I have heard this story several times and not once have I heard the backstories of the victims. Thanks for being the best True Crime on UA-cam by always speaking for the victims and telling their story.
When I saw the title, I thought “Oh, I’ve heard about her case before… but probably not the way he tells it.” And yep- heard new info. It’s always worth listening to this channel even if the case is one I know well.
Guys... I watched her whole interrogation/confession. She let out the wettest, loudest, longest fart in that tiny room with the poor detective. Idk how he kept his composure. He needs a medal of honor for his service that day.
Her explosive fart during the interrogation was the funniest thing I've ever seen. That poor detective had to sit in that cloud while the paint peeled. Absolute legend.
I'm 68 and have been healthy my entire life except for a period in 2018 when I got pneumonia and followed that with Septic Shock. My son is a grown man but it freaked him out so bad, (because he'd never known me to be sick) that he drove down to Austin and stayed with me every night I was in the hospital. I was in ICU for over 2 weeks and pretty much out of it for most of that time. Episodes like this one make me even more grateful that he took it upon himself to be my advocate because I trusted the staff completely and never questioned anything. He didn't distrust the staff but he made sure that they knew that he was taking an active role in my care. Yeah, I'm proud of the man he has become.
I’ve had sepsis from kidney stones/infection. My BP was 40/20 when I arrived by ambulance to the hospital. Of course, I don’t remember much of it in ICU. But I didn’t think I’d ever get over it. Actually, I don’t think I have, never got my strength back 100% but was so thankful to not have lost any limbs. Glad you made it, also.
You are blessed to have such a loving son. Glad you had a trustworthy staff and your son's presence meant a lot! I hope you are doing well and will continue to do so!
Communication is the most important thing when it comes to anyone’s health care. I am so happy your son was there to do that for you. I am a nurse’s aide and I am currently working in a memory care ward. Before that I was doing home care for 16 years, and even though some family members and/or friends can feel like they are butting in and being really picky and bossy at the same time it is wonderful to see others helping out loved ones when they can’t speak for themselves. And so often it is really helpful when they are there to visit or take someone out for a while, the patients love it and it can really make a difference in their entire mood
@@bbe3034I'm proud of ypur son too. You obviously did great work in raising him. So happy your health has improved. Blessing for continued excellent health. 🙏💙
My friend had an accident and became a paraplegic. He was in a rehab facility for about a year. He told me that most of the nurses were good, some were mediocre and some were cruel. One Nurse is particular was evil. She got mad at him for something and she "forgot" a spoon in his bed. He can't feel most of his body so he laid on it all day and all night. He still has the imprint of it on the back of his upper thigh. He believes she did this on purpose bc the next day she asked him if he was "going to behave now." The day he left that place he bawled his head off. He really didn't think he would make it out of there. He filed a complaint soon after and come to find out she had received a bunch of complaints similar to his. I don't think she wanted him to die. I think she enjoyed watching him suffer.
@@cumswag1222 Approximately 65-70% of all nurses (in the US and depending what data you go off of) are white so I get that you were trying to clap back but it's just likely that the nurse was white based on statistics. Go off though.
As a nurse myself it is shocking that 1. Anyone could use their knowledge of medicine this way and 2. that other staff didn't think to check the ailing patients blood glucose! Especially the diabetic ones. That was always my 1st intervention if a patient was feeling poorly or out of sorts, vitals, blood sugars, labs. Hypoglycemia is easily treated. Unacceptable on all levels.
As an RN that’s exactly what I was thinking, A blood glucose level is one of the very first things you would check. People who prey on the sick and elderly are the worst of the worst. Esp people in positions of trust.
I was thinking the same as well. As a nurse it's just part of the change in status assessment especially known diabetic patients. A lot of times either this or a UTI is the culprit in status changes in the elderly. A pattern would have become apparent.
Yes, I was thinking the same thing. PLUS how was it that no one noticed med counts being off, or did I miss that part? Where I worked, there was tight control over this.
As a nurse’s aide I am as well. How many times are we taught to walk away from a patient who is agitated and try again later. And bring another nurse or aide in with you to help
Just want to say if you do find yourself with some who is diabetic having a hypoglycemic episode and they are able to swallow, get them sugary fluids like apple juice or orange juice. Then get them something with a lot of starchy carbohydrates like bread. You want to give them a mix of fast acting glucose and slow acting glucose. The symptoms of hypoglycemia are most often confused with drunkenness: slurred speech, awkward walking, incoherence. If you are a diabetic, please get yourself a bracelet indicating as such, honestly it will probably save your life.
About the bracelet; as a type 1 diabetic for almost 40 years the bracelet can also kill you. Some people think to treat low bloodsugar is to give you insulin! And of course I'm too confused and out of it because of the low bloodsugar to know what I'm talking about. Try to "fight" people of when weak due to low bloodsugar. Especially as a kid when adults already won't take you serious because you are a kid. I haven't worn a bracelet since.
I always think of Julia Roberts in Steel Magnolias & I swear for my generation, that was actually informative. As a police officer we are also taught that people acting super drunk, but don’t smell like booze, but we can smell a sweet fruity smell indicates diabetic emergency. We call the fire dept IMMEDIATELY
And, especially if they've experienced a shock like a fall or stressful news. Why I say this is because my elderly mother had fallen on her way back to bed after using the bathroom. Her legs had poor circulation and it took her several hours to crawl from where she fell, to across the living room where the phone was. My husband and I immediately rushed over, and I let myself in her apartment with my spare key. My husband picked her up from the floor (still makes me choke up thinking about it!) and put her in her favorite chair. I took her blood pressure, then checked her glucose. Her pressure was a little high and bloods were slightly elevated but w/in range for her, and other than shivering (from the stress and strain, I presumed), she was okay. I told her I was spending the night with her, but she was adamant that she was fine, and wanted to be alone. I got her a sweater and a blanket, made her a jam sandwich and put it on the table beside her along with an open bottle of orange juice, her glucose candies, and the cordless phone. We stayed for about an hour, then left once she was settled. Early the following morning I went to see her, and aside from a bruise on her arm from the fall, she was okay. I'm not a nurse, but I had enough wherewithal to know that the shock from that fall, at her age, and w/her medical conditions, was to be taken seriously.
As if killing the vulnerable, elderly and the sick wasn’t bad enough, these poor people were needlessly murdered by the person they trusted and depended on to care for them. The betrayal of a vulnerable persons trust makes these already sickening crimes so much worse. Thanks for sharing the victims stories, Jiles. Most channels will focus on the murderer in this case, so it is refreshing to see the victims treated as human beings with lives and backstories. Nice job 👍🏼
She quit hey job when offered to work with sick kids. Because she didn't want to hurt children. And killing the elderly wasn't horrible enough in her demented brain? She has messed up scruples, for sure! (I am glad she wasn't moved into pediatric because that would make her fifty times as bad, imo) Take care and be safe.
