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lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
A surgical team was about to harvest this man’s organs — until his | |
doctor intervened | |
By Cara Anthony, KFF Health News | |
Updated: | |
2:18 PM EDT, Fri September 12, 2025 | |
Source: KFF Health News | |
Lying on top of an operating room table with his chest exposed, Larry | |
Black Jr. was moments away from having his organs harvested when a | |
doctor ran breathlessly into the room. | |
“Get him off the table,” the doctor recalled telling the surgical | |
team at SSM Health Saint Louis University Hospital as the team cleaned | |
Black’s chest and abdomen. “This is my patient. Get him off the | |
table.” | |
At first, no one recognized Zohny Zohny in his surgical mask. Then he | |
told the surgical team he was the neurosurgeon assigned to Black’s | |
case. Stunned by his orders, the team members pushed back, Zohny said, | |
explaining that they had consent from the family to remove Black’s | |
organs. | |
“I don’t care if we have consent,” Zohny recalled telling them. | |
“I haven’t spoken to the family, and I don’t agree with this. Get | |
him off the table.” | |
Black, his 22-year-old patient, had arrived at the hospital after | |
getting shot in the head on March 24, 2019. A week later, he was taken | |
to surgery to have his organs removed for donation — even though his | |
heart was beating and he hadn’t been declared brain-dead, Zohny said. | |
Black’s sister Molly Watts said the family had doubts after agreeing | |
to donate Black’s organs but felt unheard until the 34-year-old | |
doctor, in his first year as a neurosurgeon, intervened. | |
Today, Black, now 28, is a musician and the father of three children. | |
He still needs regular physical therapy for lingering health issues | |
from the gun injury. And Black said he is haunted by what he remembers | |
from those days while he was lying in a medically induced coma. | |
“I heard my mama yelling,” he recalled. “Everybody was there | |
yelling my name, crying, playing my favorite songs, sending prayers | |
up.” | |
He said he had tried to show everyone in his hospital room that he | |
heard them. He recalled knocking on the side of the bed, blinking his | |
eyes, trying to show that he was fighting for his life. | |
Organ transplants save a growing number of lives in the U.S. every | |
year, with performed in 2024, according to the Organ Procurement and | |
Transplantation Network, which oversees the nation’s transplant | |
system. And awaiting donations that never come. | |
But organ donation has also faced , including reports of patients | |
showing alertness before planned organ harvesting. The results of a | |
into a Kentucky organ donation nonprofit, first disclosed by in June, | |
found that during a four-year period, medical providers had planned to | |
harvest the organs of 73 patients despite signs of neurological | |
activity. Those procedures ultimately didn’t take place, but federal | |
officials to overhaul the nation’s organ donation system. | |
“Our findings show that hospitals allowed the organ procurement | |
process to begin when patients showed signs of life, and this is | |
horrifying,” Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy | |
Jr. said in a statement. “The entire system must be fixed to ensure | |
that every potential donor’s life is treated with the sanctity it | |
deserves.” | |
Even before this latest investigation, Black’s case showed Zohny that | |
the organ donation system needed to improve. He was initially hesitant | |
to talk to KFF Health News when contacted in July about Black. But | |
Zohny said his patient’s story had stuck with him for years, | |
highlighting that while organ donation must continue, little is | |
understood about human consciousness. And determining when someone is | |
dead is the critical but confusing question at play. | |
“There was no bad guy in this. It was a bad setup. There’s a | |
problem in the system,” he said. “We need to look at the policies | |
and make some adjustments to them to make sure that we’re doing organ | |
donation for the right person at the right time in the right place, | |
with the right specialists involved.” | |
LJ Punch, a former trauma surgeon who was not involved with the case | |
but reviewed Black’s medical records for KFF Health News, questioned | |
whether Black’s injury — from gunfire — possibly contributed to | |
how he was treated. Young Black men like Larry Black are in the United | |
States, and . His experience exemplifies “the general neglect” of | |
Black men’s bodies, Punch said. | |
“That’s what comes up for me,” Punch said. “Structurally, not | |
individually. Not any one doctor, not any one nurse, not any one team. | |
It’s a structural reality.” | |
The hospital declined to comment on the details of Black’s case. SSM | |
Health’s Kim Henrichsen, president of Saint Louis University Hospital | |
and St. Mary’s Hospital-St. Louis, said the hospital system | |
