Murdered with Insulin: Nurse Who Killed Her Elderly Patients - Full Interrogation

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  • Опубликовано: 17 мар 2023
  • In this gripping video, we present the full interrogation of Elizabeth Wettlaufer, a Canadian nurse whose heinous crimes shocked the nation and sent shockwaves through the healthcare community. The full interrogation footage offers a rare glimpse into the mind of a killer, as investigators work to unravel the twisted motivations behind her actions and bring justice to the victims and their families. Wettlaufer, once trusted with the care of vulnerable elderly patients, was convicted of murdering eight individuals under her care by administering lethal doses of insulin.
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    Throughout the course of the full interrogation, disturbing details emerge about Wettlaufer's calculated and cold-blooded approach to her crimes. The disgraced nurse not only confessed to the eight murders but also admitted to attempting to take the lives of six additional patients. As the interrogation unfolds, viewers will witness the skillful techniques employed by investigators to extract the truth and build a solid case against Wettlaufer.
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @LawAndCrime
    @LawAndCrime  Год назад +48

    Subscribe to the creator, Stranger Stories! www.youtube.com/@StrangerStories

  • @jackchop1576
    @jackchop1576 Год назад +854

    I saw a true crime documentary about her and there was one part where it said, "Elizabeth explored her bisexuality in college but nobody else was interested" 😂😂😂

  • @Lindsey_Lockwood
    @Lindsey_Lockwood Год назад +506

    If you want to know about how the state of our healthcare infrastructure is doing keep in mind she had no problem continuing to find employment in trustedmedical capacity AFTER being caught passed out at work AND stealing meds. Now be aware that people that have done far far worse criminally are entrusted to work with our elderly at nursing homes.

    • @ceilconstante640
      @ceilconstante640 Год назад +38

      Your comment should be pinned at the top.

    • @tinawindham6958
      @tinawindham6958 Год назад +32

      20 yrs ago I worked at a hospital in New Orleans, I caught a husband signing on a wife pain meds that he witnessed she wasted a portion. We were all RN’s he came from a different floor which is NOT procedure. I reported them and they were “let go”… I do believe they were stealing pain meds and if I hadn’t caught him in the med room, no one would have known…we check for signatures but not necessarily the name.
      Also had a nurse giving a lot of elderly people sleeping pills and pain meds. She had passed out in the bathroom from giving herself morphine. That hospital sent her to rehab and she could not work around pain meds ever again so her license was noted. That means she could do intake work , school nurse etc but no home health or hospital or hospice nursing.

    • @jaspermartin7444
      @jaspermartin7444 Год назад +9

      ohmygosh I'm never going to forget your comment.

    • @ceilconstante640
      @ceilconstante640 Год назад +26

      A LOT of CNA's working in Nursing homes were convicts that can't get a job handling money. If you have a loved one in a facility, you need to prioritize coming and going often and just hanging out. Ask questions and don't allow them to sneak in flu shots etc. not authorized.

    • @carolsisti7203
      @carolsisti7203 Год назад +1

      Pretty scary to think about.

  • @agapereign
    @agapereign 5 месяцев назад +93

    My sister is a nurse. This behavior is very common in facilities that care for the elderly. Very few people actually care about them. My sister said it’s depressing to see just how little others care about the elderly.

    • @solotrizteynocerebro
      @solotrizteynocerebro 5 месяцев назад +4

      Facts

    • @tabularasa7775
      @tabularasa7775 5 месяцев назад +5

      Problem is , the few that are caught arn't followed home .

    • @21stcenturyshowgirl
      @21stcenturyshowgirl 5 месяцев назад +3

      yes they are the true unrepresented minority

    • @fruitofthespiritgalatians5856
      @fruitofthespiritgalatians5856 4 месяца назад +2

      I worked in LTC, and ppl generally cared for the ppl living there. None of this insanity.

    • @cynthiagarcia2770
      @cynthiagarcia2770 4 месяца назад +2

      This is very true I was a CNA and had to quit because of the way Nurses treated Elderly at the facility it was horrendous

  • @anataye88
    @anataye88 Год назад +443

    Why is someone who is addicted to drugs, has history of bipolar disorder and on anti depressants able to care for patients? Rip to those who died by her actions. Absolutely sickening.

    • @mtjensen5
      @mtjensen5 Год назад +26

      Yeah that’s what I wonder. Unacceptable!!!

    • @27Zangle
      @27Zangle Год назад +117

      There are some people who are bipolar and depressed that have been able to live normal lives with proper help. Now for the the drug addiction issue, she should not have been able to be in that position. I suppose it might be difficult for the employer to know.

    • @crawlmanjrable
      @crawlmanjrable Год назад

      The nursing home industry is filled with... lets same damaged people.

    • @uglysonic8777
      @uglysonic8777 Год назад +89

      Taking Antidepressants really isn't that big of a deal compared to the rest.... You can take them and work fine.

    • @ThelaughingPineapples
      @ThelaughingPineapples Год назад +98

      There are millions of people who have bipolar and are on medication for it antidepressants or even psych meds who live a pretty normal lifestyle and can work even in the medical field just fine. She has more issues than just that!

  • @mrnygren2
    @mrnygren2 Год назад +207

    I have diabetes type 1 and an overdose of insulin is torture - you feel like you're gonna lose conciousness which is a horrible feeling and in panic you'd reach for sugar to increase the level of sugar in the blood.
    These elderly victims didn't have that opportunity and died in panic helpless to do anything about it.

    • @teresacox2511
      @teresacox2511 Год назад

      I hear you darlin. I’m type 2 diabetic and dropped down as low as 42 and I thought I was dying. I had fallen asleep after taking my insulin. I woke up to what I thought was someone hitting me in the head. It was my heart pounding out of my chest. I had to crawl down my steps from my bedroom and drag myself across the floor to where I had sat some soft drinks that I kept around just incase my sugar dropped. I grabbed one and opened it just as I was blacking out. I managed to take a few drinks of it and laid there waiting to die. I woke up a few minutes later and took several more swallows of the soft drink. Then I was able to sit up and get myself something to eat. Still crawling around on the floor. I got myself over to the couch and climbed up on it and laid down. I laid on my side and ate a pack of crackers. I fell asleep and slept for 10 hours. I now keep a package of glucose tablets with me all the time. I don’t even get up and walk to the bathroom without carrying them with me. I had to have surgery one time and I was in the hospital for several days. I hated the food so I barely ate anything while I was there. The nurse came in and without checking my sugar, she gave me my scheduled insulin. She walked out and left her stethoscope in my room, thank God she did. Because when she came back to get it, she looked at me and said, are you okay? I managed to say somethings wrong. She quickly grabbed the glucometer and checked my sugar. It was 37!! She ran and grabbed a bag of glucose and hung it up and hooked me up to the drip and pushed it fast. I was blacking out just as she got there with the glucose. They were able to bring me back around. I told her that I hadn’t eaten anything and she should check my sugar before she gave me the insulin but she was in a hurry and nearly killed me. I was too weak from the surgery to argue with her. People are crazy these days and very irresponsible. Thank goodness you’re okay. Sending gentle hugs 🤗

    • @karlahemphill3414
      @karlahemphill3414 Год назад +13

      I thought it was a horrible death. Thanks for sharing that. Godbless those poor people.

    • @stancexpunks
      @stancexpunks Год назад +5

      Uhh I highly doubt someone who didn’t know they were passing out from insulin OD would know to reach for sugar. But by all accounts, it seems like insulin OD is pretty painless. You just pass out, which you even said so yourself in your comment.

    • @mrnygren2
      @mrnygren2 Год назад +27

      @@stancexpunks No, if you have diabetes you know immediately when you're low as that's a common experience throughout life.
      I wouldn't say that they didn't know what was happening unless of course if they were sleeping.
      It's not painless unless drowning is painless to you as well.