@@amandahugginkiss55 I don’t believe there is much difference between harming sick kids and the elderly, both vulnerable and dependant upon her for care, both wanting to live and holding onto what precious life that they have remaining. She was in a position of trust, so whether that be with the young, the old, or anywhere in between, it’s pretty fucked up to do what she did. Kinda makes me paranoid tbh about going to doctors and hospitals etc, cos who really knows wtf is going on in some peoples deranged minds!?! Scary stuff. But yeah, well done Elizabeth for quitting to avoid killing kids 🙄 maybe she should’ve quit the very first day she considered murdering ANYONE, instead of attempting to (and eventually succeeding in) killing her patients, for a number of years!! But as long as she didn’t hurt the kids, right?! 😒
@@lolly5453 I agree! My opinion is that killing innocent kids is way worse than killing old people. They've lived and loved and experienced so much. No matter how they die, they have lived a lifetime of life. Kids not so much.
Agreed on the victim focus. I sincerely appreciate that even though the monster's name is always in the title, every victim is treated like the actual individual human that they are. 2 other channels are also very very good at this - Truly Criminal (they especially go into the family's activities after losing their loved one) and The Misery Machine (who apologize when they have no background info about a victim). ✌️🍍
Her entire integration is shocking. As a recently retired nurse who worked many years in long term care, this just blew me away. Sincere Thoughts to these resident's families.
I'm a retired RN, too and worked in hospitals & skilled nursing facilities. I don't consider this particular monster deserving of the title "Nurse". Her poor patients had no idea. I always told my patients that they could refuse or question anyone.
@@dirpdanger8839 i too think also so little controll especially with insulin. After seeing this..I wonder too. Many feel over worked..and probably are, scary for sure!! I am glad I am retired.
She should not have been working in long term care if she found her residents so annoying and difficult to look after. Lots of places are constantly hiring nurse’s and aides so it’s not like she would have been without a job. I work as an aide in memory care (I spent 16 years working in home care as an aide), and yes there are people who are constantly difficult to get ADLs done with but you just keep your head on and when you have trouble go get another coworker to help you. If that fails go to someone higher up and report it. As long as the right people are aware of a tough situation with a resident then they can help direct you on what to do next. What I at is if you are having a hard time at your job talk to someone. Communicate
I always learn something new from you. I was familiar with Wettlaufer's case, but I never knew that she actually LAUGHED while she killed these poor people. That just makes her more of a monster.
Something similar happened to my grandfather in 1992 at the Veterans hospital in Columbia Missouri. Richard Williams a nurse there injected him and others with succinylcholine. It paralyzed them and they stopped breathing. The FBI got involved but someone messed up the paperwork and they let him go!! We were furious! Not only did he kill at the hospital but a nursing home prior to that. He is still out there free somewhere. My grandfather who survived WW2 was murdered by a monster who had a sick fascination watching people die. You can Google it. There were many stories about it in 2003. Stories like this just brings it all back.
It’s really sad how many killer nurses there are. I mean there aren’t a lot compared to how many nurses there are, but it blows my mind that someone could go to all that school to care for people when all they wanna do is kill? I mean I guess it makes sense if you are a monster. You have to be just completely evil. It’s weird they always either use insulin or succinylcholine.
I literally been getting recommended her interrogation from a different channel all week I finally clicked on it. My UA-cam crashed I reopen it and find out I can first listen to this is MONSTERS cover her. Thank you!
R.I.P James Silcox and thank you. My parents and grandparents were liberated in the Netherlands by you and other Canadian soldiers in the spring of1945
As someone who works in a long term care facility myself, I've seen first hand that many people have no empathy when it comes to residents. Personally, I can't imagine ever being angry enough to cause any substantial or fatal harm to someone you're supposed to care for.
This is so scary . As a clinical social worker in health care . I really can understand why a lot of families are horrified at the thought of putting family members in nursing homes.
imagine if she didn’t constantly feel the need to snitch on herself. she could’ve gotten away with 8 murders???? this just goes to show if someone doesn’t “look” like a murderer, they can get away with a ton! i cant believe she told 4 people ???
@@akg1649 Take a look through the comments, I have seen a few comments from healthcare workers expressing how difficult the job can be mentally. As well as the struggles one stressful night leading them down a path of addiction but they sought out help. We don't have to write off all healthcare workers who struggle just because of this women's sickness.
@@Lostboy.7z I’ve been a patient more times than I can count. Sorry, but last thing I want is a nurse or dr taking care of me who is high. Yes, it is a sickness but she was in charge of other people’s lives and because of her addiction some of her patients didn’t get their own medications. It’s not right. What if it were you or a relative? You’re telling me you’d be ok with it?
@@akg1649 I completely agree with you, I just hope to not treat all healthcare workers struggling with addiction and recovery. I dont want to be treated by someone in that state either or my family members and I would be pissed. I'm just trying to be empathetic to all the good HC workers who get help. I think we probably agree on most of this but I mistook your comment as being harsher than it really was.
@Sushia, yes, she was clearly severely mentally ill and she tried many strategies to stop ...Like dulling her senses with depressant drugs, telling people, turning to what she thought was a supernatural being that could help her. I also think it's significant she quit rather than work with kids.This is just so horrible and tragic all around.
I’m a type one diabetic and once I realized what was coming after the Fredrick Banting part honestly my stomach dropped. A low blood sugar is not a nice feeling at all, an extremely low blood sugar feels very confusing, disorienting, numbing and can be painful. It’s almost like living a fever dream if it’s bad enough. 50 units of insulin is an absurd amount of insulin EVEN for a diabetic, that could easily kill a diabetic
T1D as well...the amount of insulin used here is shocking. For me, hypoglycemia feels like a feral, intense hunger. Sort of like your abdomen is collapsing inwards on itself in a painful and intense manner. I start shaking uncontrollably and lose my balance, and it's like your thinking iust gets stretched so thin you can't comprehend anything. Having hypoglycemia bad enough that you are so desperate for food but can't get out of bed from weakness is terrible. It's feels like you are starving to death in just minutes to hours as it develops, and it can kill you just that fast. Tl;dr, too much insulin and hypoglycemia is a terrible experience
@@kirasmith1147 No, there is such a thing as mandated reporting. This applies not only for the sake of children, but for adults who have care givers, such as in orphanages, schools, nursing care facilities, hospitals, etc. Such laws are the result of the abuse, and neglect in other cases in order to help protect people who can't protect themselves. Such laws would be the result of a humanitarian state. (NOT authoritarian.) Why would you stay silent and aid the perpetrator to continue in hurting/murdering others? Fear? Low moral compass? They would just continue on like Wettlaufer did because no one who knew would report her. If this had happened to my grandmother or other relative/friend- I'd be just as angry toward those mandated reporters who did nothing.
