Dr Thomas Kwan was accused of trying to kill Patrick O'Hara(Image: Northumbria Police.)

'Respected' GP admits to trying to kill his mum's partner with fake Covid jab laced with poison

Dr Thomas Kwan, 53, had sent Patrick O'Hara, now 72, fake NHS letters to arrange a 'Covid jab'. After the injection, he was diagnosed with a life-threatening flesh-eating disease

by · The Mirror

A "respected" GP dramatically changed his plea in court today to admit attempting to murder his mother's partner with a fake Covid jab laced with poison.

Dr Thomas Kwan was accused of trying to kill Patrick O'Hara, now 72, after experimenting with a series of noxious substances, including Castor beans to make ricin, in his garage following a row over his mother Jenny's will. Kwan, 53, had sent him fake NHS letters to arrange the "Covid jab" to Mr O'Hara in advance. The court was told that following the attack on January 22 this year, Mr O'Hara had contacted his GP and the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle to ask about the jab.

The site of the injection became inflamed despite him being sent home with antibiotics. But his condition grew worse. He was rushed to hospital and diagnosed with Necrotising Fasciitis, a life-threatening flesh-eating disease, and had to be treated in intensive care.

Dr Thomas Kwan in his disguise( Image: Northumbria Police.)
Dr Kwan allegedly injected his mum's partner with a 'noxious substance'( Image: Northumbria Police.)

Kwan became "obsessed" with ricin, arsenic, cyanide, and nerve agents. He had "10 poisons used to kill people" among guides found after the attack, Newcastle crown court heard. On Thursday, the jury was shown the opening shot of a video of Mr O'Hara in the ICU unit of the RVI , close to the home which he shared Jenny, 73, in which he gave an account of the poisoning.

The full interview could not be played in court due to a technical issue. But there was a noticeable change in the demeanour of Kwan when he returned to court afterwards, as he sat with his head bowed before the jury was sent home.

The video interview was due to be played in full to the jury today at Newcastle crown court. Kwan had "pestered" his mother over her financial affairs after she changed her will to allow Mr O'Hara to live at the home they shared if she were to die first. Dad-of-one Kwan, of Ingleby Barwick, Teesside, had denied attempted murder and grievous bodily harm. He had admitted administering a noxious substance but denied intending to cause serious harm.

On January 22 this year, he donned a disguise to inject Mr O’Hara, then 71, and his mum Jenny Leung's partner of 20 years, with an unidentifiable poison at their home. He bought a variety of dangerous chemicals, covering his tracks by using the Happy House surgery in Sunderland where he worked as GP and a fake research firm Azxon UK Ltd a "front", said Peter Makepeace KC, prosecuting.

He told how Kwan sent Mr O'Hara two bogus NHS letters from a "community nurse" called Raj Patel, one of Kwan's former colleagues, and even produced a fake ID in a wig, moustache, specs and goatee beard. Mr Makepeace said: "Very considerable portions of Mr O'Hara's arm flesh had to be removed in repeated procedures."

Dr Kwan arriving at the Holiday Inn( Image: Northumbria Police.)

Five days after the attack, Mr O'Hara received another NHS-style letter detailing the results of his blood tests before the jab was given, the jury heard. A package meant for Mr O'Hara was then intercepted by police containing over-the-counter iron supplements which the prosecution say had been sent by the defendant. Detectives also interviewed him just days after the attack.

The jury was shown CCTV of Kwan arriving at the Premier Inn, near his mum's home in Newcastle, before dressing in surgical mask, gloves, hat and dark tinted spectacles to administer the noxious substance to Mr O'Hara. It was believed to be iodomethane (c), a pesticide, which had never been administered to a human before, the court heard.

Mr O'Hara only became suspicious when Jenny remarked that the nurse was "about the same height" as her son. Opening the case, Mr Makepeace KC told the jury: "Sometimes, occasionally perhaps, the truth really is stranger than fiction," he said. "The case you are about to try, on any view, is an extraordinary case.

"Mr Thomas Kwan, the defendant, was, in January of this year, a respected and experienced medical doctor in general practice with a GP's surgery based in Sunderland. From November 2023 at the latest, and probably long before then, he devised an intricate plan to kill his mother’s long-term partner, a man called Patrick O'Hara.

"On any view that man had done absolutely nothing to offend Mr Kwan in any way whatsoever. He was however a potential impediment to Mr Kwan inheriting his mother’s estate upon her death. Mr Kwan used his encyclopedic knowledge of, and research into, poisons to carry out his plan."

On January 22 this year, he donned a disguise to inject Mr O’Hara( Image: PA)

He went on: "That plan was to disguise himself as a community nurse, attend Mr O’Hara’s address, the home he shared with the defendant’s mother, and inject him with a dangerous poison under the pretext of administering a covid booster injection. It was a very carefully planned scheme; it involved Mr Kwan forging NHS documentation to lure Mr O’Hara into his plan; personal disguise to shield his identity from his victim and his mother; falsification of number plates on his car to try to evade detection; and using false details to book into a local hotel to use as the base for his operation.

"It was an audacious plan, it was a plan to murder a man in plain sight, to murder a man right in front of his own mother, that man’s life partner." An MoD expert, Dr Steven Emmett, was brought in by police to try and identify the substance used, the jury was told. He found that there has been 'no recorded medical case of any human being injected with iodomethane'.

Nevertheless, he concluded that the hypodermic injection of iodomethane into Mr O'Hara "could have resulted in the injuries" which he sustained, said Mr Makepeace. He went on: "He noted iodomethane is highly reactive even on external contact with skin leading to skin burns and blisters similar to those seen in the early stages of Mr O’Hara’s presentation.

"He concluded iodomethane was a viable candidate for causing the injuries to Mr O'Hara. He was satisfied it would be suitable as a candidate to cause acute harm to anybody upon hypodermic application."The fake ID for Raj Patel, the bogus name used by Kwan for the NHS nurse sent to administer the Covid jab, showing Kwan in a black wig with a moustache, beard and specs, was shown to the jury. There were also "comprehensive lists" of poisons, and how to use them, found at Kwan's home, including the details of how much poison was needed to kill a man.