    • @GaryWyrd
      @GaryWyrd Год назад +30

      @@stancexpunks You don't just "pass out", you feel the effects of low blood sugar long before that. Adrenaline surges through your body when that happens. Your hands shake, your heart pounds, sweat pours from your body. You'd feel delirious and have a hard time understanding what's going on around you. It's not fun. I'm type 1 and have gone through that process many many times. It's a distinct feeling so I know exactly what's going on. My first instinct is to reach for sugar.

  • @nikkisu2
    @nikkisu2 10 месяцев назад +91

    The fact that she could come in and confess all of those murders and then think she’s going home baffles me. It’s even crazier because it sounds like they may have let her.

    • @SaraSummer
      @SaraSummer 10 месяцев назад +11

      Yes that’s Canada for you

    • @jeffreymarcum9053
      @jeffreymarcum9053 9 месяцев назад +13

      They are nice up there I hear

    • @MRZDEB7
      @MRZDEB7 7 месяцев назад +10

      What happened to Elizabeth Wettlaufer?
      Wettlaufer, who killed eight elderly people and injured six more, is widely regarded as one of Canada's most notorious serial killers. She was incarcerated for her crimes and later transferred to a psychiatric facility in Montreal where she continues to stay even today.

    • @lydiayork9451
      @lydiayork9451 4 месяца назад +4

      ⁠@@MRZDEB7They take good care of her, ironically.

    • @krystlekane9874
      @krystlekane9874 4 месяца назад +1

      @@MRZDEB7interesting! thanks for the info!

  • @tammycox9789
    @tammycox9789 Год назад +243

    I'm shocked she even got her nursing license to begin with. She's clearly not all there.

    • @NoticerOfficial
      @NoticerOfficial Год назад +13

      Nursing shortage

    • @michaelg1237
      @michaelg1237 Год назад +23

      An RN at that. The test isn't easy

    • @clovemartin
      @clovemartin Год назад +1

      Mental illness can on-set later in life. You're not always born with it. It's clear she is functioning.

    • @GK-qt6vh
      @GK-qt6vh Год назад +4

      The State has to be "politically correct' I guess!

    • @tammyslade1375
      @tammyslade1375 Год назад +13

      A her yt privilege allowed her to supervise over others to! 🤷🏽‍♀️

  • @Rozebunny14
    @Rozebunny14 Год назад +135

    This is why I took my mother into my home to care for her. And when she needed to be hospitalized. I had to stay on top of her treatment to make sure she was getting her correct meds etc. Otherwise, she would've passed away 10-15 year's before her passing in 2021. I would literally write down all her meds, doses, give it to nurses caring for her, emphasize how important that she gets them, and they'd STILL mess her up. At one point she was double dosed and was put in CCU. I am honestly terrified of getting old after going through this with my mother. I feel so awful for the people without an advocate💔

    • @warmlantern0000
      @warmlantern0000 Год назад +14

      Your an awesome daughter 💗🌿

    • @ericrivera8410
      @ericrivera8410 9 месяцев назад +6

      I was the second youngest in a healthcare facility I feel for the old folks there no cell phones or wifi and family only visit once a month

    • @alaska-bornfloridaman4068
      @alaska-bornfloridaman4068 9 месяцев назад +6

      Same here. Thankfully, I had a sister who lived pretty close, so she helped. The Hospice ladies would come and bathe her twice a week, and my girlfriend was invaluable. It was a team effort and much tougher than I imagined, but I'm so glad I never put her in a nursing home. As much pain as she was in, she was very happy to be with me in my home.

    • @user-ef7gf8iv6t
      @user-ef7gf8iv6t 6 месяцев назад +4

      Right??!!
      I was recently hospital for in patient surgery. I was prescribed 2 different, very strong pain meds. One at the 4 hr mark, and then if that didn't handle it, I could have morphine an HR later. I was in so very much pain the 1st night and woke up twice to nurses in my face telling me to just breathe, just breathe. The second time scared me so bad I called my husband and he came in about 3 am to stay with me. He demanded to talk to the charge nurse who looked at my chart and explained that the nurse had od'd me on Tylenol...not once but twice. Her reasoning was that I was in pain and complaining. Supervisor asked why I had not been given my pain meds and she said that she had never seen anyone need that dose of pain meds for this type of surgery....😲
      So, instead of following Drs orders she, as a nurse, thought she knew better and that most of the time patients do fine on Tylenol. This nurse was relieved of her duty on the spot and after explaining to the doc what had happened they had a social worker and an administrator talk to me as well. So bc this nurse thought that I was drug seeking, post surgery, she went against Drs orders, almost killed me TWICE, cost me two extra days in the hospital because I was in so much pain, and my husband had to stay around the clock from then on and grilled every nurse after every time they gave me meds or put anything into my IV. We had to spend extra money because of the extra two day stay, had to hire a hand to take care of our animals because of my husband camping out at hospital to keep me alive....very scary experience

    • @mw12349
      @mw12349 2 месяца назад

      @@user-ef7gf8iv6t scary did you take legal action? What surgery did you have? thats horrible

  • @fresh.prince7472
    @fresh.prince7472 Год назад +247

    It makes you think how many more in the medical field can we trust she's not the first nurse to do this

    • @sunnyshine4621
      @sunnyshine4621 Год назад +17

      They really need to treat them like they do people buying gun's,if any counseling or mental health issues they can't have the job or gun.

    • @JesusRamos-gw5sd
      @JesusRamos-gw5sd Год назад +5

      Or the last

    • @fresh.prince7472
      @fresh.prince7472 Год назад +3

      @@sunnyshine4621 I totally agree

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Год назад +5

      This nearly three hour long video was uploaded two hours ago. So you're commenting before you could even have watched it all.

    • @sherrisRN
      @sherrisRN Год назад +11

      It actually doesn’t make me think that At all. That’s a leap of a Grand Canyon size to make that connection based on this pathetic representative.
      It’s irresponsible to conclude of many on the acts of 1.
      The other million nurses taking care of YOU and your family will never be in this room

  • @beerlahai
    @beerlahai Год назад +83

    My daughter in law worked cares at a couple different facilities. She has begged me to never put her in a facility after working at them. My husband and I are in our 70s and I’d never put him in one. Every facility is understaffed and will hire any warm body that applies for the job.
    One of my best friends is a nurse and has worked in rehabilitation facilities and has stated the same thing. If you have elderly family members do whatever it takes to take care of them yourself.

    • @MsGroovy51
      @MsGroovy51 Год назад +6

      I already stated what happened to my father above but I implore you to do as your daughter insists!! Although for economic purposes mom will soon go to ASSISTED LIVING, she will go where there are already friends of hers and have been thoroughly checked out by us, and close enough I can visit daily, and she is still walking and talking so she can complain-which she is not shy about doing. But once she is bed ridden the visits will certainly be more often and full body inspections daily!

    • @beerlahai
      @beerlahai Год назад +2

      @@MsGroovy51 it sounds like you’ve done your homework and know how to proceed. I wish you and your mom all the best. Prayers up for her happiness and safety. There are those who want to do harm in or out of long term care.

    • @jenisemcintyre3839
      @jenisemcintyre3839 Год назад +5

      @@MsGroovy51 Don't depend on the frequent visits. Most of the dirt will be perpetrated against a loved one at night when you're gone as in this story.

    • @warmlantern0000
      @warmlantern0000 Год назад +8

      Why would daughter in law beg YOU not to put her in nursing home. She's younger then you , correct ?

    • @warmlantern0000
      @warmlantern0000 Год назад +3

      @@jenisemcintyre3839 YUP I feel so sorry all those old ppl scared to sleep

  • @connielelle1861
    @connielelle1861 Год назад +258

    I am a nurse and the majority of my career I have cared for elderly, severe medical patients, and they know someone who they don’t trust and they will act out to defend, as a nurse I would always look into that and see why they pull or punch their caregiver, sometimes or most of the time you need to approach this patient in a different manner. That lady who punched her and tried to kick her probably never liked her and always knew there was something off. I don’t understand why other staff didn’t see this.