Imagine that 95 years old, lived through both world wars just to get killed by this horrible piece of work. I have a feeling her parents fundamentalism has a lot to do with her rage and propensity to blame the same God for her crimes, because het parents were fundamentalists and strict
She looked really good for her age too. You can kind of tell she was a bold and outspoken person. I love her style with her sweaters and earrings. She looks like she would have been a really fun person to know
"They could be a bit of a handful" That's literally the nature of the job. It's your job to deal with difficult patients. That's why it's important to make sure the people who work at these places are not quick to anger.
Exactly. I have been working as a nurse’s aide in senior care since 2005 and this is just part of the work. They can’t help it, it’s part of the dementia or whatever they have going on health wise that is causing them to act the way they do. You take a deep breath and walk away when you just can’t do anything in that moment. There is always time to re approach and try again.
I have a lot of admiration for those who work with difficult patients. I’m sure most are just annoying or rude but I can imagine some are combative and don’t understand where they are.
A lot of channels focus on her wild interrogation, but I’ve listened to the victim impact statements and it’s important to remember she really tore apart entire families even years after they’d come to term with the deaths.
Wow! I am 52 and Today I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes which I know nothing about. This video (not to be confused with medical advice) gave me a basic understanding of what organs regulate my condition. JILES gets a 5 star because his presentation is informative but doesnt present controversial medical advice.
I didn’t go through all the comments so this might have been mentioned. I have several friends who are diabetic. The doctor sold the formula for insulin for $1 cause he wanted to save lives. I believe it costs lest than $10 to make a vile yet my friend cannot retire because his out-of-pocket cost would be $800 a vile. That is disgusting.
As someone who has BPD. The important thing to remember is not everyone who has it are monsters, but the anger beast is real and I fight it everyday. My impulse control is astronomical while raising teenagers.
Most narcissists don't kill people either, they just inflict a great deal of damage and trauma in their close relationships through their manipulative, passive-aggressive, unstable, needy, controlling, and emotionally ab*sive behaviour. Borderlines behave in many of the same ways, although they almost never recognise or take responsibility for their harmful behaviour. They are far more likely to believe (mistakenly) that they are the victims and that problems in their relationships are someone else's fault.
I'm not going to lie. My mother had BPD and was extremely abusive. Anyone with BPD is very triggering for me. I hope you are getting mental health help and will keep you in my prayers.
@@jenniferedwards1752I understand why you feel that way, but you can't equate having BPD with being abusive. people with BPD are often abused themselves
I grew up in Woodstock and still live nearby. My high school was across the street from Caressant Care. This case completely shook the community, it was hard to believe that such a monster could I’ve in our quiet little town.
My nursing career started as an LPN before an RN as I was an accountant prior and wasn't sure I could handle the career. My first job after graduation was in a LTC facility on the 3-11 shift. My nursing instructor had warned us not to wear our ID badges around our neck because the lanyard could be used as a weapon. Of course I did what everyone did once working and wore it on a lanyard. I was giving meds to a sweet little old lady in a w/c when she suddenly grabbed my lanyard, twisted it tight, and pulled as hard as possible choking me while hitting me in the face with her other fist. It took 4 people to get me free from her. I was bruised and bloody. That was the old days of triple restraints; she went in a geri chair, got an injection to calm her and wrists restraints. About 20 minutes later she was calm and we helped her to bed. She was suddenly as sweet as pie again and begged me the sit with her on her bed edge. I sat with her and every time she moved I would flinch thinking she was going to attack me again. Needless to say over the next 35 years I never wore a lanyard again. Expect the unexpected. 🙂
Geesh!! You know the movie Dumb and Dumber? Reminds me of the part where Jim Carey says “I just got robbed by a sweet old lady driving a motor cart.” You just never know!! I am sorry that happened to you though. I guess looks can be deceiving!
"Un gay their daughter " as a mother with a gay child any time I hear of "conversion therapy" it is gut wrenching. Thanks again for another informative video and ine I've not heard before. By far the best true crime guy on UA-cam 🧡
I can't stop thinking about how if she actually received a proper treatment for her BPD and addiction issues and if people took her confessions seriously, all these people might have lived.
It is appalling how many people this woman actually confessed to, and not a single person thought it would be a good idea to go to the police, just in case she wasn't lying. Unreal.
What happened to all those people she confessed to? It is awful that they did nothing, even if they thought she was lying or mentally unstable, they should have called the Police.
Yeah, the 18 year old and I can understand more because she was young and probably terrified. But the pastor that heard the confession??? Even if she seemed to be lying out of her ass, he should have reported it because wtf that’s a problem.
@@chelscara yeah, even if she was lying, she clearly has some mental health issues if she believes she killed a bunch of people... like report it to someone? What if she was just making it up, but felt guilty about these "murders" and committed suicide? Obviously thats not the scenario here, but someone in this situation is in no way mentally well and needs to be checked out.
Three stories to cover when you get a chance 1. The Sutherland Springs massacre in Texas 2. The Walmart El Paso shooting 3. Pearl cruise and her father the murder of Diane Tilly ( from San Antonio)
Im an RN myself and this story is terrifying as well as heartbreaking to me. I’ve been admitted to the hospital before and it is truly stressful having to put your trust in others and hoping they do the right thing with your best interests in mind. This monster preyed on some of the most vulnerable population, truly despicable.
I work at a caressant care myself. We were so shocked by this. The media was so bad! Caressant care was under scrutiny. Media called us, showed up outside our building just to get us to say something. Thankfully we had excellent direction from head office to just direct them to call a number. If they did, I don’t know. Thanks to this evil woman, we nurses now have to count every medication, including insulin and has to be verified by another nurse before administering it. I hope this woman enjoys the rest of her life because her afterlife is going to be hell, pun intended.
I grew up 20 minutes down the road from Woodstock. I was actually working there when this was in the news. This was all everyone talked about for weeks.
My favorite channel on UA-cam. This case raises so many questions. One of which is there a nursing shortage in Canada? She kept getting jobs being clearly incompetent: alcoholic, drug addict and morbid obesity do not promote health and wellness
Love this show. As a type 1 diabetic this was hard to watch. Low blood sugar, is f’n terrifying. And trust me, would be a horrible way to die. This woman makes me sick 😓
Got to give it to you Jiles, I have watched you since day one, and you are hands down the best true crime youtuber out there, your research is deep, your intro song is so simple yet so eerie and catchy, your opening graphics are just getting cooler each season, world class stuff man
I love this channel so much, it’s the best on UA-cam. Thank you for everything you do. I have also heard the story before from another UA-camr. You honestly tell it the best!
Sadly for many of us, Jim learned how to swim and swam (is that a word?) away from youtube…edit: but this creator and a few more are VERY good at what they do, so I’ve grabbed onto their 🚎 and riding along with them! I do miss Jim :(
Thank you for the recommendations, I will definitely check them out! From my side I can recommend Eleanor Neale, she can really dig up old and interesting stories to cover.
I was in what became a very toxic relationship with someone who suffered from Borderline personality disorder. It's a difficult condition to navigate. My mum is 86 and I'm so thankful that (apart from her hearing!) she is mobile and mentally fine. It would be so difficult to deal with something like dementia.
