Imperial Valley Press

Former Texas nurse accused of killing dozens of kids in ‘80s

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DALLAS (AP) — A Texas nurse who is in prison for the 1982 killing of a toddler has been charged with murder in the death of an infant a year earlier, and authoritie­s said Friday that they think she may have killed up to 60 young children around that time.

Genene Jones, 66, is serving concurrent 99year and 60-year sentences at a Gatesville prison for the 1982 killing of 15-month-old Chelsea McClelland and the sickening of a 4-week-old boy who survived. The girl was given a fatal injection of a muscle relaxant and the boy received a large injection of a blood thinner.

Jones was Jones due to be

freed next March under a mandatory release law that was in place when she was convicted. But on Thursday, the Bexar County district attorney’s office announced that she has been charged in the 1981 death of 11-month-old Joshua Sawyer, who investigat­ors say died of a fatal overdose of an anti-seizure drug, Dilantin.

During Jones’ time working in hospitals and clinics in San Antonio and elsewhere in Texas, children died of unexplaine­d seizures and other complicati­ons. At a news conference Friday in San Antonio, District Attorney Nico LaHood said investigat­ors believe Jones may have killed some or all of those children because they died under unusual circumstan­ces during or shortly after her shifts.

“She’s been suspected in dozens of infant deaths and she’s only been held accountabl­e in one,” he said.

It’s not clear why Jones’ actions, involving so many suspected victims, were not detected earlier. But Sam Millsap, a previous district attorney in Bexar County, told KSAT-TV in 2013 that medical records at the San Antonio hospital at one point were accidently destroyed, hampering efforts by investigat­ors to prove their suspicions.

Chelsea McClelland died after receiving an injection at a clinic in Kerrville, northwest of San Antonio, and prosecutor­s at Jones’ 1984 murder trial said the nurse lethally injected children there to demonstrat­e the need for a pediatric intensive care unit at a nearby hospital.

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