approaches “all situations involving critical illness or end-of-life | |
care with deep compassion and respect.” | |
Mid-America Transplant, the federally designated organ procurement | |
organization serving the St. Louis region, does not comment on | |
individual donor cases, according to , executive vice president for | |
organ procurement. She did tell KFF Health News that her organization | |
has walked away from cases when patients’ conditions change — | |
though not as late as when they are in the operating room for | |
harvesting. | |
“Let me be clear about that. It happens way before then,” she said. | |
“It definitely happens multiple times a year where we get consent. | |
The family has made the decision, we approach, we get consent, it’s | |
all appropriate, and then a day or so later they improve and we’re | |
like, ‘Whoa.’” | |
But Speir said the recent media stories about the nation’s donation | |
system are prompting a lot of questions about a process that also does | |
a lot of good. | |
“We’re losing public trust right now,” Speir said of the | |
industry. “And we’re going to have to regain that.” | |
Blink twice for a chance at life | |
It was a Sunday afternoon when gunshots rang out in downtown St. Louis. | |
Black had been on his way to his sister’s apartment. | |
“I didn’t know I was shot at first,” Black said, sitting in his | |
living room six years later. “I literally ran like a block or two | |
away.” | |
He collapsed moments later, he said, crawling to the back door of a | |
woman’s home, where he asked for help. He said he asked the woman to | |
give him two large towels, one covered in rubbing alcohol and another | |
soaked with hydrogen peroxide. He wrapped those towels around the back | |
of his head. | |
When his sister Macquel Payne found him, he was lying on the ground | |
near the leasing office of her apartment complex, a crowd gathered | |
around him. | |
Before an ambulance took him to the hospital, Black told his sister not | |
to worry about him. | |
“I’m hearing Larry say, ‘I’m good, sis,’” Payne recalled. | |
“‘I’m OK.’” | |
Black said he went in and out of consciousness on the way to the | |
hospital and once he was there. | |
“I got to hitting my hand on the side of the ICU bed,” Black said. | |
“They was like: ‘That’s just the reaction, the side effects of | |
the medicine. Ask him some questions.’” | |
Payne said she asked her brother to blink twice if he could remember | |
his first pet, a dog named “Little Black” that looked like the | |
Chihuahua from the Taco Bell commercials. | |
Black said he remembers blinking twice. His sisters remember the same. | |
Payne asked him another question. This time she wanted to know whether | |
her brother recognized their family. Black said he blinked twice when | |
he saw his mom and sister standing nearby. | |
Black said his sister then asked him “the main question” that | |
everyone needed him to answer. | |
“She’s like, ‘If you want them to pull a plug, if you tired and | |
you giving up, blink once,’” Black recalled. “‘If you still got | |
some fight in you, blink more than once.’” | |
Black said he started blinking and hit the bed to let his family know | |
that he was still with them. | |
The sisters said hospital staffers told them the movements were | |
involuntary. | |
‘Not right now’ | |
In a waiting room steps away from the hospital’s intensive care unit, | |
a woman carrying brochures explained to Payne and the rest of the | |
family that Black had identified himself as a possible organ donor on | |
his ID. | |
The woman wanted to know whether the family wished to move forward with | |
the process if Black died, Payne said. | |
“I remember my mom saying, ‘Not right now,’” Black’s sister | |
recalled. “‘It’s kind of too soon.’” | |
Payne said the woman persisted. | |
“She was like, ‘Well, can I at least leave you some brochures or | |
something?’” Payne recalled. “Then my mom got a little agitated | |
because it felt like she was being, like, pushy.” | |
The family was already acquainted with the organ donation process. In | |
2007, Black’s teenage brother Miguel Payne drowned at a local lake. | |
His organs were donated, Macquel Payne said, noting the family was told | |
that his body parts and tissues helped multiple people. | |
“I believe in saving lives,” Payne said. “But don’t be pushy | |
about it.” | |
Mid-America Transplant handles the organ transplant process for 84 | |
counties in parts of Illinois, Arkansas, and Missouri, including St. | |
Louis. Like the Kentucky organization, it is one of 55 federally | |
designated nonprofits that facilitate organ donations throughout the | |
country. | |
The nonprofit has never pressured a family into organ donation, Speir | |
said. Registering to be an organ donor is legally binding, she said, | |
but Mid-America has walked away from cases when families didn’t want | |
to move forward. | |
She said her staff tries to dispel myths about organ donation and | |
alleviate concerns. “We want to have the families leave with a | |