    • @BL-no7jp
      @BL-no7jp Год назад +35

      I’m a retired nurse and through out my career, I’ve never been hit. Even when a patient isn’t all there, they tend to remember those who have been kind and trustworthy towards them and they remember the ones who were not connected with the patients. I always avoided touching patients while waking them or with their backs turned. I did everything possible not to startle a patient or escalate their frustration. A nurse’s great failure can be measured by their failure to follow the golden rules. Nursing is not a place for those with a narcissistic personality disorder at all. They are the least subordinate karens in any workplace.

    • @01chittock
      @01chittock Год назад +3

      Because the system is broken, and too many people doing Jon’s they hate! Some people just don’t care! Oh they think they are doing them a favour.

    • @Beef_it_to_be_fit
      @Beef_it_to_be_fit Год назад +1

      Women

    • @walterstones9896
      @walterstones9896 Год назад +9

      In germany we call that "berufsblind" or occupational blindes if I'm correct.
      I'm a male nurse and work in the neurological ward.
      Our clientele differs widely with of course, diffrent clinical pictures.
      We also have high fluctuations in both out and intake on patients.
      A routine, mixed with stress ( the word routine being dangerous enough already) is often the cause of many problems on things, which are trivial to spott, then again... you miss them completely out of the sudden without even knowing ( like, a aspiration induced pneumonia for instance).
      Then again, would you suspect a college on "mercy killing" patients?
      Almost no one would, except he caught one in the act of doing so.
      We had a case in germany, were one nurse killed 100 people...
      His name was Nils Högel, he achived this from 2000 till February 2005.

    • @BL-no7jp
      @BL-no7jp Год назад +16

      @@walterstones9896 in the US, the nursing schools and colleges managed to have the grading system lowered 5 point for college profits. It’s the only way to have high enrollment in nursing programs for all semesters. This was in the 90’s when it happened in Illinois. It gave a pass for the low percent that doesn’t belong in nursing at all. I’m retired from nursing and I hope and pray I never end up in a hospital or nursing home before it my time to go. I hope I die before that ever happens. Health care in our country was non profit until 1973. When the health care system went for profits in 1973, standard of health care gradually evolved into failed deadly system where profits over human lives matter. My last stay was a nightmare with the most inept nurses I’ve ever witnessed in my life.

  • @susanfontaine5214
    @susanfontaine5214 Год назад +168

    NEVER EVER leave an even slightly confused/medicated loved one alone in hospital. They need someone to watch out for them. Craziness 😮😢

    • @overtcovert
      @overtcovert Год назад +3

      Advocate

    • @myachamberlin9481
      @myachamberlin9481 Год назад +14

      That’s all we’ll and good, but what about people who don’t have the privilege of taking time off? Or the family of older adults who require a higher level of care 24/7? Or what about the parents of newborns in the NICU? My little one was there for six months, and being there around the clock was simply not an option. It’s not enough for people to just stay with their loved ones. The US medical system requires a complete overhaul, and it will mean everyone needs to advocate for radical change…even if we all need to pay a couple more dollars in taxes.

    • @Peppermint1992
      @Peppermint1992 Год назад +1

      @@overtcovert 😅

    • @blahblew4609
      @blahblew4609 Год назад +2

      This did not happen in a hospital

    • @EE-hn8cg
      @EE-hn8cg Год назад +7

      When I traveled to nursing homes for work, there was a patient who's family put a camera in his room. The employees were always alert and on their best behavior. Not a bad idea, if you can't always be there with family.

  • @stephanypasnin1474
    @stephanypasnin1474 Год назад +118

    When my dad was in palliative care bleeding protrusely from his gums from cancer and constantly choking for days i actually asked and begged a nurse to give in something to stop it all. She said she couldnt. He laid for another 4 hours out of it, but constantly spittin, coughin, choking. I was relieved when it was over. He suffered. This haunts me. I wish they were allowed to give a injection for the terminally ill.

    • @Misssssysparkles
      @Misssssysparkles Год назад +27

      sorry for your loss -

    • @schrisdellopoulos9244
      @schrisdellopoulos9244 Год назад +1

      ​@@Misssssysparkles that's it missy? Might be better to say nothing?

    • @flugsven
      @flugsven Год назад +31

      @@schrisdellopoulos9244 Shush.

    • @Forever_Thatter
      @Forever_Thatter Год назад

      @@schrisdellopoulos9244 skase mori.

    • @tlindsay1007
      @tlindsay1007 Год назад +13

      That's absolutely heart breaking. I'm so sorry he had to suffer like that, and that you have to live with that memory. May God bless you for your love for your Dad.

  • @melinagoranson
    @melinagoranson Год назад +45

    In Germany we had a similar story. A Nurse who killed over 100 patients over multiple years. This is scary...

    • @tinawindham6958
      @tinawindham6958 Год назад +1

      Oh geez…was it a geriatric floor???

    • @mrnygren2
      @mrnygren2 Год назад +5

      They're the least likely to be suspected of wanting to hurt others. Being a nurse is a great facade and cover for a killer.

    • @Sir_Typesalot
      @Sir_Typesalot Год назад +5

      The story needs to be put in context, though:
      The German male nurse killed unintentionally. He gave over a hundred patients different medications, to cause cardiac arrest, so he could revive them. He hoped he would be praised by his superiors and earn a promotion.
      All patients were rushed into the ER after some kind of terrible accident, and then sent to intensive care, where the male nurse was supposed to watch over them. He demanded to work night shifts, because he would have less personnel running around the corridors, and would have a better access to the patients.
      The thing why this went on for so long (over five years in three cities) is because his father, also a male nurse, was highly regarded in their hometown and earned praise and awards for his work at the local hospital. He was fascinated by the fact, that when he was a boy, and would walk through the city centre with his father, many people, doctors, police officers, restaurant owners, former patients, would run over to shake his father’s hand. His father received small gifts, was invited to dinners, sports events, and many times given free meals in local establishments, as a token of appreciation.
      So the son, to overshadow his father’s success, entered the same profession and landed a job in the best German clinic - The Charité - in Berlin.
      However, he was transferred to three other clinics after (under his watch) over a period of five months, three patients died of unexplained cause. He was able to repeat the same thing over and over again, because of his father’s spotless reputation, since no one thought to consider him a suspect. And every interview with authorities, he mastered like a pro.
      It was the daughter of the last patient that died under strange conditions, who demanded an autopsy, which drew attention of the authorities, and led to the exhumation of 130 patients, of which 100 showed high levels of medications that cause cardiac arrest.

    • @melinagoranson
      @melinagoranson Год назад +5

      @@Sir_Typesalot I have stopped reading after the first sentence. Stop spreading bs about "unintentionally" killing 100 people as a nurse. He knew what he did and is still to this day in german jail. I also blocked and reported your comment for bs.

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад +6

      ​​@@Sir_Typesalot The context doesn't help or change anything. He murdered at least 100 people because he was jealous of his father supposedly. He still murdered at least 100 people. Why would you come to the defense of a killer? Your comment is disturbing.

  • @ExpThenAndNow
    @ExpThenAndNow Год назад +68

    I like how she stated she had to "pass gas", the detective acknowledges, and they just continue talking normally right after the fact.

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 9 месяцев назад +13

      Imagine the stink. It must have been awful.

    • @summumbonum1619
      @summumbonum1619 9 месяцев назад +6

      51:27🤣🤣

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@summumbonum1619 Was it a silent emission?

    • @YourlashTherapist
      @YourlashTherapist 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@sandgrownun66 no instant relief 😂

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@YourlashTherapist 🤭Better to let it out, than keep it in.🤭

  • @memaw197
    @memaw197 Год назад +46

    Imo she killed those who made her work harder than she wanted to. She seems more narcissistic than anything else to me. BPD, Bipolar,all combined does not describe the evil she did to patients that were in her care . Her addiction was probably one of her problems but she has some dark issues to want to harm someone that is of no threat . Trigger was probably work.

    • @schrisdellopoulos9244
      @schrisdellopoulos9244 Год назад

      You're on to something. Agreed 💯. People try to rationalize evil people because it is easier to believe that someone is sick instead of just bad. We saw it with the Alex Murdaugh case. 20 percent thought he was innocent.
      Listen to this monster victim blame. She needs to be in a cage. An elephant cage.

