The organ thieves The shocking story of the first heart transplant in the segregated South

Charles Jones, 1952-

Book - 2020

In 1968 Bruce Tucker, a black man, went into Virginia's top research hospital with a head injury that would prove fatal. His heart was taken out of his body and put into the chest of a white businessman-- without permission of Tucker's family. Jones exposes the horrifying inequality surrounding Tucker's death. The circumstances surrounding his death reflect the long legacy of mistreating African Americans that began more than a century before with cadaver harvesting-- and culminated in efforts to win the heart transplant race in the late 1960s. -- adapted from jacket

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Subjects
Published
New York : Gallery Books/Jeter Publishing [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Charles Jones, 1952- (author)
Edition
First Gallery books hardcover edition
Physical Description
viii, 390 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 337-373) and index.
ISBN
9781982107529
  • Part 1. Roots
  • Chapter 1. Case of the Missing Heart
  • Chapter 2. The Resurrectionists
  • Chapter 3. The Anatomy Men
  • Chapter 4. "The Limbo of the Unclaimed"
  • Part 2. The Race
  • Chapter 5. Breaking the Heart Barrier
  • Chapter 6. Heart on Ice
  • Chapter 7. Restless Genius
  • Chapter 8. The Glass Jar
  • Chapter 9. Foreign Exchange
  • Chapter 10. Finish Line
  • Part 3. Reckoning
  • Chapter 11. The Fall
  • Chapter 12. His Brother's Heart
  • Chapter 13. The Scream
  • Chapter 14. "Facts and Circumstances"
  • Part 4. Troubles, Trials, and Tribulations
  • Chapter 15. Rejection
  • Chapter 16. The Making of a Medical Celebrity
  • Chapter 17. The Defender
  • Chapter 18. Relative Death
  • Chapter 19. Time of Trial
  • Chapter 20. Friends in High Places
  • Chapter 21. Shaping a Verdict
  • Chapter 22. The Unresolved Case of Bruce Tucker
  • Chapter 23. Down in the Well
  • Epilogue: The Soul of Medicine
  • Afterword: Unhealed History
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this doggedly reported account, journalist Jones (War Shots) reveals unexpected links between racial inequality and the race to perform Virginia's first human-to-human heart transplant. On a Friday evening in 1968, African American laborer Bruce Tucker suffered a severe head injury. Taken to a Richmond hospital, he was pronounced dead the next afternoon. Without the knowledge or permission of Tucker's family, a team led by cardiac surgeon Richard Lower transplanted Tucker's heart into a white businessman, who initially recovered from the operation but died a week later. Informed by a funeral director that his brother's heart and kidneys were missing, William Tucker hired lawyer (and future Virginia governor) Doug Wilder to look into the matter. Lower and the other surgeons were eventually cleared in a wrongful death lawsuit, though jurors intended to find the hospital negligent for allowing the procedure to go forward without consent from Tucker's next of kin, and were only prevented by a statute of limitations. Jones connects the case to the long and sordid history of medical experimentation on African Americans, including the 19th-century practice of procuring medical cadavers from black cemeteries, and explores the tangle of ethical and legal questions around the concept of "brain death." The result is a dramatic and fine-grained exposé of the mistreatment of black Americans by the country's white medical establishment. Agent: Peter McGuigan, Foundry. (Aug.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Bruce Tucker was spending time with friends after work in Richmond, VA, in May 1968 when he fell off of a wall and suffered a serious head injury. Hours later, his heart was removed and used in one of the country's earliest heart transplants. Even though his brother worked nearby, the hospital claimed it was unable to locate the patient's family to ask for permission prior to the transplant. Organ Thieves traces the story of Tucker's death, the doctors who pronounced him dead and operated, and the lawsuit that challenged their decisions. Jones, a longtime journalist in Virginia, looks at the history of early American medical schools, which often used illegally obtained African American corpses for anatomy classes. Tucker's story is placed in this tradition, in which the cruelty and indignity of racism continued even after death. Jones also examines early efforts at organ transplantation and the race by doctors, including those at the ambitious Medical College of Virginia, to perform innovative and high-profile transplants. VERDICT With elements of legal and social history, this work is recommended for readers interested in the history of race and racism, and how it relates to medical practice in the United States.--Nicholas Graham, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Another sad tale of virulent racism--this time involving the medical community--at the height of the civil rights movement. Jones is a Pulitzer Prize--nominated journalist with deep roots in Virginia's still-divided communities, so the reportage is unsurprisingly solid, and the depths and repercussions of the story he discovered are startling. The author takes the time to put the history of organ transplants and their various failures and successes into context before he arrives at the pivotal event of his narrative. In May 1968, African American factory worker Bruce Tucker fell off a brick wall and fractured his skull. Brought to the Medical College of Virginia's emergency room, Tucker was found to have suffered a grave injury. This caught the attention of Drs. David Hume and Richard Lower, who made the decision to take Tucker's heart and transplant it into Joseph Klett, a white businessman with severe heart disease. From here, the story morphs into something of a sociological mystery. Tucker's family discovered his organs were missing at the funeral home, dogged reporters attempted to chase down the facts, and hospital staff and administrators wrestled with the ethics of what they had done. There was also a hotly contested legal battle that emerged when Tucker's family sued the hospital, igniting a face-off between Jack Russell, known for "defending physicians named in medical malpractice suits," and Doug Wilder, the Tucker family's attorney and "one of the best-known African American trial lawyers practicing in the state capital." This is a powerful story that examines institutional racism, mortality, medical ethics, and the nature of justice for black men living in the American South. The author also offers two chilling codas, one involving the discovery of a mass grave and the other chronicling his search for Tucker's son some 50 years later. A moving exploration of an unthinkable trespass against an innocent man. