From the BBC:
“Niels Högel: German ex-nurse
convicted of killing 85 patients”
A former nurse has been convicted
of murdering 85 patients at two hospitals in northern Germany and handed a life
sentence. Judge Sebastian Buehrmann described Niels Högel's killing spree as
"incomprehensible". Högel, who is already serving life for two
murders, administered lethal doses of heart medication to people in his care
between 1999 and 2005. He is believed to be the most prolific killer in
Germany's modern history. Prosecutors said he attacked patients in order to
impress colleagues by subsequently trying to revive them. A former colleague
told the German newspaper Bild that Högel was nicknamed "resuscitation
Rambo" because of the way he "pushed everyone else aside" when
patients needed to be resuscitated. On the last day of his trial, Högel, 42,
asked the families of his victims for forgiveness for his "horrible
acts". "I would like to sincerely apologise for everything I did to
you over the course of years," he said. Högel had been accused of
murdering 100 patients in the northern cities of Delmenhorst and Oldenburg.
Police believe he may have killed far more but the cremation of bodies had
destroyed any possible evidence. Högel had confessed to 55 murders and the
court in Oldenburg convicted him of 85, German media reported. Delivering
sentence, Judge Buehrmann expressed regret that the court had not been able to
"lift the fog" for many grieving relatives. The BBC's Jenny Hill in
Berlin says the case has shocked Germany - not least because senior staff at
the two hospitals are accused of having turned a blind eye to unusually high
mortality rates. Högel's killing spree was stopped when he was caught in the
act of administering unprescribed medication to a patient in 2005 in
Delmenhorst. He was sentenced to seven years for attempted murder in 2008, but
the families of his other suspected victims pressed for a further
investigation. At a second trial that ended in 2015 he was jailed for life for
two murders and two attempted murders. However, during that trial he confessed
to a psychiatrist that he had killed up to 30 people. Investigators then
widened the investigation, exhuming 130 former patients and looking for
evidence of medication that could have triggered cardiac arrest. They also
pored over records in the hospitals he worked at. Records at the Oldenburg
hospital showed rates of deaths and resuscitations had more than doubled when
Högel was on shift, German media said.
^ This is one of the cases where
having the Death Penalty is the right and only choice for punishment. Germany
has never been good at punishing mass murderers (especially German mass
murderers) and this so-called punishment is a mere slap-on-the-hand for killing
85 people. This man has literally gotten away with murder (murders.) ^
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