    • @crownviclx2000
      @crownviclx2000 Год назад +6

      Love how everyone on here labels absolutely everyone a narcissist as if it's the only fkn thing to be diagnosed as. 😂😂

    • @memaw197
      @memaw197 Год назад

      @crownviclx2000 well, she's also a sociopath, so there's that but I'm not a psychologist 🤨

    • @picklecage5488
      @picklecage5488 10 месяцев назад

      @@crownviclx2000 people like this usually are very narcissistic.

    • @linallie
      @linallie 2 месяца назад +1

      people with BPD usually don't like to see others suffering, they like to take care of others because feels good to have someone that needs you, and they take others pain to themselfs, they feel too much. not all BPD are like this but most of them are. People think that people with BPD are monsters but its not quite right. BPD just love too much, and thats really painfull, so they act 'crazy' sometimes, but just because they are afraid of lose what they love, and most of the time its like another personality takes over, and they feel really regreatfull after this. I'm just saying to help break that stigma that ppl have about BPD.

  • @allystubbert7521
    @allystubbert7521 Год назад +18

    "I felt awful. Awful. I came home and went to bed. Maybe fought with my girlfriend or worked out a bit"
    First, you're trying to he honest, you've never worked out. Second, how do you fall asleep after killing a human? Lastly, how did the doctor rule Mr. Silcox, death by embolism? That's concerning.

    • @kristincannavo616
      @kristincannavo616 11 месяцев назад +2

      I thought the same thing she def didn’t work out

  • @fishingpinky3165
    @fishingpinky3165 4 месяца назад +7

    In my 30 plus years of nursing I saw so many corrupt nurses and all the hospitals did was "let them go". Let it be someone else's problem. Hospitals didnt want the bad press. They are everywhere. You better have an advocate when you go into the hospital.

  • @TheREAL1970First
    @TheREAL1970First Год назад +49

    She is making us true loving nurses look like killers instead of caring loving caregivers I loved my patients I’m on medical leave and this is sad…

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад +4

      It's just that this isn't a rare thing among nurses. Killer nurses is scarily common. It's obviously not all nurses, but it's not 1 or 2 cases either. This is happening amongst doctors and surgeons as well. It's terrifying.

    • @blackwidor
      @blackwidor Год назад +3

      Hey I know your not like her she never should be near vulnerable people. Hope you feel better soon. X

    • @jenisemcintyre3839
      @jenisemcintyre3839 Год назад +3

      I know you are a good person but you cannot control the heartlessness of others. God knows your heart and at least you can sleep peacefully knowing you've done your best. Get well soon🌹

    • @kittypools266
      @kittypools266 Год назад +1

      @@Leslie_Knope it happens among everyone, it’s not the groups of people or anything it’s unfortunately the society we have come to

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад

      @kitty pools Obviously, this is a problem with society. I was speaking about the issues with the medical field specifically, though. You depend on these people to save your lives, to operate on you, to medicate you... and many of these people are evil, monsters. I have to rely on these people for my health.

  • @WinterSaeculum
    @WinterSaeculum Год назад +28

    "The rain. Sometimes it gives me the blues."
    - Anne Wilkes, Misery

  • @monikaballah931
    @monikaballah931 Год назад +36

    she should not be practicing or have a license. sick

  • @NN57143
    @NN57143 Год назад +7

    If she walked into my hospital room to care for me, I would flip out and DEMAND a new nurse. Jeez… frightening…

  • @connielelle1861
    @connielelle1861 Год назад +76

    When she mentioned the patient who was placed in the palliative bed, where these patients would be receiving a comfort care, where pain medications would be used, it upsets me that the patient thought she was getting something for pain. She must of suffered. Unimaginable

    • @lovepet4565
      @lovepet4565 Год назад +8

      Its so screwed up
      I always have someone with me during a hospital stay when
      Things seem low staffed or over crowded.
      I had the most wonderful stay after an Emergency gut scar adhesion surgery last summer. Nurses all young, knowledgeable, and very generous with my pain meds plural. I did not have to beg, they kept it coming on 4 hour intervals. I was in a nice room, great bed. On a totally liquid diet. So i used it as a cleanse 10 day stay !

    • @theresasimonson6034
      @theresasimonson6034 Год назад

      I always loved geriatrics ! Married and had a disabled son. Worked usually 2 shifts and short handed on 11/7. Knew a couple of pts that screamed 'kill me ' 75-80% had some form of. Dementia
      Never once did I think about ending someone's life except my own at the end. But that was sleep deprivation induced . 3 rd- 20+hour shift same week was my last . I was so torn between my job and home life. That noon pill call I was passing due to NO am NURSES (2). Was a nightmare 😢😢. Terrified
      Id make an error. at 1 pm. MY DON said she couldn't get someone there to pull the 3-11 that I had volunteered 2 weeks . Then work my own 11/7. I walked out the door and called when I got home and said I QUIT. I thought of my own life because a drs office was 2 slow and confining and hadn't been at a hospital since school and would have to start all over.
      This woman was a terrible nurse. And psychopath.

    • @schrisdellopoulos9244
      @schrisdellopoulos9244 Год назад +4

      ​@@lovepet4565 sounds like a real vacation. Life is pretty bad eh? Might want to not self identify as a submissive.

    • @lovepet4565
      @lovepet4565 Год назад +9

      @@schrisdellopoulos9244 i did not add in the bad part.
      The tube drainage from stomach via nose
      The pain
      Fear of having your gut cut open
      I try to be positive!
      Would rather vaca in BVI
      &
      Its a reference to my channel, my dogs
      😏

    • @lindamccracken8235
      @lindamccracken8235 Год назад +9

      @@schrisdellopoulos9244 🤷🏼‍♀️What the heck is this?

  • @jwest649
    @jwest649 Год назад +13

    The echo is so bad and the volume is so low, the conversation is difficult to understand. Subtitles would be so helpful.

    • @goldleaf889
      @goldleaf889 Год назад +2

      Turn on Closed Caption Einstein

  • @NoNonsense30
    @NoNonsense30 Год назад +40

    I trust NO ONE with my elderly dad but myself. He has been done wrong in the hospital and it will never happen again. Don’t trust any of them.

  • @Suzee6040
    @Suzee6040 Год назад +80

    I simply cannot believe no one turned her in cause she said in first 30 minutes that a few people knew of her addiction to drugs plus some of what evil she was doing! I’m sorry, but if I had that info on a coworker or meeting member, I’d have to reach out to authorities. My conscience would kill me.

    • @cassandra6710
      @cassandra6710 Год назад +12

      You can be a drug addict and be a nurse, doctor, lawyer etc. It would shock you if you knew the amount of people that are in recovery and some of the best at their job. If she was in active addiction then yes, she needed to be reported.

    • @goudagrishhdoe8925
      @goudagrishhdoe8925 Год назад +5

      What are they gonna do? Say so and so is a drug addict, arrest them? lol being an addict isn’t illegal by itself.

    • @kareykaram4243
      @kareykaram4243 Год назад +4

      ​@@goudagrishhdoe8925 Co workers could keep an eye on her, hold her accountable for medications, and protect patients...shouldn't have to babysit coworkers, but the alternative is not
      acceptable.

    • @kareykaram4243
      @kareykaram4243 Год назад +6

      I can't imagine what a nightmare job that nursing can become. To those who are called to remain in this profession, sincerely, I salute your dedication.

    • @goudagrishhdoe8925
      @goudagrishhdoe8925 Год назад +6

      @@kareykaram4243 lol yeah. That would work but half of them are probably addicts themselves. Don’t think you understand how many people are addicts, really.