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One: Case of the Missing Heart CHAPTER ONE Case of the Missing Heart IN LATE MAY 1968, Doug Wilder was in his law office on a tree-lined street in Richmond, Virginia. He was winding down from a long day of work when the phone rang. "They took my brother's heart!" the man on the other end of the line exclaimed in horror. 1 As one of the best-known African American trial lawyers practicing in the state capital, Wilder was accustomed to taking random phone calls day or night. Accusations of rape, robbery, and murder were not uncommon, nor were other desperate pleas from mothers and fathers seeking help for loved ones who'd run afoul of the legal system. Even as halting steps toward progress had begun to bring incremental improvements in schools, housing, and jobs, his home state of Virginia was still moving at a snail's pace from under the heavy burden of centuries of discrimination. But taking a man's heart from his own body? Wilder had never heard of such a thing. "I don't understand what you're talking about, not having a heart," he told the caller, William Tucker. "What do you mean? What happened to it?" He started taking notes as Tucker described a deeply disturbing series of events that had just unfolded over the weekend. It all started when his brother Bruce went missing after work on Friday. It took a series of frantic phone calls--prompted by an insider's tip--to finally locate him at the Medical College of Virginia (MCV) on Saturday night. Then some bureaucrats hemmed and hawed before finally delivering the shocking bad news: his brother--who'd been rushed to the hospital with a head injury less than a day before--had died only a few hours earlier on an operating table. 2 Bruce's body had been claimed and taken to a funeral home near the family farm. William was given Bruce's final possessions--among them his driver's license and a business card. His business card, William realized. It was for his shoe repair shop only a few blocks from the hospital. Why hadn't anyone called him sooner? A day later, still numb from the news of his brother's death, William began the hour-long drive to the farm. He wanted to personally break the news to his eighty-year-old mother, Emma, and to Bruce's teenage son, Abraham, who lived with her. First, though, he would check with the local undertaker about the upcoming funeral. William's best-laid plans were shattered, though, when he learned more shocking details of his brother's treatment in an operating room at the Medical College of Virginia. William Tucker's ordeal started with a hushed call from a friend inside the hospital. "Something's going on with Bruce," the friend whispered. William put down a pair of shoes he was working on. It was early Saturday afternoon. He asked his friend to speak up and explain himself. His friend whispered something about a heart operation involving Bruce. Then the line went dead. William stared at the phone and laid it back on its cradle. What was that about? He tried calling the hospital a couple of times but couldn't get a straight answer. It took him a few hours to close up shop and drive over to MCV. By then it was after 7:00 p.m. When the hospital finally sent out some men to talk to him, he asked them a simple question: "Where is my brother?" William, a polio victim who used crutches, braced himself for the reply. Bruce was dead, he was told, and "you'll need to make funeral arrangements." Nothing was said about an operation or anything about Bruce's heart. On Monday morning, William Tucker swung by Jones Funeral Home in Stony Creek, Virginia. Mack Jones, the owner and mortician, apologetically informed William that while preparing the body for burial he noticed something bizarre: Bruce was missing his heart--and his kidneys. 3 As William related his tale, Wilder put down his pen. This was too much to write down. After a silence, William asked Wilder if he'd represent him and the family and try to get to the bottom of what happened. "Yes, I will," Wilder agreed. Though he tried to sound confident, he also knew there was something about the sound of this case he couldn't quite put his finger on. It was something that went to the dark heart of the city and state of his birth. It had been almost ten years since Wilder graduated from Howard University School of Law in Washington, DC, but he still practiced law in the long, lingering shadow of the Jim Crow South. The courtrooms, jailhouses, and white-controlled bar association were all woefully behind the times and observed strict segregation. A black Virginian had no chance of having his or her trial being adjudicated by an African American judge for the simple reason that there weren't any black judges. Black jurors were also a rarity, since any defense attorney worth his salt would use the law to strike anyone of color from a jury panel. 4 William Tucker went on to describe more of the peculiar circumstances surrounding his brother's demise. Bruce had been working at an egg-processing plant not far from Wilder's law office. After work that past Friday, he was relaxing with friends and passing a bottle of wine in the shade behind an Esso station. He was sitting on a wall but lost his balance and hit his head, rendering him unconscious. An ambulance was called. Bruce was quickly transported to the nearby MCV, the state's largest teaching hospital. That's how it started. But what happened after Bruce was treated in the emergency room and later by the hospital's brain-injury specialists? And why would he attract the notice of its heart surgeons? Wasn't it his head--not his heart--that was injured? From what Wilder could piece together from William's first account, something simply didn't add up. It reminded Wilder of some kind of science fiction movie where doctors experiment on humans in the dead of night. As William's friend had whispered from inside the hospital, "They're doing some kind of experimental heart operation." But who ? Wilder wondered. And why ? What happened behind the walls of the big hospital on the hill? William Tucker sounded distraught, and his first account took some twists and turns that could be hard to follow at times: The frantic phone calls to MCV... How nobody seemed to know even where Bruce had been taken, much less anything about his condition--until someone said he'd been transferred from the main hospital to nearby St. Philip Hospital, a place Wilder knew well. Until recently it had been a segregated hospital solely for African American patients. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 had forced all hospitals to end the separation of races in their wards. So why had they sent such a severely injured black patient like Bruce Tucker over to the still-second-rate facility? The more Wilder heard from William, the more questions he had. Why hadn't the hospital given William time to get over to see Bruce when he was in such dire shape? Like the cobbler, Wilder ran a one-man shop, where he answered his own phone and even cleaned up the office. He couldn't just run out whenever an emergency arose. But why wouldn't William think he could wait a few hours if his brother was in such good hands at MCV, with some of the finest physicians in Virginia? William finally managed to close his shop and get over to St. Philip sometime between 7:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. That's when he learned his brother had died more than three hours earlier--at 3:35 p.m. But why ? From what ? And if Bruce had been so near death, why hadn't anyone informed him so he could rush over to be by his bedside? It didn't add up. One thing was clear to Wilder, though: questions needed to be asked on the family's behalf--and the sooner the better. Sure, Bruce Tucker was in bad shape when he'd been rushed to MCV. But the injured factory worker had another liability that had nothing to do with his job status or his medical condition: he was a black man with liquor on his breath. Because of that, Wilder knew that Bruce's odds for fair treatment were about as good as his own chances of ever getting elected governor. How could a man go into the hospital with a head injury and come out not only dead but also with his vital organs missing? Something about the taking of Bruce's heart was particularly shocking. Wilder--a chemistry major in college who went on to work in the state medical examiner's office 5 --considered himself a rational, progressive-thinking man. But the heart ? This still held a sacred place as the symbol of all human emotions. Who had taken it? he wondered. Who had received it--and why? Wilder was the grandson of slaves. Early in life, he developed a thick skin to deal with the segregated world of the South that still plagued his hometown in 1968. As a result of his hard work, advocacy skills, and refusal to play by the old rules, the thirty-seven-year-old's legal practice was thriving. But the call from the distraught brother had stirred up some bad childhood memories. Growing up in the 1930s and 1940s in the former capital of the Confederacy, Wilder heard rumors about what went on behind the fortresslike walls of the teaching hospital. There were whispered warnings from older boys: "You best stay away from MCV, or you might get snatched up by the night doctors!" It was like something from the pen of Edgar Allan Poe, who himself had once carried his own dark thoughts along the cobblestone streets of Richmond. Between his law practice and earlier work in the Virginia medical examiner's office, Wilder knew doctors weren't perfect. Things happened in the course of medical treatments that were kept from prying eyes. But even in his worst nightmares, he never imagined a hospital would condone stealing a man's heart. 6 It was an unseasonably warm day for spring in Richmond, so he switched on a fan by the open window. Kids were happily playing hopscotch on the sidewalk while young couples held hands as they took a stroll to enjoy this otherwise bright, sunny afternoon. Most of his neighbors were African American these days. Not that long ago, Church Hill had been a mixed neighborhood where whites and blacks lived and worked together. It was named for St. John's Church, where Patrick Henry had famously declared in the run-up to the Revolutionary War, "Give me liberty, or give me death!" As Virginia was forced to open its public schools to black children in the early 1960s, many white families fled to avoid integration. Wilder always thought the white flight was a sad commentary on his community. Something about William Tucker's story tugged at Wilder. He didn't entirely know what he was getting into, but he knew full well that he was in for one hell of a fight. MCV was not only a large medical school, but it also was a powerful one backed by big business and big government alike. As an aspiring politician, Wilder was keenly aware of how things worked around town. He had no doubt that with so much money, power, and influence at stake, MCV--which was funded by the state and was a major source of civic pride--was not a place to trifle with. It simply had too many friends in high places. But, as he later observed, "I recognized that making a living was one thing, but I also had a role to play in representing those who were in danger of being left outside the system unless I helped them." 7 Wilder hadn't paid that much attention to the recent news of the heart transplant on the front of the Richmond Times-Dispatch : "Heart Transplant Operation Performed Here at MCV." He recalled only that it was about helping a white businessman and it was a first for Virginia. 8 The article had not said anything about the donor's identity. Now, he quickly surmised, William Tucker was filling in the major gap in the story: his brother Bruce was the unnamed "donor"--the guinea pig the MCV doctors used to jump into the heart transplant race. Doug Wilder was determined to find out why. Excerpted from The Organ Thieves: The Shocking Story of the First Heart Transplant in the Segregated South by Chip Jones All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.