positive experience,” Speir said. | |
Despite the family’s initial ambivalence, they ultimately consented | |
to moving forward with donating Black’s organs. Watts said members of | |
her brother’s care team had told the family that her brother was at | |
“the end of the road.” | |
The family was told to prepare for Black’s “last walk of life,” | |
Payne said. Also known as an honor or hero’s walk, the tradition | |
honors the life of an organ donor before the harvesting process begins. | |
At the time, Payne said, she thought her brother still had a fighting | |
chance. She asked the hospital staffers to take another look at him | |
before he was wheeled down the hall. | |
“I’m like, ‘My brother’s in there tapping on the bed,’” | |
Payne said. “They said, ‘That’s just his nerves.’ But I’m | |
like, ‘No, something’s not right.’ It’s like he was too alert. | |
He was letting us know: ‘Please don’t let them do this to me. I’m | |
here. I can fight this.’ They were saying that’s what the medicine | |
will do, it affects his nerves.” | |
After the family had agreed to move forward with the organ donation | |
process, the two sisters said, an especially helpful member of | |
Black’s medical team no longer treated them the same way. She became | |
standoffish, they said. | |
“You could tell the dynamics had changed,” Watts said. | |
‘#RIPMyBrother’ | |
The family put on blue jumpers for the walk of life. “We just walked | |
around the floor, and everybody was, like, acknowledging him,” Payne | |
said. “We just thought this was the end.” | |
A friend Black went to high school with filmed part of the ritual. In a | |
, Black is seen being wheeled on a stretcher down a hallway in the | |
hospital. His eyes are half-open. People are crying. | |
False rumors then started to swirl outside the hospital. | |
Brianna Floyd said she went into shock when she heard that her friend | |
was dead. She knew that Black had been shot in the head. But a few days | |
earlier, that he was in stable condition. | |
Floyd checked Facebook to see whether the news of his death was true. | |
Her timeline was flooded with farewell posts for Black, so she decided | |
to write one, too. | |
“I Love You So Much Brother,” . “#RIPMyBrother. Never Thought I | |
Would Say That.” | |
Black’s father rushed to the hospital when he heard a rumor that his | |
son was being wheeled to the morgue. | |
“He’s gone,” Lawrence Black Sr. recalled being told. “He’s | |
going to the freezer now.” | |
Black Sr. said he refused to believe that his son was dead. The thought | |
was devastating. He had already experienced that kind of loss to gun | |
violence. | |
“You wake up and nothing’s the same,” Black Sr. said. “The | |
spirit is lingering for about a week, and you can feel it, you know?” | |
Overwhelmed with emotion, he prayed for his son to live. | |
‘I can’t kill your son’ | |
Zohny, the neurosurgeon, said he heard an announcement about a | |
“hero’s walk” over a loudspeaker in the hospital. He wasn’t | |
familiar with the term, so he asked about it. Medical residents in the | |
hospital explained and told Zohny that the walk was possibly for his | |
patient Larry Black. | |
“No, that can’t be my patient,” Zohny said he told them. “I | |
didn’t agree.” | |
That’s when Zohny called the ICU to check on Black’s status. A | |
person who answered the phone told him that Black was being wheeled to | |
an operating room, he said. | |
“This is my first year,” Zohny said. “Your first year out as a | |
neurosurgeon is the riskiest time for you. Any mistakes, anything | |
small, basically derails your career. So the moment this happened, my | |
legs went weak and I was very nervous because, at the end of the day, | |
your job as a doctor is to be perfect.” | |
KFF Health News, Zohny, and Punch all reviewed the medical files given | |
to Black from his hospitalization. It’s not clear from the records | |
what led to that moment. | |
“In every case, the patient must be declared legally dead by the | |
hospital’s medical team before organ procurement begins. This is not | |
negotiable,” Mid-America Transplant’s CEO and president, Kevin Lee, | |
wrote in on the nonprofit’s website, responding to the news and | |
federal comments about the investigation centered in Kentucky. | |
“Mid-America Transplant strictly follows all laws, regulations, and | |
hospital protocols throughout the process.” | |
He said in a statement to KFF Health News that a person can be | |
pronounced dead in two ways. A person is legally dead if their heart | |
stops beating and they stop breathing, which is when donation after | |
cardiac death can occur. A person can also become an organ donor if | |
their brain, including the brain stem, has irreversibly ceased | |
functioning, which is when brain death donation can occur. | |
“Every hospital has their own process in declaring both types of | |
death,” Speir said in a statement. “Mid-America Transplant ensures | |
hospitals follow their policies.” | |
But Black didn’t fall into either category, Zohny said. And, he said, | |
