What you should know:
1. A .22-caliber bullet was taped to an employee’s locker. After management alerted the police, the center was locked down.
2. An employee claimed the bullet and said it fell out of his jacket pocket while he was changing.
3. A member of the center’s cleaning crew found the bullet and taped it to the locker it was in front of. It was not the bullet-owner’s locker.
4. After the clarification, the lockdown was lifted and business resumed.
More articles on surgery centers:
Wisconsin health system to open ASC — 3 insights
New York hospital opens pediatric surgery center, part of $120M investment
Iowa hospital opens $8.4M surgery center — 3 insights