  • @maripartridge4168
    @maripartridge4168 Год назад +24

    It's scary sometimes when you go to the hospital to get a procedure done. I had my gall bladder taken out. They nicked an artery in the process and just sewed me back up.
    I noticed that there was fresh blood on my belly button bandage, and I was lucky a friend came by to check on me. I was trying to get off my bed, but I couldn't. They had the same surgery and told me that I shouldn't be feeling that way. Nor should I have blood on my bandage. When I got to my feet, I just cried out to call the ambulance. When I arrived at the ER, they treated me like I just couldn't handle the pain. The nurse that came in to put the IV in my arm should have known right then that I was losing blood, as all the veins in my arm sank. The doctor didn't even bother to lift my gown up to see that my bandage was over flowing with blood. They just kept shooting me up with pain medicine. But the pain was so intense that it didn't even touch how bad I was hurting. After laying there for 4 hours, my friend called the doctors, who had performed the surgery, and they called the hospital and told them to get me into a CT scan. I went unconscious. I woke the next morning with my friend still beside me and was told that it took 4 hours to save me. I had kept telling them that I was bleeding inside. But they wouldn't listen. Then, the 3 doctors came in to speak with me, and all told me different stories. I was so angry they put me in a private room. I should have sued them all and the hospital.
    Because now, as a result of it all. I have 9 aneurysms and 3 dissections. They nearly blew my aorta. I had almost lost all my blood in my body. Now, I am left in a fatal condition and on disability.
    I have much better doctors now and a much better hospital.
    I have had nurses steal my pain shots from that old hospital and just leave me there in pain. You know when you don't get your shot. I will never go back there again EVER!

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад +6

      Please sue them! That is evil what they did to you. I'm so sorry that happened to you. Are you doing any better? Can they do anything about the aneurysms?

    • @Moore_cookies51
      @Moore_cookies51 Год назад +3

      I'M SO SORRY FOR YOU having to go through this. WE EXPECT CARE And get NONE.

    • @maripartridge4168
      @maripartridge4168 Год назад +4

      @Catly They have fixed 2 of them. 1 with coils and a cuff that was made in Australia to fit my body and grafted into my Celiac Trunk and the other 1 they put coils in. I get CT scans regularly to watch over the others.
      It's the dissections that I am concerned about. 1 is in my Superior Mesenteric Artery and only has 5mm left to tear. The others are in my renal arteries and 1 on my right kidney. There isn't much they can do about those.

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад +3

      @@maripartridge4168 That is absolutely terrible. Those doctors should be in prison. 🤬 I hope and pray you are okay. Please stay strong.

    • @lollypop2413
      @lollypop2413 Год назад

      What a story...if your aorta cut you die fast

  • @summumbonum1619
    @summumbonum1619 9 месяцев назад +10

    The whole video she squirming around trying to break wind🤣 she was farting the whole time for sure

  • @atleastimgenuine3566
    @atleastimgenuine3566 Год назад +14

    I understand being nice and cordial as a technique but this is overboard. I’m shocked they didn’t hug her while feeding her grapes.

    • @picklecage5488
      @picklecage5488 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah and then they even let her go home, insane.

    • @whatareyoulookingat908
      @whatareyoulookingat908 9 месяцев назад +1

      It's Canada. They're VERY lax in murderers...even celebrated sometimes. Yet they think they're enlightened. Its pretty pathetic.

  • @Jaclyn_Zen
    @Jaclyn_Zen Год назад +8

    Whoaaa the start of this is so different than the police interrogations for murders that I’ve watched (American here). You Canadians are indeed so nice 😄

  • @SharkFishSF
    @SharkFishSF Год назад +18

    Audio issue, can't hear them legibly.

  • @CoffeeIsHere
    @CoffeeIsHere 8 месяцев назад +18

    The fact that she put her cup that far on the edge of the table just screams psychopath to me. What kind of heathen would do such a thing?

    • @marinvanz.1924
      @marinvanz.1924 4 месяца назад +6

      @coffeelsHere the fact you noticed that also screams

    • @brookeblue9195
      @brookeblue9195 2 месяца назад

      😅

    • @brookeblue9195
      @brookeblue9195 2 месяца назад

      @@marinvanz.1924 😅😅

    • @jillgantz9229
      @jillgantz9229 Месяц назад

      Omg I thought the same😂

    • @saintlynnie4037
      @saintlynnie4037 Месяц назад +3

      Probably because reaching any further would cause her heart rate to go into overdrive and explode

  • @brbrknndy
    @brbrknndy Год назад +71

    Amazing that she came into confess when they weren't even suspecting her for any deaths. Amazingly even more is that she was able to walk out of the interview without being charged. She was not even taken into custody.

    • @dagneytaggart7707
      @dagneytaggart7707 Год назад +19

      Police often have people confess to things they didn't do. Usually, this involves mental health issues. Before arresting someone, they would need to have evidence of a crime actually happening.

    • @brbrknndy
      @brbrknndy Год назад +27

      @@dagneytaggart7707 They can hold her for 24 hours though. She confesses to killing 8 people. That's enough to hold someone.

    • @MrsBeasonBryant
      @MrsBeasonBryant Год назад +16

      ​@@brbrknndy I agree! That was more than enough to arrest her.
      Guess This is what Privilege looks like at its best!

    • @GrannieLee
      @GrannieLee Год назад +6

      ​@@MrsBeasonBryant 💯

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Год назад +9

      This nearly three hour long video was uploaded two hours ago. So you're commenting before you could even have watched it all.

  • @a.jlondon9039
    @a.jlondon9039 Год назад +9

    When confronted by an incompetent nurse many managers will give them a decent reference just so the incompetent/dangerous nurse will just leave. Advice to all patients/families: Question all treatment. Write down the names of staff and any medications you are given. Know the number to patient relations. Find out who the manager is and never hesitate to question the person. Ask who the administrator on call is. Know who the hospital CEO is. Know the numbers to the College of Nurses, College of Physicians and Surgeons etc. Disciplinary bodies (Colleges) are legally bound to investigate. I

    • @Cat-ik1wo
      @Cat-ik1wo Год назад

      I been there and done that. They fought back. My God! I singlehandedly fought an army. They stick together and use their clout to make you look like the problem. Just by questioning. They are not used to someone who will stand up to them. Unless you have an army yourself. They will go at great lengths to protect themselves instead of patient care. Doctors, nurses, specialist, whoever, is a roll of the dice. I NO LONGER HAVE FAITH IN HUMANITY. I HAVE LOST RESPECT FOR THEIR GARBAGE SYSTEM

    • @kristovapalenkova5884
      @kristovapalenkova5884 Год назад

      That's mad sweet of u ❤️ letting us know. I didn't know this ;as where to invest igate

  • @BooBooSchmitt
    @BooBooSchmitt Год назад +57

    The sad thing is she’s not the 1st “nurse” who has done this. This is becoming a common theme and it’s scary. It makes me wonder How many of them is out there that haven’t been caught? 🤢🤢

    • @crownviclx2000
      @crownviclx2000 Год назад +4

      Thousands. Maybe millions.

    • @leopoldfreiherrvonbernewit4747
      @leopoldfreiherrvonbernewit4747 Год назад +3

      Pressure forms cracks. That's the way it is. I'm not excusing what they did, but it is a simple truth that putting people under pressure will create some (!!) to resort to criminal solutions.

    • @hithere4719
      @hithere4719 Год назад +7

      @@leopoldfreiherrvonbernewit4747No. These are predators who are also so weak they need weaker prey. Being overworked doesn’t turn someone into a serial killer.

    • @Tom_Van_Zandt
      @Tom_Van_Zandt Год назад +1

      3. There are literally only 3 out there who haven't been caught.

    • @Tom_Van_Zandt
      @Tom_Van_Zandt Год назад +1

      @@hithere4719 Then why does all work and no play make Jack a dull boy?

  • @Venme2870
    @Venme2870 5 месяцев назад +4

    How do you get eight life sentences but possibility of parole after 25 years? Only in canada.

  • @monams2514
    @monams2514 Год назад +18

    THANK GOD both of my parents were in my care when they left this earth. This is hard to listen to and my heart goes out to the families that lost their loved ones. It is sickening. They should of been on to her from the get up. How many others have done this. Unbelievable these stories I hear anymore. Pray for the ones that lost their loved ones at the hands of this so called nurse. She is pathetic I do not care if the excuse was mental health issues and addictions. I have read plenty on things to do with mental health and crimes but someone should not of put her in that job if she was in such bad shape. Screen your people folks!!

