CDC Official Accused of Child Molestation, Bestiality Returns to Work
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An official with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who was charged with two counts of child molestation and bestiality involving a 6-year-old has returned to work with the agency.
Dr. Kimberly Lindsey, a deputy director with the CDC's Laboratory Science, Policy and Practice Program Office, had been scheduled for a preliminary hearing Thursday, but the hearing was pushed back to a later date, one of Lindsey's attorneys told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Lindsey, 44, was arrested in October along with her boyfriend Thomas Westerman. Lindsey was being held in the DeKalb County Jail on a $25,000 bond, while Westerman was released on a $16,000 bond.
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It is unknown if Westerman, also a CDC employee and charged with two counts of child molestation, has returned to work as a resource management specialist with the agency, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports.
The arrest warrant said Lindsey and Westerman are accused of making the child participate in sexual play.
Police were tipped by a medical professional in August to the alleged molestation, and the arrest warrant cited incidents in August and in January 2010, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.
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"During the investigation, evidence was recovered that led to the bestiality charge, DeKalb police spokeswoman Pamela Kunz told the newspaper.
Lindsey's work with the CDC involves oversight of the agency's $1.5 billion fiscal allocation process for terrorism preparedness and emergency response, according to the CDC's website.