Black hadn’t had what is known as a brain death exam. | |
Zohny said he immediately informed his chairman about the situation, | |
then started running to the operating room. Black’s family was | |
waiting in the hallway, unaware of the drama happening behind a set of | |
closed silver doors. | |
Then Zohny emerged, pulling Black’s family into an empty operating | |
room that was nearby. | |
“I remember he told my mama, ‘I can’t kill your son,’” Payne | |
recalled. “She said, ‘Excuse me?’” | |
Zohny put an image of his brain on a screen. Then he circled the part | |
of Black’s brain that was damaged. He explained that Black’s | |
gunshot wound was something that he could possibly recover from, though | |
he might need therapy. He asked the family whether they were willing to | |
give Black more time to heal from the injury, instead of withdrawing | |
care. | |
“In my opinion, no family would ever consent to organ donation unless | |
they were given an impression that their family member had a very poor | |
prognosis,” Zohny said. “I never had a conversation with the family | |
about the prognosis, because it was too early to have that | |
discussion.” | |
Zohny knew that he was taking a professional risk when he ran into the | |
operating room. | |
“The worst-case scenario for me is that I lose my job,” he recalled | |
thinking. “Worst-case scenario for him, he wrongfully loses his | |
life.” | |
Later, Zohny said, a hospital worker who transported Black from the ICU | |
to the operating room told Zohny that something had seemed off. | |
“I remember him looking at me and saying, ‘I’m so glad you | |
stopped that,’” Zohny recalled. “And I said, ‘Why?’ And he | |
said: ‘I don’t know. His eyes were open the whole time, and I just | |
felt like he was looking at me. His eyes didn’t move, but it felt | |
like he was looking at me.’” | |
‘Back from the dead’ | |
After Zohny’s intervention, Black was wheeled back to the ICU. Zohny | |
said the medical team held back all medications that caused his | |
sedation. | |
Black woke up two days later, Zohny said, and started speaking. Within | |
a week, the neurosurgeon said, he was standing. | |
“I had to learn how to walk, how to spell, read,” Black said. “I | |
had to learn my name again, my Social, birthday, everything.” | |
Zohny continued to care for Black during what remained of his 21 days | |
in the hospital. During a follow-up appointment, he posed for a photo | |
with Black and his older sister, Watts. Next to Zohny, Black is | |
standing up, a brace on his leg. | |
“It’s a miracle that despite flawed policy we were able to save his | |
life,” Zohny said. “It was an absolute miracle.” | |
Zohny, who was working as a fellow and assistant professor at the time, | |
left Saint Louis University Hospital for another job later that year | |
when his fellowship ended. He said Black’s story made him question | |
what we know about consciousness. | |
He’s now working on a new method that quantifies consciousness. Zohny | |
said it could possibly be used to help measure consciousness from brain | |
signals, such as with an electroencephalogram, or EEG, a test that | |
measures electrical activity in the brain. Zohny said his method still | |
needs rigorous validation, so he recently started a medical research | |
company called Zeta Analytica, separate from his work at the West | |
Virginia University , which he’ll begin in October. | |
“We don’t understand the brain to the level that we should, | |
especially with all of the technology we have now,” Zohny said. | |
Today, Black is trying to move forward. He said he has seizures if the | |
bullet fragments in his head move around too much. He said he easily | |
overheats because of the injury. | |
He doesn’t blame his family for their decision. But he questions the | |
organ transplantation process. “It’s like they choose people’s | |
destiny for them just because they have an organ donor ribbon on their | |
ID,” Black said. “And that’s not cool.” | |
To help him process everything that happened to him in 2019, he makes | |
music under the name BeamNavyLooney. “I am back from the dead,” he | |
recently about his experience. | |
Earlier this year, Black celebrated the birth of another son, who was | |
sleeping peacefully at home as Black recounted his story. | |
“He doesn’t really cry,” Black said. “He just makes noises.” | |
Black sat with a firearm within reach. He said he keeps the gun close | |
to protect his family. It’s still hard for him to sleep at night. | |
Nightmares about what happened — both on the street and in the | |
hospital — keep him awake. | |
He said he no longer wants to be on the organ donor registry. | |
This project was supported by a fellowship from the Association of | |
Health Care Journalists, with funding from The Joyce Foundation. | |
is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health | |
issues and is one of the core operating programs at — the independent | |
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