Chattanooga Times Free Press

Officials: German nurse killed at least 88

- MELISSA EDDY NYTIMES NEWS SERVICE

BERLIN — A German nurse serving a life sentence for murdering two of his patients is believed to have killed at least 86 others entrusted to his care, officials said Monday, in what they described as an imaginatio­n-defying series of crimes.

The nurse, identified as Niels Hoegel, was sentenced to life in prison in February 2015, after a court in the northern town of Oldenburg found him guilty of administer­ing overdoses of heart medication to some patients in an intensive care ward in Delmenhors­t. He was convicted of two counts of murder, two counts of attempted murder and causing bodily harm to patients and is serving his sentence.

During his trial, the former nurse confessed to intentiona­lly inducing cardiac crises in 90 of his patients, 30 of whom he said had died. That prompted officials to launch an investigat­ion into the deaths of some 130 of Hoegel’s former patients. The results were presented Monday in Oldenburg.

At least 84 of the convicted killer’s former patients were found to have died after suffering from injections of five different forms of medication, Johan Kuehme, chief of police in Oldenburg, told reporters.

Authoritie­s are waiting for the results of another 41 toxicology reports, the results of which could drive the number of confirmed deaths even higher, he said.

“The realizatio­n of what we were able to learn is horrifying,” Kuehme told reporters. “It defies any scope of the imaginatio­n.”

Hoegel, now 40, told the court at the time he had enjoyed trying to revive the patients. But his efforts did not always succeed, leaving some to become his victims.

The special commission, launched in October 2014, combed through evidence that included more than 500 patient files. It based its conclusion­s in part on toxicology tests on the remains of 134 possible victims, who were exhumed to see if they contained traces of the chemicals the nurse had confessed to using.

It found Hoegel had administer­ed lethal injections to patients at a hospital in Oldenburg, where he worked from 1999 to 2001.

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