I cannot believe how many people did not report Beth after she told them she murdered people... if someone tells you they murdered someone report it... if you don't report it and they go on to murder someone else then blood is on your hands...
Exactly. I cannot know whether or not the person is telling me some weird lie. Let the police figure that one out. If it turns out to be false, hopefully the fake killer learned a lesson to not lie about those things. Context is everything though. I guess I personally wouldn't do it if someone says it jokingly. It doesn't look like Beth was being funny about it, though.
Thank you for telling these victims stories, you truly are my favourite true crime channel. A real staple in my household. Thanks for all the great content🤍
Thank you for the depth and time you give the victims. I’ve heard this story many times and never once seen a picture of all of the victims until today. It’s kind of you to give them the respect and visibility they deserve.
I have borderline personality disorder. And I’m a nurse. And I dropped out of college too. I have zero desire to physically hurt anyone. I love my residents like they’re my own.
Twice, in my 38 years as a nurse, did i come across 2 nurses that i felt were dangerous, both times i made reports about them, both not taken seriously. Told my management not to put me on shifts with them, because something was going to happen and that i was not taking the blame and losing my PIN for them employing unsafe people, (same ward different times). One eventually was struck off and made front page news, the other gave insulin to a pancreatectomy patient and put her in ITU, she was 'asked to leave' after playing the race card, thus shifting her on to some other hospital. Shocking state of affairs.
I am an RN, a healthcare administrator, and an adjunct college professor. I remember seeing her interrogation video and found MYSELF becoming very angry at the AUDACITY of how callously she murdered these elderly people who were in her care!!🤬 These people were loved and it was her PROFESSIONAL DUTY to take care of them, not end their life!! She kept thinking she would get caught early on because she KNEW, if an autopsy were completed she would be done for as the high insulin levels would be found on toxicology reports. But, due to the circumstances, none was completed. So terrible...
Early in my career as a medic we got called to a nursing home for a full arrest. I couldn’t get anything back. One of the aides came into the room and yelled she’s a diabetic I had just pushed epinephrine and atropine heard that and for shits and giggles we have her an amp PD D50 sugar iv push I then gave her sodium bicarb we got pulses and by the time we were at the hospital she was breathing on her own. The charge nurse sometimes overdosed patients on insulin as a way to punishment for soiling her clothes I heard this and several people reported it to the cops. She was fired and the nursing home went out of business
A lot of the stories you covered I learned about from a young age or over time being curious but I do enjoy revisiting the memory with a superb narrator like you
I'm not diabetic, but I do have episodes of low blood sugar thanks to a chronic stomach illness, and man is it a miserable feeling. I can't imagine how scary it would be to die that way, especially when you don't know what's going on. I can't say it's the same for everyone but when I have low blood sugar moments, I get like...this impending doom feeling I guess? Like it starts with just feeling like something horrible is about to happen, and that's usually my indication my blood sugar is about to drop. Can you imagine that being your last moment alive? Gives me shivers.
This really makes me angry 😡...I'm a nurse who takes care of the elderly and I don't know how someone could do this evil shit, ughhhh..RIP to all her victims ❤️🙏
I am a male nurse and i work in nursing the elderly,its so disturbing that somewhat was doing the same work as me but chose to end lifes instead of making sure those people live a good quality life until they die naturally
I live in Geraldton Ontario, I remember when her arrest was public there was a murmur across the high school about this woman and how she worked at the hospital.
This was huge all over Canada when it first came to light. Thank you for covering this story like you did. I would love to see you cover the Robert Pickton case. I still believe he did not act alone after he brought women back to the farm. Such a long and very convoluted case. I believe he took the fall for others. I don’t think he is innocent but I don’t thing he was alone in the murders.
Perfect timing for the trial of Lucy Letby killer baby nurse. A lot of commonalities between them in psychology, the parenting style they grew up under, repressed sexuality/sexual issues and their MO including anger, projection and displacement of anger, jealousy and the methods of attack and preferred drugs.
This is the only mini doc on her that I've been able to tolerate. Even her interrogation agitated me. As usual, you've made an excellent run at this story, things I've never read or heard before now. Thank you for your due diligence to your craft sir.
@Ѕқџ Gęṃἱחἱ there's an Interrogation of her that lines up when I hit autoplay and I just hit skip when I hear her voice. It aggravates me for some reason. Why would the specifics of my personal aggravation concern you so much that you commented? Step away from the tech, go for a walk, read a book......
I have heard this story several times and not once have I heard the backstories of the victims. Thanks for being the best True Crime on UA-cam by always speaking for the victims and telling their story.
This is why I love this channel so much! Jiles puts in the extra effort to recognize the victims as much, if not moreso, the Monsters. 💖💖💖
Yasss he is my favorite
He is awesome, no doubt!
When I saw the title, I thought “Oh, I’ve heard about her case before… but probably not the way he tells it.” And yep- heard new info. It’s always worth listening to this channel even if the case is one I know well.
I agree
8:44 Her wearing that horrendous minion shirt in public should've been enough evidence that lady was not to be trusted
🤣🤣🤣
Truly one of the most disgusting and depraved things i've seen in any of these videos
Bwahahaha!!! So true...😂🤣😂
That shirt is part of her scrubs.
I choked on my sandwich when reading this lmao 😭
Guys... I watched her whole interrogation/confession. She let out the wettest, loudest, longest fart in that tiny room with the poor detective. Idk how he kept his composure. He needs a medal of honor for his service that day.
I was wondering if this was her 😂😂😂😂😂
She let out the biggest Wettlaufer.
How he kept his composure as she ripped one so loud and vile that it peeled the wallpaper, I’ll never know
She wet her laufer right in front of that poor poor man. It sounded so moist and bubbly as the gas bubble struggled to escape her folds 😫
maybe that was the "red surge bubbling up"
Her explosive fart during the interrogation was the funniest thing I've ever seen. That poor detective had to sit in that cloud while the paint peeled. Absolute legend.
😂🤣😂💀 I’m going to watch it immediately when this is over.
What's the time of her fatt on the interview give a link
I'm 68 and have been healthy my entire life except for a period in 2018 when I got pneumonia and followed that with Septic Shock. My son is a grown man but it freaked him out so bad, (because he'd never known me to be sick) that he drove down to Austin and stayed with me every night I was in the hospital. I was in ICU for over 2 weeks and pretty much out of it for most of that time. Episodes like this one make me even more grateful that he took it upon himself to be my advocate because I trusted the staff completely and never questioned anything. He didn't distrust the staff but he made sure that they knew that he was taking an active role in my care. Yeah, I'm proud of the man he has become.
And you should be proud, very proud. Great son! So glad you’re well now
I’ve had sepsis from kidney stones/infection. My BP was 40/20 when I arrived by ambulance to the hospital. Of course, I don’t remember much of it in ICU. But I didn’t think I’d ever get over it. Actually, I don’t think I have, never got my strength back 100% but was so thankful to not have lost any limbs. Glad you made it, also.
