Here are five things to know:
1. Dr. Raber signed an employment agreement with Washington Regional during his fellowship at Baltimore-based Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. The contract stated his base salary would be $716,000 with additional bonuses for potential total compensation reaching $1.5 million, according to the report.
2. Prior to signing the agreement, he visited the hospital three times on Washington Regional’s dime. The hospital said it paid around $9,177 in recruitment expenses, which included airfare to the hospital, hotel stays and meals.
3. In March 2017, about four months after signing the agreement, Dr. Raber notified the hospital that he would break their contract, deciding not to work at the hospital for “personal reasons.”
4. Washington Regional sought compensation for the recruitment expenses, payroll taxes on Dr. Raber’s $48,000 signing bonus — which totaled $3,672 — as well as $305,912, which the hospital paid for a physician staffing firm to fill the role Dr. Raber vacated. The chief U.S. District Court judge of Western district of Arkansas ruled Dr. Raber owed the hospital for the payroll taxes and recruitment expenses, totaling $12,849.
The judge did not require Dr. Raber to repay the cost of the physician staffing firm.
5. Dr. Raber paid back the signing bonus and is now working at Houston-based Baylor College of Medicine.
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