Overview
- Maj. Blaine McGraw was suspended on Oct. 17 following a patient’s allegation, and no criminal charges have been announced as the inquiry continues.
- The Army released McGraw’s full service history, documenting training and residency at Tripler in 2019–2023 before his assignment at Fort Hood.
- Plaintiff attorneys say they now represent 56 women with similar allegations, and multiple civil actions have been filed, including a federal tort claim.
- Officials say more than 1,400 former patients received letters and access to an expanded call center, a support line, and Special Victims Counsel.
- A servicemember’s husband is credited by plaintiffs with prompting the probe by reporting covert filming, while an Army spokesman says senior leaders met with the couple.