Doctor of training accused of secretly recording a video of hundreds of female colleagues in the hospital bathrooms
/ News/ AP
Melbourne, Australia – A learning surgeon was released from custody on Friday after he was accused of secretly recording hundreds of medical colleagues in the bathrooms of Australian hospitals.
Ryan Cho, 28, will probably face around 500 positions related to 4,500 intimate videos that he secretly recorded with phones mainly in the bathrooms of the personnel of three hospitals in Melbourne since 2021, the police claimed in documents cited in the Supreme Court of the State of Victoria.
Judge James Elliott ruled that the Junior doctor was released on the condition that he lives with his parents, who moved from Singapore to Melbourne in advance of his son’s month in prison. His parents were requested to publish a guarantee of $ 50,000 Australians ($ 32,000).

The prosecutor argued that Cho had no significant ties with Australia after being suspended from his work and that the charges against him could be an incentive to flee. While Cho became an Australian permanent resident in April, he would face deportation if he were sentenced and sentenced to 12 months or more in prison, Hammill said.
The judge pointed out that Cho had delivered his Singapore passport and had no criminal connections to help him abandon Australia.
Choked the reporters’ questions when he left the court building with sunglasses on his prescription glasses and a surgical facial mask.
Police allege that Cho registered intimate images of at least 460 women. The judge pointed out that there were no accusations that Choc had disseminated those images.
Cho was arrested in July after a phone was found from inside a mesh bag that hung in a bathroom at the Austin hospital. Police alleged that he also recorded in the bathrooms at the Peter Maccallum cancer center and the Royal Melbourne Hospital.
His lawyer Julian McMahon rejected the fears of prosecutors that if he released, Cho could interfere with witnesses. It is likely that there are hundreds of witnesses who allege similar offenses, McMahon said.
“There is a feeling that if my client had to participate in the criminal crime to interfere with witnesses that he would not affect the result of the case,” said McMahon.
Cho was initially accused of six crimes, but another 127 charges were added on Thursday, including intentional recording of intimate images without permission.
McMahon said it was too early to know if the accusations would go to trial. Cho has not entered replicas.
Cho arrived in Australia as a student in 2017 and studied medicine at the Monash University of Melbourne.
In a similar case, a former hospital employee of the Pittsburgh area Added in video recorded to employees and patients In a bathroom at the West Penn hospital during his trial at the beginning of 2021. A judge sentenced Guy Caley to 11 to 22 months in prison, followed by 10 years of probation.
He declared himself guilty in May from 2021 to 89 charges in relation to video in secret.
- sexual harassment
- Australia
- Inappropriate sexual behavior