You are blessed to have such a loving son. Glad you had a trustworthy staff and your son's presence meant a lot! I hope you are doing well and will continue to do so!
Communication is the most important thing when it comes to anyone’s health care. I am so happy your son was there to do that for you. I am a nurse’s aide and I am currently working in a memory care ward. Before that I was doing home care for 16 years, and even though some family members and/or friends can feel like they are butting in and being really picky and bossy at the same time it is wonderful to see others helping out loved ones when they can’t speak for themselves. And so often it is really helpful when they are there to visit or take someone out for a while, the patients love it and it can really make a difference in their entire mood
@@bbe3034I'm proud of ypur son too. You obviously did great work in raising him. So happy your health has improved. Blessing for continued excellent health. 🙏💙
I haven’t decided what’s more disturbing. Multiple people not taking her confessions seriously or her laughing as she murdered her patients
The laughing is normal, but the blatant negligence from the others is questionable
Both are a different kind of nasty, but equally dusturbing
The ones who didn’t report this pig should be held accountable. Disgusting case on so many levels.
@@rlm2476 That gives pigs everywhere a bad name. LOL!!
@@tinynina76 you are right. My apologies to pigs the world over for comparing them to this waste of space.
She confessed several times but was taken as a liar. So many missed opportunities!
and lives lost
People with BPD do bullshit through their back teeth though and constantly attention seek
She probably lied all the time
@@SchindlersFiist yup. This says more about her than it does about those people.
My friend had an accident and became a paraplegic. He was in a rehab facility for about a year. He told me that most of the nurses were good, some were mediocre and some were cruel. One Nurse is particular was evil. She got mad at him for something and she "forgot" a spoon in his bed. He can't feel most of his body so he laid on it all day and all night. He still has the imprint of it on the back of his upper thigh. He believes she did this on purpose bc the next day she asked him if he was "going to behave now." The day he left that place he bawled his head off. He really didn't think he would make it out of there. He filed a complaint soon after and come to find out she had received a bunch of complaints similar to his. I don't think she wanted him to die. I think she enjoyed watching him suffer.
I’m willing to bet she was a white woman
@@truartist5379 Tru Racist there I fixed your name for you
@Jae Brd that is horrible! There's a special place in hell for these Tru monsters
@@cumswag1222 Savage. Wrong; but savage.
@@cumswag1222 Approximately 65-70% of all nurses (in the US and depending what data you go off of) are white so I get that you were trying to clap back but it's just likely that the nurse was white based on statistics. Go off though.
As a nurse in Toronto this story still haunts us, she’s a stain on our profession.
Do you do what she did sometimes? You can tell me.
@@DrPhil-kx3ci lol
Thank you for your hard work! 🙏 🥰
@@DrPhil-kx3ci lmao 😂
@@DrPhil-kx3ci 💀💀💀
As a nurse myself it is shocking that 1. Anyone could use their knowledge of medicine this way and 2. that other staff didn't think to check the ailing patients blood glucose! Especially the diabetic ones. That was always my 1st intervention if a patient was feeling poorly or out of sorts, vitals, blood sugars, labs. Hypoglycemia is easily treated. Unacceptable on all levels.
As an RN that’s exactly what I was thinking, A blood glucose level is one of the very first things you would check. People who prey on the sick and elderly are the worst of the worst. Esp people in positions of trust.
I was thinking the same as well. As a nurse it's just part of the change in status assessment especially known diabetic patients. A lot of times either this or a UTI is the culprit in status changes in the elderly. A pattern would have become apparent.
@@Soffity remember guys she was a night nurse she probably was one of the only ones there night shift at a elderly living home
I wonder if it has something to do given Canada has a gov health care system? Glad the hear some people here take excellent care of their patients.
Yes, I was thinking the same thing. PLUS how was it that no one noticed med counts being off, or did I miss that part? Where I worked, there was tight control over this.
As a former nurse, I'm completely embarrassed and pissed off by this woman.
Me too1😳🙄🙏
As a nurse’s aide I am as well. How many times are we taught to walk away from a patient who is agitated and try again later. And bring another nurse or aide in with you to help
No need to be ladies!
99.99% of nurses are earth angels!
Ive spent my 60 years in and out of hospital!
The nurses were more than lovely ❤
Thank you for your hard work! 🙏 🥰
Just think of how many nurses are getting away with this right now. Even doctors
Just want to say if you do find yourself with some who is diabetic having a hypoglycemic episode and they are able to swallow, get them sugary fluids like apple juice or orange juice. Then get them something with a lot of starchy carbohydrates like bread. You want to give them a mix of fast acting glucose and slow acting glucose.
The symptoms of hypoglycemia are most often confused with drunkenness: slurred speech, awkward walking, incoherence.
If you are a diabetic, please get yourself a bracelet indicating as such, honestly it will probably save your life.
Thanks for this information. It's much appreciated.
I'll try and remember this too
About the bracelet; as a type 1 diabetic for almost 40 years the bracelet can also kill you. Some people think to treat low bloodsugar is to give you insulin! And of course I'm too confused and out of it because of the low bloodsugar to know what I'm talking about. Try to "fight" people of when weak due to low bloodsugar. Especially as a kid when adults already won't take you serious because you are a kid. I haven't worn a bracelet since.
I always think of Julia Roberts in Steel Magnolias & I swear for my generation, that was actually informative. As a police officer we are also taught that people acting super drunk, but don’t smell like booze, but we can smell a sweet fruity smell indicates diabetic emergency. We call the fire dept IMMEDIATELY
And, especially if they've experienced a shock like a fall or stressful news. Why I say this is because my elderly mother had fallen on her way back to bed after using the bathroom. Her legs had poor circulation and it took her several hours to crawl from where she fell, to across the living room where the phone was.
My husband and I immediately rushed over, and I let myself in her apartment with my spare key.
My husband picked her up from the floor (still makes me choke up thinking about it!) and put her in her favorite chair. I took her blood pressure, then checked her glucose. Her pressure was a little high and bloods were slightly elevated but w/in range for her, and other than shivering (from the stress and strain, I presumed), she was okay.
I told her I was spending the night with her, but she was adamant that she was fine, and wanted to be alone. I got her a sweater and a blanket, made her a jam sandwich and put it on the table beside her along with an open bottle of orange juice, her glucose candies, and the cordless phone. We stayed for about an hour, then left once she was settled.
Early the following morning I went to see her, and aside from a bruise on her arm from the fall, she was okay.
I'm not a nurse, but I had enough wherewithal to know that the shock from that fall, at her age, and w/her medical conditions, was to be taken seriously.
As if killing the vulnerable, elderly and the sick wasn’t bad enough, these poor people were needlessly murdered by the person they trusted and depended on to care for them. The betrayal of a vulnerable persons trust makes these already sickening crimes so much worse.
