Nurses Who Kill
In this series, we reveal the horrors in hospitals and in nursing homes and we uncover how so many got away with killing on the wards. In depth research reveals not only why it is so easy for a nurse to kill, but how easy it is to cover their tracks.
Beverley Allitt
2016 marked the 25th anniversary of a crime spree which at first baffled and then profoundly shocked Britain's Medical community. Four children were murdered, others with routine medical conditions were left fighting for their lives.
Ben Geen
Over three months at a general hospital in Oxfordshire England two patients had died and a further fifteen had become serious inexplicably gravely ill for conditions they should not have been suffering from.
Genene Jones
Drawing on court reports, evidence uncovered, recollections of those involved and using dramatic reconstructions of real life events, this program will tell the story of Nurse Genene Jones.
Stephan Letter
Stephan Letter - was superficially a model German nurse. Using dramatic reconstructions of real-life events, this programme will ask, Is Stephan Letter responsible for the murder of dozens on wards at Sonthofen hospital in Germany?
Kimberly Saenz
In 2012 jurors at a courtroom in Texas were asked to find Nurse Kimberly Saenz guilty or not guilty of murder. It had been alleged that she had targeted not just vulnerable dialysis patients - but used the equipment they relied on as a murder weapon.
Niels H
Privacy rules mean that in Germany he is known as Niels ‘H'. The camera shy Nurse Niels has much to hide…Niels H is still to reveal the extent of his homicidal behaviour whilst working in two hospitals in the North of Germany…
Colin Norris
Colin Norris was, by some accounts, an excellent Nurse. So, when inexplicable deaths on the ward at the hospitals where he worked were happening, he was not suspected.
Victorino Chua
In May 2015, Nurse Victorino Chua was tried for Murder at Manchester Crown Court. The jury would hear that, whilst Chua was working at Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport, 21 patients had inexplicably suffered hypoglycemia attacks.
Charles Cullen
2003 saw the arrest of a man who would eventually confess to the murder of at least 40 patients on wards throughout New Jersey. Charles Cullen strangely was actually a good nurse, he did his job well, but he was also an incredibly troubled man.