False vaccinations, real prison - Lower Bavarian doctor cheats on 1,290 measles certificates
One doctor, 1,290 children - and a huge deception
What sounds like a plot from a bad thriller is a bitter reality in Lower Bavaria: a doctor from the district of Landshut is said to have issued over 1,000 fake measles vaccination certificates - mostly for minors. The accusation: the vaccinations never took place. Instead of a shot, there was just an entry in the vaccination record - with a stamp and signature.
The doctor is now in custody. According to the Nuremberg Public Prosecutor General's Office, he is not only accused of fraud, but also of acting as part of a gang. This is because he is also alleged to have billed the bogus vaccinations to the Bavarian Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians and collected around 20,000 euros for them.
Major operation by investigators: 88 searches, one arrest warrant
The public prosecutor's office is talking about one of the biggest cases to date involving fake vaccination certificates in Germany. The Nuremberg district court issued 88 search warrants, not only against the doctor, but also against people who used such fake certificates - some for their children, some for themselves. This is not just a case of simple deception: anyone who presents fake vaccination certificates to the authorities risks severe penalties - even as a parent.
The authorities came across the case after various district offices had received a conspicuous number of certificates of incapacity for vaccination. When these were not recognized, parents suddenly presented valid vaccination certificates - with the signature of the doctor who is now in custody. Many of the children lived far away and were otherwise cared for by other doctors. This made the matter conspicuous - and got the ball rolling.
Measles protection is mandatory - and not a matter of negotiation
In Bavaria, measles vaccination is mandatory for children and young people as soon as they attend nursery or school. Staff in medical and community facilities are also subject to this vaccination requirement - provided they were born after 1970. The law is intended to prevent measles from spreading again. This is because measles is not a harmless childhood disease, but potentially life-threatening.
Parents who do not want to have their children vaccinated have been under pressure for years - and this is precisely where the accused doctor's business model comes in: Between mandatory vaccination, skepticism and parental concern, he offers the "shortcut" via the vaccination certificate. Without a shot, but with a stamp. But this shortcut now leads directly to prison.
Not an oversight, but a business model
Anyone who tramples on their medical responsibility in this way has no place in medicine. And anyone who thinks they can outsmart state rules with a stamp is playing with trust in our healthcare system. Vaccination obligations can be viewed critically. But circumventing them by pretending to be someone else - that's not courageous, it's dangerous. For society. And for the children who should actually be at stake here.
Do you have legal questions about medical certificates? Arrange a consultation now and get expert support!