becomes legal abandonment, placing the EMT and/or the certifying authority in a position to be sued.
@RodAox: As a former WI EMT (I retired 2 years ago), I know that if 911 was called, we had to transport the person unless they signed a waiver stating that they didn't want to be transported to the hospital. Don't get me started about the dislocated fingers and toothaches that we had to transport to the hospital. If we refused to transport them (even if they were fine), we could be sued for abandonment. This is why in some areas it takes 15-20 minutes for an ambulance to arrive, they are too busy responding to BS calls like these. It's a crappy system.
I rode with a DeKalb County GA police officer for a full shift a few months ago. He was called to a Kroger supermarket to take in a shoplifter that store security had grabbed. He was cuffed and put in the back of the patrol car. That's when he started having chest pains. That brought out an ambulance and a fire truck. I can only imagine what the trip to Grady Hospital cost taxpayers. The likelihood that a Kroger employee would be available to file a complaint against the guy when he got out dropped to about zero. Guy knew how to work the system.
@ZekeSulastin: Many heart attacks cannot be detected without blood work. The standard procedure, at least for Paramedics in my area, is to treat a possible-heart-attack-patient based on their reported symptoms, even if their Vital Signs and the Heart Monitor appear normal.
It is entirely possible for a patient having a heart attack to present with high -or- low blood pressure, high -or- low pulse rate and no changes on the EKG.
(Wish we could edit so I could add this on to my last comment)
@emt888: I feel ya! My boyfriend is an EMT and they were always and forever getting calls from the local senior citizen community to come help with some ridiculous thing or another. They once got a call that ended up being some old lady who just needed help with going to the bathroom and pulling down/up her underwear. Where the center's staff was to help with this stuff, I don't know, but it's a waste of time and resources.
@ElizabethD: Well really, BK and McD's have no problem here. You pay before you eat at those types of places. BUT.... "steak, salad, mashed potatoes, a soda, a strawberry smoothie and a brownie" will get him there pretty quickly no matter where he chooses to dine. Cruel irony is fun no matter where though.
@Jay Slatkin: Wow. That's awesome. I love how he stays committed to it! Pro se parties rock.
My husband has a great filing from pro se party in some ugly divorce/custody/deadbeat case where the guy filed a motion to vacate which was, in its entirety, "You fuckers won't get away with this!" in a handwritten scrawl. The best part was that in that case, the pro se party was an attorney. :P
@RodAox:
Heart Attacks are not always cut and dry in terms of diagnosis. Chest pain/heart injury can occur without changes on EKG, and while your index of suspicion decreases when the patient is not exhibiting classic symptoms (like rapid heart rate, profuse sweating, crushing as opposed to stabing pain et cetera) the only way to be certain is to observe over a period of several hours, with repeat ekgs and testing for enzymes that often appear in the blood after a myocardial infarction (smarty pants word for heart attack)
So the paramedics are not doing anything wrong/stupid/whatever here. People with chest pain, get a fast track to a medical examination. If we permit paramedics, nurses or even physicians to start making the yes or no call without doing the proper diagnostics, you would see many more deaths. Yeah there are fakers (and just plain crazy people) but this is just one of those things that needs to be endured for the good of the whole.
Now this guy on the other hand, is full of shit.
We had a woman in Hot Springs, AR that was well known for doing this. The owners eventually began to deny her service in their restaurants. She decided to seek revenge on one place by vandalizing it. To the tune of $150,000 worth of damage. Anything over $1000 in AR is a felony. She was arrested and it over a two year period, she had 121 arrests for petty theft, disturbing the peace, etc. Her attorney tried to get the charges thrown out on mental grounds. The judge didn't buy it. He gave her the choice of woman's prison or max security mental ward for 10 years, minimum. She picked the later.
Echos of Dirty Harry [www.imdb.com]
Early on in the movie before the hostage situation in the liquor store, they encountered an similiar event at a sidewalk cafe. Harry saw who it was and he started to "urge" him in his own way, by kicking and cussing. He finally grabbed the clown by the tie and yanked him up and off the ground, leading him out of the place.
Good ole Callahan, he bent the rules, but got the job done.
I suspect this clown saw the movie and decided to pull similar stunts. Poor copycatting can get you in the dip.
this guy should definitely get jail time. He is wasting the time of 911, the ambulance crew, and the hospital. I would hate to think someone really having a heart attack has to wait for treatment because this guy is a cheap bastard. As a rule, it's really not a good idea to cry wolf for medical emergencies, nobody will believe him if he really does have one
@homerjay: That's brilliant.
I eat there pretty frequently, but the cheese sticks are the only thing that are definite outs for me. They get me sick every time.
In Applebees' defense, Chili's cheese sticks are the same way.
@homerjay: OMG yes. I went there for the first time recently, it's like Fridays if it were 200 years old.






















The definition of criminality should be something like wasting massive amounts of other peoples' resources for a small gain of your own.