  • @muddysludge7117
    @muddysludge7117 Год назад +18

    She just wants free medical in prison. I hope she gets a nurse just like her.

    • @cynthiaconnors183
      @cynthiaconnors183 Год назад +3

      We have universal health care in canada. It's rare to pay of of pocket for anything and private health care here is rare

    • @Johnjohn-dt6hw
      @Johnjohn-dt6hw 5 месяцев назад

      In Canada nooo they are so polite

  • @MsRee713
    @MsRee713 27 дней назад +2

    This witch almost killed my father, but luckily another nurse came in before she administered too much insulin. He had just been given his dose and the other nurse knew it. I thank the nurse that saved his life. I got to keep him for another two years for which I am very, very grateful because he was my best friend. We had two more years of laughing and giggling and snacking and watching scary movies together. I miss him so very much but at least I got more time with him than what she would’ve given me.

  • @sunnywantsmoney8483
    @sunnywantsmoney8483 Год назад +5

    The marrator keeps saying she feels guilty.. i dont buy it. She is callously explaining how she brutally planned and executed multiple murders. Shes sitting there giggling and acting all frumpy. She deserves the death penalty

  • @cryosightgaming
    @cryosightgaming 9 месяцев назад +4

    Idk why i keep coming to this video as background noise even though ive heard it like 10 times 😂😂😂

  • @SweetTater
    @SweetTater Год назад +20

    Her speech is affected by the fact that she's either missing some front teeth, or is having a speech impediment. Either way, it is difficult to understand her.

  • @dkcorderoyximenez3382
    @dkcorderoyximenez3382 Год назад +10

    One seriously dangerous killer...she was virtually invisible during her crime run...

  • @barrettbeach8252
    @barrettbeach8252 2 месяца назад +2

    Did she at one point apologize because she was about to pass gas? Lmfaoooo

  • @user-gl5ux5xk3k
    @user-gl5ux5xk3k Год назад +17

    she wants to go to jail. Why not- 3 hots and a free cot. We need the death penalty used for evil people

    • @mimiwatching
      @mimiwatching Год назад +3

      What she doesn't realize is her psychological meds will stop behind bars. Won't be pretty.

    • @franklinterrell9392
      @franklinterrell9392 6 месяцев назад

      @@mimiwatching Actually, they won't!!!

  • @de1961
    @de1961 Год назад +9

    Why wasn't more people checking blood sugars when these patients were crashing? SMH

    • @mrnygren2
      @mrnygren2 Год назад +1

      He or she was old so it must be a natural death- somebody...

  • @GK-qt6vh
    @GK-qt6vh Год назад +5

    Lock her behind up and she'll have 24/7 to pace back and forth!

  • @honorclarkescatacomb67
    @honorclarkescatacomb67 5 месяцев назад +4

    I don't want to come across as sympathetic to this nurse or euthanasia, because I am not. However, having worked in a nursing home with bed bound patients, many of whom had Alzheimers or senility, and many whose personality had completely changed, I saw the stress on the family. It happened to my own husband, when his mother finally decided it was time to put mom in a facility because she terrified the grandchildren. Although there are always exceptions; there are people who will come in and read to their loved on and visit every day, despite the person having no idea who they are, it's rare.
    Honestly, I think in some of these cases, the patient is too tired to go on living, and the family is frazzled. Maybe it is better for them to have a dignified end, than for the diseases to progress until you're dealing with someone hostile, aggressive, who no longer knows you, your visits become duty visits, and the memory of your loved one LIKE THIS, overlays the previous wonderful memories you have . Like the patient I had, Felicia, who would take a swing and literally punch anyone who came near her. (She no longer had visitors, which didn't surprise anyone)/ It's a shame it has to get to this point.

    • @Cheersthewinners
      @Cheersthewinners 5 месяцев назад

      I wouldn’t even have posted something like this

    • @honorclarkescatacomb67
      @honorclarkescatacomb67 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Cheersthewinners Well, I'm not advocating for murder, or even Eugenics. I'm certainly not giving her a pass. But it's easy to be a keyboard warrior taking a moral stance when you haven't dealt with these patients for years, as I have. Believe me, I had empathy and sympathy for them, and senility, Alzheimers ,ALS, TBI all manifest differently.
      All I'm saying is I've seen and cared for patients in nursing homes that hadn't had a visitor for 10 years. One took a swing at anyone who came near her. She didn't remember her family, and didn't even remember us, the nurses there every morning. One new nurse got a right hook to the jaw and was laid out. I told her, "I warned yo about that right hook". She thought I was kidding.
      Truth is truth. I'm not overplaying it or downplaying. Go work in a nursing hom for bed ridden incontinent patients for 6 months; then write me back and we'll talk. Until you have a frame of reference you don't know what these people's lives are like.

    • @Lady_Angela1
      @Lady_Angela1 Месяц назад +1

      I get what your saying. But once you start playing God its hard to stop.

  • @pw191164
    @pw191164 Год назад +7

    She's been romantically involved with fast food, nothing much else.

  • @Lava_Girl-
    @Lava_Girl- Год назад +9

    It was interesting to listen to this confession again. Sometimes I wonder if she just got tired of them being too needy.

    • @shayalynn
      @shayalynn Год назад +5

      It’s part of the job 🤷‍♀️ if people can’t deliver what their job requires, they need to leave. It affects everyone. We don’t have free healthcare so I don’t know why some nurses seem to have a strange attitude. Let someone else work who has a passion for helping people, not just for the check. I’m just ranting by the way lol.

    • @lalotime
      @lalotime Год назад +7

      Not sure if you meant to phrase it like you did. They are needy because they NEED. The people she was watching over were those who needed a lot of care to survive. You don't start killing elderly, even if they not entirely lucid. They are still people. Killing people for their disabilities sounds awful familiar

    • @walterstones9896
      @walterstones9896 Год назад

      Sure its annoying at times...AT TIMES.

    • @Lava_Girl-
      @Lava_Girl- 11 месяцев назад +3

      @lalo time I guess what I mean is she found those patients exceptionally needy, it annoyed her. It made her job easier once they were gone. No excuses, she should have never become a nurse.

  • @a_adexter6786
    @a_adexter6786 Год назад +20

    That's why we have strict nursing licensing procedures in our country, you can't become a nurse if you have a psychological disorder, on antipsychotics, antidepressants, or any criminal records, felony or a misdemeanor. This is a stressful career where we need to be compassionate and professional at the same time. It can trigger those with mental illness too. Nursing shortage isn't an excuse to hire just anyone. We are talking about ppl's lives for God's sake!

    • @27Zangle
      @27Zangle Год назад +21

      What country are you in? I think that is a bit too much as many people or most in general have something wrong with them. Very few are 'normal' these days. Antidepressants shouldn't bar anyone from becoming a caring and compassionate nurse.

    • @b4glady
      @b4glady Год назад +10

      Which country is that? I never heard of a nursing board do psychological test to see if you are fit to the job. That would costly and discriminatory.

    • @juliadixon8465
      @juliadixon8465 Год назад +4

      I obtained an LPN in America while prescribed Prozac and Klonopin. There's no question that I was severely addicted to the latter, and lost my license for the usual reasons.

    • @emmagatewood3898
      @emmagatewood3898 Год назад +4

      GOOD! If Canada had that law, Elizabeth would have never been hired and all those people would have never been murdered. Certain jobs require mental & emotional stability as part of the job duties. Seems obvious that nursing is one of those jobs... This is not to say that mentally ill people are bad, or that they are worth less than anyone else. But certain jobs require certain abilities in order to perform well, that is just reality. Not everybody can do every job. Elizabeth Wettlaufer had no more business being a nurse than she had being an Olympic sprinter.

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад +2

      As a person on anti-depressants, that's smart and thoughtful. The United States should implement this policy for so many fields.

