France's 'Horror Dentist' Sentenced To 8 Years For Assault
In the  space of one hour in March 2012, Sylviane Boulesteix's dentist had  wrenched eight front teeth from her mouth and replaced them with  ill-fitting dentures. Then, as blood was still flowing from her raw  gums, he went for lunch.
The  66-year-old widow was one of scores of victims of Jacobus Van Nierop,  nicknamed the "horror dentist" by French media for massacring the mouths  of patients over a three-year period.
"I  spent three hours in his office gushing blood," she told The Associated  Press. "He never explained what he was doing. He's a butcher, a  charlatan."
 On  Tuesday a court in the town Nevers in central France found Van Nierop  guilty of assault and fraud, sentencing him to eight years in prison for  85 counts of "deliberate violence," among other crimes. He was also  barred from practicing dentistry for life.
The 51-year-old showed no signs of emotion when the court returned its verdict.
About  100 plaintiffs had filed complaints against Van Nierop, ranging from  having multiple healthy teeth removed, drill bits left in their gums and  teeth, abscesses, recurrent infections and misshapen mouths following  his interventions.
The  Dutchman was accused of illegally practicing dentistry in France,  mutilating and disabling patients from 2009 to 2012, and of overcharging  patients and billing them for imaginary procedures.
In  their 130-page ruling, the judges convicted him of assault and 61 counts  of fraud against patients, their health insurance companies and the  local social security agency. They fined him 10,500 euros ($12,000) and  said they will decide the amount of damages due to 62 of the plaintiffs  in June.
The  court acquitted the defendant of six counts of assault and some counts  of fraud. Van Nierop has 10 days to file an appeal. He has been detained  in a French prison since January 2015.
Marie-Jo Lemoine, another victim of Van Nierop, celebrated the verdict.
"It's  silly to say that but I say it: It feels good. He will have time to  think about us," she said. As for the compensation, "it won't be enough  to repair the harm he caused."
In her  closing speech last month, prosecutor Lucile Jaillon-Bru said that in  Van Nierop "there was only greed, indifference to another, even some  enjoyment in making others suffer."
She said the dentist's goal "was to always make more money" and that for the victims "the price of pain is enormous."
Van  Nierop's lawyer Delphine Morin-Meneghel acknowledged her client was  responsible for some bad procedures but insisted he committed no  intentional or premeditated violence toward any of his patients.
When  the dentist opened his office in late 2008 he was first welcomed by  residents in the small town of Chateau-Chinon, located in a remote part  of France's Burgundy region known as a "medical desert" because of a  lack of medical professionals.
Van  Nierop provided false documents to practice dentistry in France and  concealed that he was the subject of disciplinary proceedings in his own  country.
The  Dutchman lived in an imposing home with a swimming pool, drove expensive  cars and visited luxurious hotels, but had debts of nearly 1 million  euros, according to court documents. He may be insolvent, which worries  the plaintiffs who had claimed more than 3 million euros overall in  damages.
In late 2013, Van Nierop fled to Canada before being extradited to the Netherlands and then France.
Psychiatrist  Dr. Jean-Claude Guillaume and psychologist Michel Michel Bernardi said  he showed a narcissistic personality with an absence of all moral sense  and did not appear to feel any compassion.
During the trial, the lawyer for one patient told the dentist his client was just waiting for apologies.
Van Nierop replied: "I have no feelings anymore. So, if I was offering my apologies today, I would be lying."
 Dailymail.co.uk reportage.

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