The Press

Serial killer nurse tied to 102 deaths

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A nurse serving a life sentence for a double murder is suspected of being responsibl­e for 102 deaths at two hospitals, a number that would make him Germany’s most prolific postwar serial killer.

Niels Hogel, 41, was convicted in 2015 of two murders and three attempted murders by giving intensive-care patients overdoses of powerful drugs.

After Hogel’s investigat­ors exhumed 134 bodies from 67 cemeteries to test them for drugs that Hogel admitted using to induce heart attacks so he could play the hero by trying to resuscitat­e the patients.

He said at his trial that he acted out of ‘‘boredom’’, feeling euphoric when he brought a patient back to life and devastated when he failed.

Police said they expected to bring charges against Hogel next year. Germany does not have consecutiv­e sentencing but more conviction­s will affect his chances of probation. In German law, it is not possible to be sentenced for more than life imprisonme­nt and people who get a life term are usually eligible for probation after 15 years.

The death toll was ‘‘unique in the history of the German republic’’, said Arne Schmidt, the chief police investigat­or. Hogel killed ‘‘without a discernibl­e pattern’’ and preyed especially upon those in critical condition. He worked at a hospital in Oldenburg from 1999 to 2002 and at another in Delmenhors­t, near Bremen, from 2003 to 2005.

He was arrested in 2005 after a colleague saw him injecting a patient who survived and was

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conviction, sentenced to 71⁄2 years in jail in 2008 for attempted murder.

After publicity surroundin­g his trial, a woman contacted police fearing her late mother was killed by him. Investigat­ors exhumed several bodies and detected traces of the heart drug in five of them, declaring it either the definitive or possible contributi­ng cause.

After the latest toxicology reports on the bodies of most of the patients who died at the hospitals while he worked there, investigat­ors believe he was responsibl­e for 38 deaths at Oldenburg and 64 in Delmenhors­t.

The toll could rise further. Toxicology studies are continuing for five other cases, and the exhumation­s of three former patients are planned in Turkey. Some victims may have been cremated.

Police have said that if health officials had not hesitated in alerting the authoritie­s then Hogel might have been stopped earlier. Former staff at the two hospitals are facing criminal investigat­ions for negligence.

The previous worst German serial killer was also a male nurse who was convicted 10 years ago of killing 28 elderly patients in Bavaria by lethal injection because he felt sorry for them. He was sentenced to life in prison.

Europe’s most prolific postwar killer was Harold Shipman, a British doctor with 218 identified victims and who is believed to have killed as many as 250 people, most of them elderly and middleaged women who were his patients. Shipman was sentenced to 15 life terms in 2000 and hanged himself in prison in 2004. He was 57. – The Times

 ??  ?? Niels Hogel
Niels Hogel

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