Woman testifies she was ‘livid’ Anchorage dentist pulled her tooth while on hoverboard

Seth Lookhart, left, charged with Medicaid fraud and reckless endangerment, at his trial in Anchorage on Dec. 4. (Photo by Casey Grove/Alaska Public Media)

An Anchorage dentist is on trial for multiple felony criminal counts of Medicaid fraud and reckless endangerment over his alleged overuse of sedation and — among other allegations — performing dentistry while on a hoverboard.

State prosecutors say Seth Lookhart, 34, unnecessarily sedated patients so he could bill Medicaid for more money. They say Lookhart’s billings amounted to nearly a third of all Medicaid billings for dental sedation in Alaska in 2016 and that Lookhart’s office billed about $2 million in unjustified intravenous sedation that year alone.

A state board suspended Lookhart’s dentistry license in 2017.

One of his patients was Veronica Wilhelm, who testified in court Wednesday that her son had also been a patient. Wilhelm said it had angered her when Lookhart sedated her son for a simple teeth cleaning.

But what happened to Wilhelm herself has drawn the most attention to the case: While Wilhelm was fully sedated, Lookhart extracted one of her teeth while riding on a “hoverboard.” He also videotaped the procedure and joked about what he’d done with someone to whom he sent the video.

Wilhelm testified that she found out when an investigator, who discovered the video while looking into the fraud allegations, showed it to her.

“I was pretty livid. Pretty pissed off,” Wilhelm said.

A prosecutor played the video again for Wilhelm, who was shocked, again, to see herself unconscious in an unauthorized video.

“You can see that thing moving while he’s pulling my tooth out. That’s crazy,” Wilhelm said. “I think you gotta be pretty full of yourself to think that you can pull people’s tooth out on a hoverboard.”

In defense, Lookhart’s attorney Paul Stockler initially focused on Medicaid audits and edits to documentation. Stockler said Lookhart denies the felony fraud allegations, but he admits to some of the accusations, including the hoverboard incident, which Stockler described as “absolutely stupid.”

But Stockler questioned whether Lookhart’s conduct was criminal.

“There’s bigger questions to be answered sometimes of, ‘Is this a crime?’ which, I’m not minimizing what he did. It was wrong,” Stockler said. “But I’ve seen much more dangerous things where no doctor has been charged.”

Alaska Public Media

Alaska Public Media is one of our partner stations in Anchorage. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

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