Blaine McGraw faces 146 specifications of violating the Uniform Code of Military Justice. (Bell County (Texas) Sheriff’s Office)
The Army on Tuesday filed more charges against a former OB-GYN at Fort Hood, Texas, who is accused of secretly video recording his exams with patients, to include more than 70 women, according to the service prosecutors’ office.
Maj. Blaine McGraw, 47, now faces 146 specifications of violating the Uniform Code of Military Justice. That includes 64 counts of sexual abuse and assault; one count of attempted sexual assault; 66 counts of indecent recording; 13 counts of conduct unbecoming; one for extramarital sexual misconduct; and one for willfully disobeying a superior commissioned officer, according to the Office of Special Trial Counsel, which is prosecuting the case.
The allegations involve 72 patients and occurred between Oct. 6, 2023, and Oct. 18, 2025, at Fort Hood’s Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center. He is also accused of secretly recording one woman in an off-post home.
McGraw was first charged in December with crimes against 44 women.
Following that, he waived his right to a preliminary hearing in which an appointed officer would review evidence and determine whether prosecutors had enough to move forward with a court-martial. He instead opted to go straight into an arraignment hearing.
A new preliminary hearing will be scheduled to review the new charges, prosecutors said.
“As this case remains an open investigation, [Office of Special Trial Counsel] prosecutors will continue to coordinate with the Department of the Army Criminal Investigation Division as the case progresses to determine if additional charges are warranted,” the special trial counsel said in a statement.
Outside of the criminal justice system, McGraw faces a lawsuit filed by more than 80 women in Bell County court. At least nine others have filed federal tort claims with the Army regarding the doctor’s actions. The women say they were forced into exams with no medical need, touched inappropriately and denied chaperones during appointments.
Daniel Conway, an attorney for McGraw on his criminal case, said these new charges “seem to be based upon a lawsuit rather than an investigation.”
McGraw is representing himself in the lawsuit, filing handwritten legal motions from Bell County Jail. Last month a judge ruled against his request to have the suit dismissed over jurisdiction.
He has now submitted a four-page request to receive the names of the 82 women signed onto the lawsuit because they have all done so under the pseudonym “Jane Doe.”
“A defendant cannot be expected to prepare his defense without knowing who is suing him and why,” he wrote.
Some of the women involved in the lawsuit and in tort claims have accused McGraw of sexual misconduct at Tripler Army Medical Center in Hawaii, his duty station before arriving at Fort Hood in August 2023, according to his service record.
One Tripler patient filed a claim Tuesday and wrote that during appointments, McGraw “placed his hand on my upper thigh and left it there,” and made uncomfortable comments during a breast exam she had told him she did not need because a different doctor had performed it.
“During his appointments with me, Dr. McGraw would often answer text messages and phone calls. I thought this was inappropriate. I now worry that he videotaped me during these visits without my consent,” the woman wrote in the claim.
She later ended her care with him after she said he texted and called her from his personal phone to schedule an invasive procedure outside of normal clinic business hours.