The Columbus Dispatch

Fired VA staffer in W.VA. charged in insulin deaths

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A former staffer at a veterans hospital in West Virginia is being charged with killing seven patients by giving them fatal doses of insulin, according to court documents unsealed Tuesday in a sweeping probe into a series of mysterious deaths.

Reta Mays, a former nursing assistant at the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg, is being charged with second degree murder in the deaths of seven people and assault with the intent to commit murder of an eighth person between 2017 and 2018.

She had a plea hearing scheduled for Tuesday afternoon.

The unsealed court records, which name Mays publicly for the first time, come after multiple families initiated civil lawsuits against VA leadership alleging a widespread system of failures at the hospital, where victims were wrongfully injected with insulin and suddenly died.

The widow of George Nelson Shaw

Sr. said the 81-year-old retired Air Force member was given four insulin shots without a doctor’s order in March 2018. Her lawsuit accuses the hospital of failing to securely store insulin and prevent its access by unauthoriz­ed personnel.

The office of U.S. Attorney Bill Powell has described the probe of at least 11 patient deaths at the hospital as a top priority. Robert Wilkie, the Veterans Affairs secretary, had called for an expedited investigat­ion into the deaths.

A federal judge was informed of the charges by U.S. Attorney Bill Powell’s office ahead of Mays’ plea hearing. Powell had described the probe of at least 11 patient deaths at the hospital as a top priority. Robert Wilkie, the Veterans Affairs secretary, had called for an expedited investigat­ion into the deaths.

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, who previously expressed “grave concerns over the pace of the investigat­ion” to Attorney General William Barr, told reporters last year that the FBI was involved and that the bodies of victims were being exhumed.

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