  • @neverland606
    @neverland606 Год назад +10

    Worked in one for 15 years and was a resident for 2 years. I had nurses that I dearly loved but wasn't crazy about some of the cnas and their care to others. I've begged my daughter to never put me in one again. I'd rather take my life first. It's bad, but I will say there is cnas who work every hard. They are under payed and themselves not treated like they should be. There's other's that are there only for a pay check. So sad !!

  • @kathleenmortensen3065
    @kathleenmortensen3065 Год назад +10

    Curious what (if any) autopsies stated as cause of death, and if any exhumations were necessary. Very suspicious

    • @Lily-wp8ol
      @Lily-wp8ol Год назад +5

      Don't know about Canada, but here in US autopsies are usually done only on people who have unwitnessed death. Also
      if the circumstances seem odd an autopsy is performed. Nursing home deaths, hospital deaths are generally not autopsied.

    • @danrussell3439
      @danrussell3439 Год назад +3

      It’s also hard to detect insulin murders especially in diabetes

    • @Cuckoo_Lane
      @Cuckoo_Lane 3 месяца назад

      @@Lily-wp8olWrong assumption.

  • @kathleenweinberg6442
    @kathleenweinberg6442 Год назад +40

    A very sad story may the victims rest in peace

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Год назад +1

      This nearly three hour long video was uploaded two hours ago. So you're commenting before you could even have watched it all.

    • @Itsjcold0
      @Itsjcold0 Год назад +2

      @@sandgrownun66 would you please stop putting this comment everywhere

    • @delishme2
      @delishme2 Год назад +6

      ​@@sandgrownun66 It's a well know case. People have heard of what she did before this post 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Год назад

      @@Itsjcold0 What do you define as "everywhere". Does three times to those who couldn't have watched the whole video, constitute "everywhere"? Just wondering.

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Год назад

      @@delishme2 Most people who commented before watching the whole video, will never have heard of the case.

  • @tatonkaa
    @tatonkaa Год назад +5

    she moves like a tank

  • @Crimetoosleep
    @Crimetoosleep Год назад +28

    Pure evil

    • @carltonbanks5470
      @carltonbanks5470 Год назад +2

      and gas.

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Год назад +1

      25 likes for two obvious words? Why didn't you say that she is great instead?

    • @Crimetoosleep
      @Crimetoosleep Год назад +2

      @@sandgrownun66 who asked you ?

  • @TeamTLJ
    @TeamTLJ 5 месяцев назад +2

    “When someone is dying, you think that it takes longer if youre around.” The way she said that gave me a chill down my spine.”🤯 if didn’t transcribe/quote precisely, pls correct me, my apologies!

    • @esctruecrime
      @esctruecrime 3 месяца назад

      *How do we maintain a balance between being vigilant and living freely without fear?*

  • @fairlyvague82
    @fairlyvague82 Год назад +6

    Never mind how did she get her nurses license with her mental health history, how did she get her nurses license looking like she needs a crane to get her on and off the toilet?? She must literally just have given the medicines out and take a few temperatures.

    • @teddychannel4701
      @teddychannel4701 9 месяцев назад +1

      We have a lot of very large nurses in the UK

    • @franklinterrell9392
      @franklinterrell9392 6 месяцев назад

      @fairlyvague82 Since I've never had an issue with my weight, I have no idea what that struggle is like; however, for you to insinuate that a person's eliminates them from nursing is idiotic. You do realize that how much a person weighs has nothing to do with getting a "nurses license"...right???

    • @Laura-xr2ej
      @Laura-xr2ej 27 дней назад

      Yea she has trouble wiping for sure.

  • @beavinator
    @beavinator 10 месяцев назад +4

    This lady: murders people
    Also this lady: I apologize I have to pass gas.

  • @genomic_
    @genomic_ 5 месяцев назад +3

    Her nonchalant attitude is aggravating 😡

  • @Abigail43732
    @Abigail43732 Год назад +7

    BE INVOLVED IN YOUR LOVED ONES' CARE.

  • @Tony-Tiger1970
    @Tony-Tiger1970 4 месяца назад +1

    Guilty or not NEVER talk in an investigation or police. You want to avoid getting extra charges. Their goal is to get paid and send you to prison not be your friend

  • @jogirl836
    @jogirl836 Год назад +9

    I’m just curious how this female version of Peter Griffin even made it room to room to give meds and “care” for her patients....🧐

  • @tammycox9789
    @tammycox9789 Год назад +18

    I'm a retired cna and caregiver and this just makes me angry. I just don't understand why anyone would do what she's done.

    • @danielfurnea4233
      @danielfurnea4233 Год назад

      Being crazy doesn't sound like enough of a reason?

    • @walterstones9896
      @walterstones9896 Год назад

      Imagine that those people had a motivation to do so.
      If good or bad intentions, a motivation nonetheless.

    • @Lady_Angela1
      @Lady_Angela1 Месяц назад

      Evil

  • @angeltillman1323
    @angeltillman1323 5 месяцев назад +2

    She said she has to tell her parents what's going on , hey mom n dad I've killed many pple so I'm a murderer and I've been caught" wow the audacity of this evil lady 😮

  • @tmoney7487
    @tmoney7487 8 месяцев назад +2

    What's all the noise in the background??? Sounds like a fan motor 🤦‍♀️

  • @millieatr
    @millieatr Год назад +6

    Besides her patients i'm sure over the years she probably had some pets that she thought "It was their time to go"

  • @530mamaj
    @530mamaj Год назад +5

    Am I trippin or did she say she was going to turn herself in and a pastor prayed over her and said it was Gods will? I was working on a project and couldn’t come back to replay and I don’t feel like searching lol

    • @starshinemoonbeam
      @starshinemoonbeam 9 месяцев назад +1

      YES!! She said the pastor said it was God's will but that if she continues he will have to turn her in

    • @kristineeuribe4357
      @kristineeuribe4357 9 месяцев назад +1

      The pastor didn't say it was God's will. But he should have reported it. Instead he just prayed for her and told her if she did it again he would have to report it. But in ministry, we are mandated reporters. So he had a responsibility to go.to.the police.

  • @poiuytd
    @poiuytd 8 месяцев назад +2

    ive had a harder time finding a food serving job.

  • @collindaley9562
    @collindaley9562 5 месяцев назад +1

    I live in Toronto and don’t remember seeing this in the news much if at all, crazy to think how many people may have gotten away with something similar

  • @cgwalker7722
    @cgwalker7722 Год назад +4

    Is it only me but does it look like she’s standing when she’s sitting sometimes!!

  • @kissmerighthere26
    @kissmerighthere26 Год назад +10

    Some ppl don't need a job

    • @emmagatewood3898
      @emmagatewood3898 Год назад

      Definitely not a nursing job anyway! Not school teacher or law enforcement jobs either.

  • @dwalker4528
    @dwalker4528 10 месяцев назад +2

    No offense, but she doesn't seem competent enough to be a nurse. She seems a little off mentally without drugs

  • @DrMurph
    @DrMurph Год назад +6

    While she was offing people, she continued going to church…

    • @ajordan1976
      @ajordan1976 Год назад

      Of course she did.
      Churches are full of hypocrites.

    • @danrussell3439
      @danrussell3439 Год назад

      Maybe she believed she was doing a godly thing …she did have emotional and mental issues.

    • @Nira39
      @Nira39 Год назад +3

      Read people of the lie. Some of the most evil hide behind in church to pass off as a good person.

    • @schrisdellopoulos9244
      @schrisdellopoulos9244 Год назад

      Many serial killers do. John Wayne Gacy was on the board of his church. They hide behind the superstition of forgiveness by their invisible Sky Daddy. Nice plan, eh? Religion is poison.

    • @danrussell3439
      @danrussell3439 Год назад +1

      @@Nira39 so true

  • @rebeccanorris8687
    @rebeccanorris8687 Год назад +4

    I am very leary of health care providers. You never know when your going to get one of these physcho paths.

