The Daily Courier

Ex-nurse pleads guilty to killings

Elizabeth Wettlaufer pleads guilty to 8 counts of 1st-degree murder, 4 counts of attempted murder

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WOODSTOCK, Ont. — A former Ontario nurse angry with her career and personal life believed she was an instrument of God as she used insulin to kill vulnerable seniors in her care over the course of nearly a decade.

About seven months after her arrest last fall, Elizabeth Wettlaufer pleaded guilty Thursday to eight counts of firstdegre­e murder, four counts of attempted murder and two counts of aggravated assault.

The crimes — which took place in three Ontario long-term care facilities and at a private home — make Wettlaufer one of Canada’s most prolific serial killers.

Emotional family and friends of her victims packed a Woodstock, Ont., courtroom as the 49-year-old quietly said the word “guilty” 14 times and admitted to a judge that she used insulin in every case.

“There was always that red surging that I identified with God talking to me,” Wettlaufer told a detective calmly in a confession video played in court. “Then I’d go get the insulin.”

Prosecutor­s laid out the details of each incident in an agreed statement of facts that included chilling revelation­s Wettlaufer made to authoritie­s. Then, about 75 family and friends of the victims watched the video of the former nurse confessing to Woodstock police.

In many cases, a growing rage over her job and her life built up until Wettlaufer felt an “urge to kill,” court heard. She said the feeling would only abate after she overdosed her victims.

“Then I’d get that laughing fit, like a cackle,” she said to police. Court heard that Wettlaufer was not intoxicate­d on drugs or alcohol when she killed or tried to kill. Many of her victims lived with dementia.

She told police she knew that “if your blood sugar goes low enough, you can die.” She also told police she refrained from logging her use of insulin in order to avoid detection, court heard.

In Aug. 11, 2007, Wettlaufer deliberate­ly injected James Silcox, an 84-year-old man with diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease, with insulin, “hoping he would die,” the Crown said.

“It was his time to go because of the way he acted,” she told police, according to the agreed statement of facts.

Silcox was later found without vital signs by a personal support worker, court heard. That was Wettlaufer’s first “successful” kill after two previous attempts failed.

Wettlaufer told investigat­ors that afterwards, she felt “like a pressure had been relieved from me, like pressure had been relieved from my emotions.”

There were religious undertones to many of the killings, court heard, and in some cases, there was no motive other than “returning them to God.”

“I honestly felt that God wanted to use me,” Wettlaufer told investigat­ors at one point.

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