Were You or a Loved One a Patient Under Dr. Brian Hyatt?

The Lawyers at LeVar Law Can Help!

If you were a patient at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s Behavioral Health Unit from 2018 to 2022, we want to speak with you.

You may be entitled to damages for what you or your loved ones have experienced.

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Arkansas psychiatrist Dr. Brian Hyatt has been accused of wrongfully detaining multiple patients at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s Behavioral Health Unit (BHU). These patients were kept against their will and mistreated for days or weeks at a time. U.S. Marshals arrested and detained Dr. Hyatt on March 28, 2026. Dr. Hyatt and seven of his co-workers are facing federal charges for their misconduct.


LeVar Law Injury & Accident Lawyers is partnering with the Odom Law Firm in Fayetteville to help patients and families affected by Dr. Hyatt actions at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s BHU. We can help you seek compensation for what you’ve had to endure.


More than 300 lawsuits have been filed in this case already. Let us help you seek justice. For a free and confidential consultation with our attorneys, contact our law firm today.

On April 1, 2022, a confidential informant who worked at the Behavioral Health Unit filed a complaint about Dr. Hyatt’s conduct on the job.

According to an October 2023 KNWA report, Hyatt was rarely present at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale during work hours. He also spent little to no time seeing or working with patients, and instead pushed a computer down a hallway.

The confidential informant also expressed concerns about patient abuse at the BHU. These abuse allegations included using physical restraints and sedatives when patients were not a danger to themselves or others.

Dr. Hyatt’s contract with Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s BHU was abruptly terminated in May 2022.

On October 9, 2023, Dr. Hyatt was arrested on two counts of Medicaid fraud. He was released one hour after this initial arrest.

Dr. Hyatt pled not guilty to these charges in Pulaski County District Court on October 27, 2024.

As reported by KNWA, Dr. Hyatt and seven co-workers at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s BHU were federally indicted in March 2026.

All eight defendants face conspiracy to commit kidnapping charges. Dr. Hyatt and one of his co-workers was also charged with conspiracy to distribute and dispense a controlled substance outside the scope of professional medical practice.

The Associated Press reported that some of the co-conspirators were also charged with participating in the misconduct, failing to intervene, and concealing the poor treatment of patients in medical records.

Prior to his 2026 arrest, Dr. Hyatt faced multiple run-ins with the law throughout 2025. This includes arrests for public intoxication and driving while intoxicated (DWI). His ex-wife also sought an order of protection against him.

Multiple Patients Have Come Forward with Allegations of Mistreatment

Multiple patients have come forward with stories of mistreatment at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale from 2018-2022.

Karla Adrian-Caceres (represented by the Odom Law Firm) filed one of the first lawsuits against Dr. Hyatt and Northwest Medical Center-Springdale. She was kept at the BHU against her will for three days. Employees at the BHU forced her to sign a “voluntary” consent to admission and threatened to keep her longer.

The hospital ignored two orders from Washington County Circuit Court to have Karla released. She was eventually freed from the BHU by a deputy sheriff.

A 2023 NBC News report focused on William VanWhy, who checked himself into the BHU feeling emotionally overwhelmed. He was kept in the BHU against his will for four days without receiving any medical care. Again, a deputy sheriff needed to come to the hospital to free a patient.

The NBC report also detailed the experiences of Shannon Williams. Williams had lost her grandmother and brother in quick succession and wound up in the ER in crisis mode. She was transferred to the BHU by another physician who claimed she was a danger to herself. Williams was forced to stay in the BHU for five days and was sedated against her will.

Three other woman came forward with their experiences on a 5NEWS report from December 2023. None of these women received the care they needed from Hyatt while at Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s BHU.

Video footage obtained by the Arkansas Attorney General’s Office confirmed what the confidential informant had reported: Dr. Hyatt wandering the halls of the hospital while doing his rounds, not entering any rooms to meet with patients.

In an affidavit, fellow healthcare providers at the facility claimed that Dr. Hyatt did not want patients to know his name, and requested his name be crossed out on patient wristbands.

Medicaid paid Northwest Medical Center-Springdale’s BHU an exorbitant amount of money from 2018 to June 2022. This came from multiple fraudulent claims.

Medicaid has a coding system to determine how much providers are paid, with higher rates given to patients who require more care. While at the BHU, 99.5% of Dr. Hyatt’s patients were billed under the “significant complication” code, which has the highest billing rates.For perspective, 5NEWS reported that on average, just 21% of Medicaid billing is for the highest code. This form of Medicaid fraud is known as upcoding.