Skincare clinic employee charged with sexual assault; clients warned to seek STI testing
CBC
An employee at a skincare business in Burnaby, B.C., has been criminally charged after two women reported being sexually assaulted during treatments.
RCMP on Thursday said Farshad Khojsteh Kashani, 47, was charged with two counts of sexual assault earlier this week. Investigators said he worked at Fab Skin Care on Kingsway, just east of Metrotown.
A statement said the first alleged victim came forward to police in 2019 and said she'd been sexually assaulted during treatment.
A second woman who received treatment by the same practitioner at the clinic came forward last year.
"We are grateful to the two women who came forward to police, but our investigators haven't ruled out that there could be other people with information who we have not yet heard from," RCMP Cpl. Michelle Hurtubise wrote in the statement.
"We are appealing for anyone else with information to contact our investigators."
At the same time as RCMP announced the charges Thursday, Fraser Health issued a public alert to anyone who received high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) vaginal tightening services from Fab Skin Care.
The warning said those people need to get tested for sexually transmitted infections "immediately."
"Fraser Health Public Health was made aware that this business was not providing these services through a registered health professional and was not using appropriate infection control measures while providing these services," the notice read.
"As a precaution, Fraser Health Public Health is advising people who received this service at Fab Skin Care to visit their family physician or primary care provider as soon as possible to be screened for chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis."
The authority has also advised those people to be routinely screened for human papillomavirus, or HPV.
Those waiting for the results of their tests should take steps to avoid potentially exposing others, like using a condom during sex.
"Members of the public should be aware that, under the B.C. Health Professions Act, only certain registered health professionals may perform services involving intravaginal devices or intravaginal examinations," the notice noted.
"If a personal service establishment is using intravaginal devices, ask if their services are performed by a registered health professional."