  • @OLBICHL
    @OLBICHL 9 месяцев назад +4

    I've watched like 3 or 4 interrogation videos and it's draining me mentally, it gave me a headache and I just can't... I can't get into their heads and wrap my mind around their thought process... never has the question why been so hard to answer... need to watch some pet videos or something nice to get out of this dark mess

    • @billfarley9167
      @billfarley9167 9 месяцев назад

      Dude! I have a great idea. STOP WATCHING VIDEOS.

  • @darrenandcarolynoneill2399
    @darrenandcarolynoneill2399 5 месяцев назад +2

    Being a diabetic myself I know how painful the lows are from to much insulin. But I feel sorry for the elderly that suffered at the hands of this so called Registered nurse.

  • @texastreat8721
    @texastreat8721 Год назад +6

    She has to be crazy to kill those people and than want to laugh when she did it. So evil! And so many evil people now! Where did they all come from

    • @trinitylivingston1286
      @trinitylivingston1286 Год назад

      More like psychopathic.

    • @melissaweaver1189
      @melissaweaver1189 Год назад

      What she describes is demon possession. Bi polar schizophrenia patients can be healed. The demons have to be cast out. Just ask Jesus. Read your KJV Bible for more details. Look how many demons were present in biblical times, then look around today. Cover and protect yourselves with Jesus's free gift of salvation. ✝️📖⏳⚖️❤️

  • @antshaq1
    @antshaq1 Год назад +10

    Lol got caught and passed gas … crazy and nasty

  • @GK-qt6vh
    @GK-qt6vh Год назад +5

    Notice, she'd love to be entrusted with the those that are helpless: can't read, can't write, feeling hopeless e.t.c., so she can take them out of their misery! Nothing but and Angel of Death!

  • @stephaniern3345
    @stephaniern3345 5 месяцев назад +1

    We as registered nurse take an oath to help heal the sick . I’m so upset watching this video. This is a Registered Nut

  • @lexiaaforever437
    @lexiaaforever437 2 месяца назад +2

    She really thought after all she confessed to that she’d be able to just sweep that under the rug & go home like nothing happened 😂

    • @EddyG2023
      @EddyG2023 2 месяца назад

      They let her go home lol

  • @double-you5130
    @double-you5130 Год назад +5

    people on antidepresents and antipsychotics should not be a nurse no?

    • @Lady_Angela1
      @Lady_Angela1 Месяц назад +1

      Ive been a nurse 15 years. Just a rough guess, but from talking to coworkers and watching them I’d say about 25% of all people in the medical field have mental health issues. You want them to take their meds trust me. 😊

    • @Pokedawn100
      @Pokedawn100 Месяц назад

      That shouldn't be a factor. It's the ones who are non medicated and nuts regardless that shouldn't be. Antidepressants do not make a person a crazy murderer.

  • @krenakrneki7636
    @krenakrneki7636 Год назад +6

    "Got myself a small blueberry pie and an overdose of insulin for her" says it all.

  • @DameVonBonDaisy
    @DameVonBonDaisy Месяц назад

    Thanks!

  • @lisalister8002
    @lisalister8002 11 месяцев назад +2

    I wonder if now she is worried about the nurses that care for her in prison.

  • @nuckingfuts1503
    @nuckingfuts1503 Год назад +4

    Watching the interview with the captions is aggravating to say the least, nothing worse then 25% of the dialogue being totally off, is this a human error or are the captions created by some computer program???

  • @leticiadavis7791
    @leticiadavis7791 Год назад +7

    I was a medication aide working alongside my boss, who was a nurse. She will sign out narcotics for most of my patients while I was on brake. Everybody was medicated except that she was given tylenols instead of the norcos. She was high as a kite and could keep her up. I reported to no avail. I moved on to a different field

    • @7777LORENZO
      @7777LORENZO Год назад

      What is a medication aid ? Never heard of that - sorry you have to be licensed to give medications

    • @kholloway29
      @kholloway29 Месяц назад

      As a medication aide, you do have to be licensed in the state of va, also wrking under a licensed nurse. I don’t know about elsewhere though.

  • @belindachadd5116
    @belindachadd5116 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the interview, well done!very informative.

  • @ceilconstante640
    @ceilconstante640 Год назад +36

    This is why you need to take good care of your health! There's a lot more like her that haven't confessed and get away with it. I'm sure a lot of people are cheated out of needed pain care. I'd rather go out to the woods and fast till it's over.

    • @Cali-Girl
      @Cali-Girl Год назад +8

      Ending up in nursing home is not a result of not caring for their health. No matter how healthy, everyone will eventually go downhill unless they die suddenly or have terminal illness of short duration and can be at home, in hospital, or on hospice care. Vast majority of nursing home employees are compassionate and try to provide adequate care.

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад +3

      Going to a nursing home has nothing to do with how healthy you are. It has to do with how wealthy you are. If you can't afford care in your home, or a luxury condo for the elderly like my grandmother lived in for $4k a month, or don't have kids willing to take care of you... you will end up in a home. People with money don't end up in homes. My grandmother was rich and stayed in a private condo with security and people who would show up if needed anytime. Unfortunately, she had a heart attack in her bed and wasn't able to press her emergency button. My parents will also not ever go to a home, they saved money to prevent that from happening.

    • @ceilconstante640
      @ceilconstante640 Год назад +1

      @@Leslie_Knope Not everyone is wealthy. Elizabeth also did home care nursing. Living in Florida in a nice 55 and over community I've met more than a few home care nurses that gave me the creeps. The best anyone can do is to do their best to stay healthy. A fall or heart attack can begin a cascade of health problems that require care and leave a person at the mercy of the staff.

    • @mollyram2997
      @mollyram2997 Год назад +3

      Dang I dunno man. I grew up in hospitals and like half of nurses are whack jobs that like to see you suffer. Once I turned 18 and got out of pediatrics, I would change that number of nut jobs to 80-90% lol. Seriously. Just my experience though💙 Unfortunately there's lots of bad people in the world. I think a lot of nurses go in to the job for the social accolades like cops, etc.. not actually bc they like to help ppl. Or maybe it's bc they are bitter and understaffed but either way... yeah. Oh! Btw I had a nurse argue with me to try and give me insulin when I was 19.. said that the"dr ordered it bc my blood sugar was high". He had the needle in his hand and I refused it. He kept arguing and trying to give it to me. I did some googling(I am not diabetic)would that have killed me??

    • @Leslie_Knope
      @Leslie_Knope Год назад

      @Ceil Constante That's not true. My parents have 5 kids who will care for them if something happens. They won't need a sketchy nurse or home care person. Plus, my brother is a nurse, and my sister-in-law is in nursing school. So we're good. You're not stuck if you have money and you have family. My father isn't healthy, but he will never go to a home. He will stay in his home with his family until the end.

  • @ETX213
    @ETX213 Год назад +4

    *How does she admit to all these murders, and not be under arrest?*

  • @skykru5721
    @skykru5721 Год назад +5

    Evil

  • @DonaldHolben
    @DonaldHolben Год назад +4

    I remember this well!

  • @3inchhippotomous.508
    @3inchhippotomous.508 7 месяцев назад +2

    Nursing is extremely insular and has little accountability outside it's own environment.There is alot of name suppression and little light shown when bad things happen.

  • @angrydingus5256
    @angrydingus5256 Год назад +2

    Ugh. Not as bad as murder, but I've had soooo many nurses steal my meds. They'd give me half a vial and pocket the rest. I've called them out on it before and they were like "oops sorry" and gave me the rest

  • @straightforward
    @straightforward Год назад +3

    Her memories sound like the memento's a serial killer keeps. imo

  • @anukataja6805
    @anukataja6805 Год назад +3

    Terrible.

  • @waynecowan5647
    @waynecowan5647 Месяц назад

    I’ve watched this video at least 4 times and each time it blows me away how she acts so casually about killing all those people.

  • @TeamTLJ
    @TeamTLJ 5 месяцев назад +1

    How did the nursing home not get suspicious?!? Like, how many deaths within? I get it’s a nursing home and elderly patients do die in nursing homes, but….🤯 I hope and pray there are no others out there who’ve done similar but just haven’t caught. 🥶