Six years ago, a Twin Cities podiatrist faced serious complaints about his practice. Among other misconduct, Dr. Robert Mullin botched several surgeries by cutting too much bone from patients' toes and withheld money owed to patients and insurers to preserve his cash flow, according to the Minnesota Board of Podiatric Medicine.
The board reprimanded Mullin in 2005, putting conditions on his license that required him to stop advertising services he didn't offer, provide required refunds within a month and submit regular financial reports to the board.
Since then, Mullin has faced more complaints. A former patient won a court judgment against the physician last year for charging twice for the same service. Another patient sued over an allegedly bungled hammertoe surgery -- it was the seventh malpractice lawsuit against Mullin in Hennepin County since 1997, records show. More recently, Mullin and his clinic, Advanced Foot and Ankle Care Clinics Ltd., were terminated by at least two insurance networks.
Despite his troubled history, Mullin is still practicing. His website describes him as a "nationally recognized" pioneer in using lasers to treat toenail and fingernail fungus.
Mullin did not return phone and e-mail messages from Whistleblower.
Podiatry board President Dr. Stephen Powless said his agency continues to investigate Mullin's practice.
"The resolution to the problem can't come quickly enough for me," said Powless, a Park Nicollet podiatrist. "I have spent my career improving our training and making our profession better. People like this really get to me, because it paints us in that light."
Powless declined to discuss current allegations against Mullin, but he said the board's earlier intervention fixed Mullin's problems with a specific surgical procedure.