Anne Ryman is an award-winning journalist and Arizona resident since 1991
PHOENIX — The ABC15 Investigators have been asking questions for years about one Valley dentist with a troubled history.
Endicott did not attend Friday’s meeting in person or virtually and did not return messages left for him by ABC15. He has the option to appeal the board’s decision.Arizona dentist with criminal history has license suspended after patient dies in his chair At a license revocation hearing last month, Arizona Assistant Attorney General Seamus Monaghan, who represents the board, described Dr. Endicott’s care of his patient who died as “egregiously subpar.
Endicott was first licensed in Michigan in 1990, but years later he lost his dental license there and in Illinois for healthcare fraud and overprescribing narcotics. But he got a second chance when the Arizona State Board of Dental Examiners licensed him in 2012. The board's vote to grant him a license was not unanimous.Records show he got licensed in Utah in 2016.
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