Charges filed in attack on California vaccine clinic staff
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — Charges have been filed against a man who allegedly punched two medical assistants at a COVID-19 vaccination clinic in Southern California and groped a nurse providing him medical care, prosecutors said.
Charges of misdemeanor battery and resisting arrested were filed against Thomas Apollo, 44, of Poway, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office said in a statement Tuesday.
Apollo faces arraignment on March 30. No attorney was listed for him on the court’s website.
According to prosecutors, Apollo was asked to leave the Families Together clinic in Tustin on Dec. 30 after he refused to wear a mask. He allegedly called the clinic workers “murderers” and directed expletives at workers who asked him to put on a mask or go outside.
Prosecutors said Apollo punched one assistant five times, hit another twice and then was pinned down by bystanders until police arrived.
He allegedly refused to follow commands from police, who used a Taser to subdue him. While being treated at a medical center for minor injuries, he bent a nurse’s finger and groped her breast, prosecutors said.
“Most importantly, we hope that the charges announced today will help healthcare workers feel supported and protected by the authorities while performing their duties and saving lives,” a clinic statement said.