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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    A German nurse killed between "90 - 180" patients out of boredom

    Rocky
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    A German nurse killed between "90 - 180" patients out of boredom Empty A German nurse killed between "90 - 180" patients out of boredom

    Post by Rocky Tue 29 Aug 2017, 2:49 am

    A German nurse killed between "90 - 180" patients out of boredom

    Arab and international Since 2017-08-28 at 18:24 (Baghdad time)

    Follow up of Mawazine News
    In the year 2015, German nurse Neils Hoogl was sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering two patients, but authorities are investigating with him today a suspect that his victims range from 90 to 180, in an unprecedented case in Germany.
    "After analyzing 134 buried bodies and collecting hundreds of testimonies, we can cut at least ninety crimes, and a similar number is being verified," said the head of the commission's investigative committee, Arnold Schmidt.
    "It is a unique figure in the history of the Federal Republic," she said.
    "The nurse does not mention all the cases, but in more than 30 cases the patients are reminded and how they acted" to kill them, said Daniela Poliman, a city prosecutor.
    "What we have reached is horrendous and goes beyond what we were imagining," Johann Komm, police chief in Ullenberg, northern Germany, told reporters.
    The nurse Nils Hoogle finished his wounds with large doses while they were in the recovery room. Investigators doubt they will be able to accurately determine the number of victims.
    The nurse did not have a preference for the age of the victims of their choice or sex, but chose who were in the most critical situation.
    "Nobody knows how many crimes will be discovered yet," said Thomas Sander, an investigator at Odenberg.
    The case was revealed in 2005 when a colleague surprised him by injecting a patient with a drug that doctors had not prescribed. He was sentenced in 2008 to seven and a half years in prison for attempted murder.
    While he was behind bars, the nurse admitted to the psychiatrists in prison about his crimes, talking about fifty of the patients who had lost their lives, which led the authorities to reopen the investigation.
    On February 26, 2015, he was sentenced to life imprisonment after the new investigation found him guilty of killing two patients.
    Today, the number of victims suspected of having died has risen to between 90 and 180, a record in the history of this type of case.
    During the trial in the city of Oldenburg, the nurse apologized to the relatives of his victims and explained that he had injected them with large doses of drugs to bring them to the brink of death and then showed himself the ability to revive them again, and that he was doing so out of boredom.
    This case highlights the imbalance in the health institutions in which the nurse worked, as the system did not notice any problem in these deaths.
    "No one wants to take responsibility," the investigators say.
    Police have launched an investigation into these hospitals to see if such incidents could be prevented without negligence or negligence.
    Similar issues have raised widespread interest in Germany, and have dominated the media landscape, but this is the first time that the number of victims has reached that limit.
    In 2006 Stephan Leyter was sentenced to life imprisonment for killing 28 patients. A year earlier, a nurse was sentenced to five years in prison for giving five patients overdose of medication that killed them.


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