Thanks for sharing the victims stories, Jiles. Most channels will focus on the murderer in this case, so it is refreshing to see the victims treated as human beings with lives and backstories. Nice job 👍🏼
She quit hey job when offered to work with sick kids. Because she didn't want to hurt children. And killing the elderly wasn't horrible enough in her demented brain? She has messed up scruples, for sure!
(I am glad she wasn't moved into pediatric because that would make her fifty times as bad, imo) Take care and be safe.
@@amandahugginkiss55 I don’t believe there is much difference between harming sick kids and the elderly, both vulnerable and dependant upon her for care, both wanting to live and holding onto what precious life that they have remaining. She was in a position of trust, so whether that be with the young, the old, or anywhere in between, it’s pretty fucked up to do what she did. Kinda makes me paranoid tbh about going to doctors and hospitals etc, cos who really knows wtf is going on in some peoples deranged minds!?! Scary stuff.
But yeah, well done Elizabeth for quitting to avoid killing kids 🙄 maybe she should’ve quit the very first day she considered murdering ANYONE, instead of attempting to (and eventually succeeding in) killing her patients, for a number of years!! But as long as she didn’t hurt the kids, right?! 😒
@@lolly5453 I agree! My opinion is that killing innocent kids is way worse than killing old people. They've lived and loved and experienced so much. No matter how they die, they have lived a lifetime of life. Kids not so much.
Agreed.💙🙏
Agreed on the victim focus. I sincerely appreciate that even though the monster's name is always in the title, every victim is treated like the actual individual human that they are.
2 other channels are also very very good at this - Truly Criminal (they especially go into the family's activities after losing their loved one) and The Misery Machine (who apologize when they have no background info about a victim). ✌️🍍
Her entire integration is shocking. As a recently retired nurse who worked many years in long term care, this just blew me away. Sincere Thoughts to these resident's families.
I too am a retired nurse, and I feel like this likely happened a lot more than we suspect.
I'm a retired RN, too and worked in hospitals & skilled nursing facilities. I don't consider this particular monster deserving of the title "Nurse". Her poor patients had no idea. I always told my patients that they could refuse or question anyone.
@@dirpdanger8839 i too think also so little controll especially with insulin. After seeing this..I wonder too. Many feel over worked..and probably are, scary for sure!! I am glad I am retired.
@@MarciaBaker1205 absolutely agree!!! She is a serial killer..no less...no more!
She should not have been working in long term care if she found her residents so annoying and difficult to look after. Lots of places are constantly hiring nurse’s and aides so it’s not like she would have been without a job. I work as an aide in memory care (I spent 16 years working in home care as an aide), and yes there are people who are constantly difficult to get ADLs done with but you just keep your head on and when you have trouble go get another coworker to help you. If that fails go to someone higher up and report it. As long as the right people are aware of a tough situation with a resident then they can help direct you on what to do next. What I at is if you are having a hard time at your job talk to someone. Communicate
I always learn something new from you. I was familiar with Wettlaufer's case, but I never knew that she actually LAUGHED while she killed these poor people. That just makes her more of a monster.
Something similar happened to my grandfather in 1992 at the Veterans hospital in Columbia Missouri. Richard Williams a nurse there injected him and others with succinylcholine. It paralyzed them and they stopped breathing. The FBI got involved but someone messed up the paperwork and they let him go!! We were furious! Not only did he kill at the hospital but a nursing home prior to that. He is still out there free somewhere. My grandfather who survived WW2 was murdered by a monster who had a sick fascination watching people die. You can Google it. There were many stories about it in 2003. Stories like this just brings it all back.
How awful. So sorry for your loss.
I'm so sorry for you and your family. Your grandfather deserved to die with dignity.
That's just horrific.
It’s really sad how many killer nurses there are. I mean there aren’t a lot compared to how many nurses there are, but it blows my mind that someone could go to all that school to care for people when all they wanna do is kill? I mean I guess it makes sense if you are a monster. You have to be just completely evil. It’s weird they always either use insulin or succinylcholine.
That is horrendous. I am so sorry for your experience and loss.
I literally been getting recommended her interrogation from a different channel all week I finally clicked on it. My UA-cam crashed I reopen it and find out I can first listen to this is MONSTERS cover her. Thank you!
Thank you. That's why I know her face.
lol juuuû
She farts loudly during her interview
R.I.P James Silcox and thank you. My parents and grandparents were liberated in the Netherlands by you and other Canadian soldiers in the spring of1945
As someone who works in a long term care facility myself, I've seen first hand that many people have no empathy when it comes to residents. Personally, I can't imagine ever being angry enough to cause any substantial or fatal harm to someone you're supposed to care for.
How many times does someone have to confess to being a serial killer before somebody tells the cops???
Too bloody many by the sounds of it!!!!! 😠
This is so scary . As a clinical social worker in health care . I really can understand why a lot of families are horrified at the thought of putting family members in nursing homes.
imagine if she didn’t constantly feel the need to snitch on herself. she could’ve gotten away with 8 murders???? this just goes to show if someone doesn’t “look” like a murderer, they can get away with a ton! i cant believe she told 4 people ???
I can’t believe her nursing license wasn’t revoked with her being an addict.
@@akg1649 Take a look through the comments, I have seen a few comments from healthcare workers expressing how difficult the job can be mentally. As well as the struggles one stressful night leading them down a path of addiction but they sought out help. We don't have to write off all healthcare workers who struggle just because of this women's sickness.
@@Lostboy.7z I’ve been a patient more times than I can count. Sorry, but last thing I want is a nurse or dr taking care of me who is high. Yes, it is a sickness but she was in charge of other people’s lives and because of her addiction some of her patients didn’t get their own medications. It’s not right. What if it were you or a relative? You’re telling me you’d be ok with it?
@@akg1649 I completely agree with you, I just hope to not treat all healthcare workers struggling with addiction and recovery. I dont want to be treated by someone in that state either or my family members and I would be pissed. I'm just trying to be empathetic to all the good HC workers who get help. I think we probably agree on most of this but I mistook your comment as being harsher than it really was.
@Sushia, yes, she was clearly severely mentally ill and she tried many strategies to stop ...Like dulling her senses with depressant drugs, telling people, turning to what she thought was a supernatural being that could help her. I also think it's significant she quit rather than work with kids.This is just so horrible and tragic all around.
I’m a type one diabetic and once I realized what was coming after the Fredrick Banting part honestly my stomach dropped. A low blood sugar is not a nice feeling at all, an extremely low blood sugar feels very confusing, disorienting, numbing and can be painful. It’s almost like living a fever dream if it’s bad enough. 50 units of insulin is an absurd amount of insulin EVEN for a diabetic, that could easily kill a diabetic
I came here to comment the exact same thing. Being low is so scary and my jaw absolutely dropped when I heard 50 units 😭
Same....T1D & when I heard 50 units my jaw hit the floor.
