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Michigan Doctor Secretly Filmed Patients Sentenced to 35–60 Years in Prison

A Michigan community is reeling after Oumair Aejaz, 41, was sentenced Tuesday, Dec. 2, to 35–60 years in prison for secretly recording nude images of women and children while working as a physician. Authorities say Aejaz exploited hospitals, schools, and even his own home to carry out years of sexual misconduct, leaving victims shocked and…

A Michigan community is reeling after Oumair Aejaz, 41, was sentenced Tuesday, Dec. 2, to 35–60 years in prison for secretly recording nude images of women and children while working as a physician. Authorities say Aejaz exploited hospitals, schools, and even his own home to carry out years of sexual misconduct, leaving victims shocked and families devastated.

Timeline of Crimes

2011–2018: Aejaz enters the U.S. on a visa, completes his residency at Detroit Sinai Grace Hospital, and works in Alabama. No public victims from this period, but authorities suspect early misconduct may have begun.

2018–2024: Aejaz works at:

  • Ascension Genesys Hospital, Grand Blanc
  • Henry Ford Macomb Hospital, Clinton Township

During this time, he allegedly sets up cameras and devices in:

  • Patient changing rooms
  • Bathrooms
  • Hospital closets
  • Bedrooms

August 2024: His wife discovers secret recordings of:

  • Herself and their two children
  • Female relatives
  • People undressing at Goldfish Swim School in Rochester Hills

October 2025: Aejaz pleads no contest to 31 felony charges, including:

  • First- and second-degree criminal sexual conduct
  • Child sexually abusive commercial activity
  • Capturing/distributing images of unclothed persons
  • Using a computer to commit a crime

Dec. 2, 2025: Judge Anderson sentences Aejaz to 35–60 years, calling the crimes “absolutely unconscionable.”

Evidence That Sealed the Case

  • Hospital Footage: Women and minors in changing rooms and bathrooms, caught on covert cameras.
  • Home Recordings: Wife, children, and female relatives filmed in private moments.
  • Swim School Footage: Multiple children and mothers recorded without consent.
  • Digital Forensics: Data recovered from computers, tablets, and encrypted cloud backups, confirming years of misconduct.

Sheriff Michael Bouchard praised investigators:

“The exploitation of women and children—especially using a trusted position as a physician—is absolutely unconscionable.”

Rumor vs. Fact

RUMOR: Aejaz sold the videos online.
FACT: There’s no verified evidence of distribution. Prosecutors only confirmed possession and production.

RUMOR: Hospital staff knew about the recordings.
FACT: Investigators found no staff complicity; Aejaz acted alone.

RUMOR: He targeted certain victims intentionally.
FACT: Evidence shows victims were diverse; the unifying factor was vulnerability.

Human Impact

The victims remain traumatized.

  • Patients lost trust in healthcare spaces.
  • Parents are furious that children were filmed in school and hospital settings.
  • Families continue to process betrayal and fear over potential future exposure of the recordings.

Sheriff Bouchard emphasized the sentence delivers justice, but for the victims, the emotional scars remain.

Your Thoughts?

Readers: How do you feel about this sentence? Do you think justice was served? Share your thoughts below — your voice matters, but please be respectful to the victims.


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