麻豆原创

麻豆原创

Nev. man sues city over misplaced severed finger

A lawsuit claims Henderson firefighters failed to preserve and deliver a severed finger to hospital staff, leaving doctors unable to reattach it after more than 12 hours without proper care

US-NEWS-LAWSUIT-HENDERSON-FIREFIGHTERS-BLAME-FOR-1-LV.jpg

Henderson Fire Department vehicle.

L.E. Baskow/TNS

By Bryan Horwath
Las Vegas Review-Journal

HENDERSON, Nev. 鈥 A man who claims that his severed finger was mishandled after police and firefighters were called to his home in 2024 has sued the city of Henderson.

Kyle Adams, according to a lawsuit filed in Clark County District Court on April 7, alleges that Henderson Fire Department personnel failed to properly identify, preserve and deliver one of his severed fingers to treating physicians and hospital officials at Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center in Las Vegas.

| READ NEXT: Time is tissue: EMS management of amputation

According to the eight-page complaint, filed through The 702 Firm, Henderson police officers and firefighters were called to Adams鈥 home in southeast Henderson the night of June 2, 2024.

While at the home, the complaint said, police officers found a severed finger from Adams鈥 right hand, which they passed along to fire department personnel, who were in the process of taking Adams to Sunrise Hospital. The lawsuit did not state how Adams was injured.

Medical providers at Sunrise, according to the lawsuit, didn鈥檛 know about the severed finger until June 3. Adams 鈥渇ound it among his personal belongings鈥 at the hospital, the complaint said.

By the time Adams discovered the finger, it had been without 鈥減roper medical preservation鈥 for over 12 hours, which made surgical reattachment impossible, according to the suit.

After Adams filed a complaint with the Henderson Police Department, he was told that fire department personnel were to blame for the 鈥渇ailure to properly deliver the finger,鈥 the lawsuit stated.

Adams has claimed in the complaint that he鈥檚 suffered the permanent loss of his finger, emotional distress, physical pain, reduced use of his right hand, and incurred medical expenses. The lawsuit asks for special damages in excess of $15,000.

The lawsuit states that the city has a duty to 鈥減roperly hire, train and supervise the staff of the Henderson Fire Department鈥 to 鈥減revent unreasonable risks of harm to the public.鈥 That duty, the lawsuit states, was breached.

Adams could not be reached for comment. Messages to The 702 Firm attorneys Michael Kane and Bradley Myers, who are listed on the complaint, were not returned.

In an email, a spokeswoman for the city of Henderson declined to comment. Cassandra Jones, a spokeswoman for HCA Healthcare, the owner of Sunrise Hospital, also declined to comment.

Trending
A state requirement will force ambulance services to install dash cameras, with smaller agencies facing added costs as larger providers say the technology improves safety, training and accountability
Gov. Kay Ivey signed legislation allowing ambulance providers to bill for treat-in-place care while advancing rural health collaboration, insurance coverage and workforce reforms statewide
Annapolis mayor鈥檚 FY2027 plan would staff a fifth ambulance during high-demand hours as EMS calls make up nearly three-quarters of department responses
The Secretary of Health and Human Services restores hiring for the World Trade Center Health Program, easing shortages that have delayed care and claims for thousands of responders and survivors

漏2026 Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Visit .
Distributed by