T1D as well...the amount of insulin used here is shocking. For me, hypoglycemia feels like a feral, intense hunger. Sort of like your abdomen is collapsing inwards on itself in a painful and intense manner. I start shaking uncontrollably and lose my balance, and it's like your thinking iust gets stretched so thin you can't comprehend anything. Having hypoglycemia bad enough that you are so desperate for food but can't get out of bed from weakness is terrible. It's feels like you are starving to death in just minutes to hours as it develops, and it can kill you just that fast.
Tl;dr, too much insulin and hypoglycemia is a terrible experience
My mother was a 40yr type one diabetic she was on 60units a day. She changed her diet and reduced it to 26unit per day.
shit i do 60 units a day
I don’t even watch this guy’s videos before I “like” them anymore. Top notch content! Thanks 🙏!!
Me too. They're informative and well-researched. I love his sense of humor.
Same 💜💜💜
We’re a club!
Same
Thank you for honoring the victims with their backstories.
I love that you cover small towns and lesser known murders, it’s so insightful🤍
Unbelievable that this woman repeatedly confessed to several people yet not one of them reported it until finally the psychiatrist did.
Yea I couldn’t believe that, just insane.
Each person she told, who did nothing, should be charged!!
@@starlingswallow To not have the freedom to stay silent would ultimately be worse for everyone - you're thinking like an authoritarian state
@@kirasmith1147 No, there is such a thing as mandated reporting. This applies not only for the sake of children, but for adults who have care givers, such as in orphanages, schools, nursing care facilities, hospitals, etc. Such laws are the result of the abuse, and neglect in other cases in order to help protect people who can't protect themselves. Such laws would be the result of a humanitarian state. (NOT authoritarian.) Why would you stay silent and aid the perpetrator to continue in hurting/murdering others? Fear? Low moral compass? They would just continue on like Wettlaufer did because no one who knew would report her. If this had happened to my grandmother or other relative/friend- I'd be just as angry toward those mandated reporters who did nothing.
@@starlingswallow She was probably lying a lot so who knows if they even believed that
Imagine that 95 years old, lived through both world wars just to get killed by this horrible piece of work. I have a feeling her parents fundamentalism has a lot to do with her rage and propensity to blame the same God for her crimes, because het parents were fundamentalists and strict
She looked really good for her age too. You can kind of tell she was a bold and outspoken person. I love her style with her sweaters and earrings. She looks like she would have been a really fun person to know
I can’t imagine growing up with parents like that. Dad enrolling in some college courses to just keep tabs on his daughter, and conversion therapy.
And the conversion therapy
The serial murder is obviously Elizabeth's worst offense. The hair/outfit combo at 24:58 is a close second.
"They could be a bit of a handful"
That's literally the nature of the job. It's your job to deal with difficult patients. That's why it's important to make sure the people who work at these places are not quick to anger.
Exactly. I have been working as a nurse’s aide in senior care since 2005 and this is just part of the work. They can’t help it, it’s part of the dementia or whatever they have going on health wise that is causing them to act the way they do. You take a deep breath and walk away when you just can’t do anything in that moment. There is always time to re approach and try again.
I have a lot of admiration for those who work with difficult patients. I’m sure most are just annoying or rude but I can imagine some are combative and don’t understand where they are.
I have worked in a facility where police was called multiple times because of violent residents.
A lot of channels focus on her wild interrogation, but I’ve listened to the victim impact statements and it’s important to remember she really tore apart entire families even years after they’d come to term with the deaths.
It's unbelievable the amount of people who ignored her murder confessions. Poor victims. Let's hope she's never released from prison.
Props to the investigator who handled her interview...world class...
It's not shown in this video, but at one point she has some very loud flatulence as well. She put that investigator through the ringer.
Hey! I expect these in the middle of the night, not the middle of the day!
Love the content dude, thanks again!
Right?! LoL
Thank you. New monsters. Thank you!
You n Mikey from That Chapter keep me company during my Audit shifts. Thank you for being such a great, thorough storyteller ☕️☕️
Wow! I am 52 and Today I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes which I know nothing about. This video (not to be confused with medical advice) gave me a basic understanding of what organs regulate my condition.
JILES gets a 5 star because his presentation is informative but doesnt present controversial medical advice.
I didn’t go through all the comments so this might have been mentioned. I have several friends who are diabetic. The doctor sold the formula for insulin for $1 cause he wanted to save lives. I believe it costs lest than $10 to make a vile yet my friend cannot retire because his out-of-pocket cost would be $800 a vile. That is disgusting.
The downsides of unscrupulous capitalism?
As someone who has BPD. The important thing to remember is not everyone who has it are monsters, but the anger beast is real and I fight it everyday. My impulse control is astronomical while raising teenagers.
I have Borderline Personality Disorder too, and I don't go around killing people.
Most narcissists don't kill people either, they just inflict a great deal of damage and trauma in their close relationships through their manipulative, passive-aggressive, unstable, needy, controlling, and emotionally ab*sive behaviour. Borderlines behave in many of the same ways, although they almost never recognise or take responsibility for their harmful behaviour. They are far more likely to believe (mistakenly) that they are the victims and that problems in their relationships are someone else's fault.
I'm not going to lie. My mother had BPD and was extremely abusive. Anyone with BPD is very triggering for me. I hope you are getting mental health help and will keep you in my prayers.
Borderline is often used as an excuse for selfcentred aholes.
@@jenniferedwards1752I understand why you feel that way, but you can't equate having BPD with being abusive. people with BPD are often abused themselves
@@velvetunderbiteI wonder what role (if any) was played by the conversion therapy.
I grew up in Woodstock and still live nearby. My high school was across the street from Caressant Care. This case completely shook the community, it was hard to believe that such a monster could
I’ve in our quiet little town.
My nursing career started as an LPN before an RN as I was an accountant prior and wasn't sure I could handle the career. My first job after graduation was in a LTC facility on the 3-11 shift. My nursing instructor had warned us not to wear our ID badges around our neck because the lanyard could be used as a weapon. Of course I did what everyone did once working and wore it on a lanyard. I was giving meds to a sweet little old lady in a w/c when she suddenly grabbed my lanyard, twisted it tight, and pulled as hard as possible choking me while hitting me in the face with her other fist. It took 4 people to get me free from her. I was bruised and bloody. That was the old days of triple restraints; she went in a geri chair, got an injection to calm her and wrists restraints. About 20 minutes later she was calm and we helped her to bed. She was suddenly as sweet as pie again and begged me the sit with her on her bed edge. I sat with her and every time she moved I would flinch thinking she was going to attack me again. Needless to say over the next 35 years I never wore a lanyard again. Expect the unexpected. 🙂
Geesh!! You know the movie Dumb and Dumber? Reminds me of the part where Jim Carey says “I just got robbed by a sweet old lady driving a motor cart.” You just never know!! I am sorry that happened to you though. I guess looks can be deceiving!
Nowadays my lanyard pings open if I catch it on e.g a patients wheelchair. Safer.
