Cheromiah v. United States, 55 F.Supp. 2d 1295 (D.N.M. 1999).
Twenty-year-old Michael Cheromiah sought treatment for severe chest pain at Acoma-Laguna-Canoncito Hospital five times over 4 days. Instead of performing the appropriate tests or treating his condition, hospital personnel repeatedly sent him home. The last nurse he saw said he was acting like a “wimp.” When he collapsed at home and was taken by ambulance to an Albuquerque hospital, he was discovered to have fluid around his heart causing a pericardial tamponade. Tragically, it was diagnosed too late to save his life. Michael died on the operating table on November 4, 1995. In this Federal Tort Claims Act case, the federal judge adopted our position and became the first judge in the country to find that tribal law, rather than state law applied to bad acts committed on reservation land. The case settled with an agreement that the government would provide an additional $75,000 to train emergency room personnel at ACL to better recognize life-threatening conditions.
Past successes cannot be an assurance of future success because each case must be decided on its own merits.