I love this case and I love "This is Monsters" - thank you a million times
"Un gay their daughter " as a mother with a gay child any time I hear of "conversion therapy" it is gut wrenching. Thanks again for another informative video and ine I've not heard before. By far the best true crime guy on UA-cam 🧡
Agree with you. It`s like " Un hetero ".
It sounds like a torture prison.
She was super heartless and happy about it. It's crazy not one person reported her
I can't stop thinking about how if she actually received a proper treatment for her BPD and addiction issues and if people took her confessions seriously, all these people might have lived.
Or how about someone actually took her seriously & reported her so someone professional could get to the bottom of what is actually wrong w her.
It is appalling how many people this woman actually confessed to, and not a single person thought it would be a good idea to go to the police, just in case she wasn't lying. Unreal.
What happened to all those people she confessed to? It is awful that they did nothing, even if they thought she was lying or mentally unstable, they should have called the Police.
Yeah, the 18 year old and I can understand more because she was young and probably terrified. But the pastor that heard the confession??? Even if she seemed to be lying out of her ass, he should have reported it because wtf that’s a problem.
@@chelscara yeah, even if she was lying, she clearly has some mental health issues if she believes she killed a bunch of people... like report it to someone? What if she was just making it up, but felt guilty about these "murders" and committed suicide?
Obviously thats not the scenario here, but someone in this situation is in no way mentally well and needs to be checked out.
Three stories to cover when you get a chance
1. The Sutherland Springs massacre in Texas
2. The Walmart El Paso shooting
3. Pearl cruise and her father the murder of Diane Tilly ( from San Antonio)
Im an RN myself and this story is terrifying as well as heartbreaking to me. I’ve been admitted to the hospital before and it is truly stressful having to put your trust in others and hoping they do the right thing with your best interests in mind. This monster preyed on some of the most vulnerable population, truly despicable.
I work at a caressant care myself. We were so shocked by this. The media was so bad! Caressant care was under scrutiny. Media called us, showed up outside our building just to get us to say something. Thankfully we had excellent direction from head office to just direct them to call a number. If they did, I don’t know. Thanks to this evil woman, we nurses now have to count every medication, including insulin and has to be verified by another nurse before administering it. I hope this woman enjoys the rest of her life because her afterlife is going to be hell, pun intended.
Its also disturbing that nursing homes fired her when she caused deaths in order to protect their reputation instead of reporting her to police.
I grew up 20 minutes down the road from Woodstock. I was actually working there when this was in the news. This was all everyone talked about for weeks.
Her interrogation is mind boggling
“Clitilda” sounds like the sort of name a stripper would have in a family guy cutaway
Spot on!
A lesbian Matilda.
My favorite channel on UA-cam. This case raises so many questions. One of which is there a nursing shortage in Canada? She kept getting jobs being clearly incompetent: alcoholic, drug addict and morbid obesity do not promote health and wellness
Yes there is a nursing shortage, it’s especially difficult to get nurses to work long term care.
Love this show. As a type 1 diabetic this was hard to watch.
Low blood sugar, is f’n terrifying. And trust me, would be a horrible way to die.
This woman makes me sick 😓
It is so annoying that some people don't report confessions.
Like, in this case, the pastor and his wife, the sponsor, and the lawyer.
I agree, but would the lawyer even be allowed to report her or would it fall under some sort of client/lawyer confidentiality privilege?
Got to give it to you Jiles, I have watched you since day one, and you are hands down the best true crime youtuber out there, your research is deep, your intro song is so simple yet so
eerie and catchy, your opening graphics are just getting cooler each season, world class stuff man
All her previous employers just kept shuffling her along. - No accountability.
I lived through the news about this monster. She will never see the light of day. Because of this many changes were made in our health care system.
It's frightening how many people just didn't want to get involved and so didn't say anything.
I love this channel so much, it’s the best on UA-cam. Thank you for everything you do. I have also heard the story before from another UA-camr. You honestly tell it the best!
😱 Wowcher absolutely shocking story, may the victims rest in peace, 🙏 another great video thanks 🖤
My favorite channel right next to JCS, keep up the good work
*That Chapter but definitely give it a goo 💁🏾♀️ 😊
Dave's Lemonade is excellent as well.
This is Monsters
That Chapter
Dave’s Lemonade
Matt Orchard
CoffeeHouse Crime
You can’t go wrong with these fellas, their work is superb! :)
Sadly for many of us, Jim learned how to swim and swam (is that a word?) away from youtube…edit: but this creator and a few more are VERY good at what they do, so I’ve grabbed onto their 🚎 and riding along with them! I do miss Jim :(
Thank you for the recommendations, I will definitely check them out! From my side I can recommend Eleanor Neale, she can really dig up old and interesting stories to cover.
Bless all the souls of the people she murdered. May they all rest in peace.
I was in what became a very toxic relationship with someone who suffered from Borderline personality disorder. It's a difficult condition to navigate. My mum is 86 and I'm so thankful that (apart from her hearing!) she is mobile and mentally fine. It would be so difficult to deal with something like dementia.
I cannot believe how many people did not report Beth after she told them she murdered people... if someone tells you they murdered someone report it... if you don't report it and they go on to murder someone else then blood is on your hands...
even if it's "jokingly" imo for some reason I believe that there's some truth to things said jokingly. kind of small cries for help
Exactly. I cannot know whether or not the person is telling me some weird lie. Let the police figure that one out. If it turns out to be false, hopefully the fake killer learned a lesson to not lie about those things.
Context is everything though. I guess I personally wouldn't do it if someone says it jokingly. It doesn't look like Beth was being funny about it, though.
Also how she thinks its just no big deal and that shell be able to just go home shortly after. Just pure evil
I wish she could have taken her anger out on herself instead.
I’ve been waiting and refusing to watch anyone else cover this. Thanks, man.
Just about to watch!!! I have a feeling you'll talk about the farts cause they were almost the star of that interrogation 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Those poor residents.
Thanks for giving a little background for each of them.
this lady confessed to murder a handful of times and EVERY ONE OF THEM thought she was lying????? come on🤦🏾♀️
Thank you for telling these victims stories, you truly are my favourite true crime channel. A real staple in my household. Thanks for all the great content🤍
Clitilda, what an unfortunate situation and an unfortunate name
Thank you for the depth and time you give the victims. I’ve heard this story many times and never once seen a picture of all of the victims until today. It’s kind of you to give them the respect and visibility they deserve.
Thank you for the upload! Can't wait to check this one out.
I have borderline personality disorder. And I’m a nurse. And I dropped out of college too. I have zero desire to physically hurt anyone. I love my residents like they’re my own.
How many people does one have to tell they killed someone before someone takes one seriously? Jesus. This is terrifying.
This case is still completely baffling to me. I can't understand why so many people ignored her confessions
Twice, in my 38 years as a nurse, did i come across 2 nurses that i felt were dangerous, both times i made reports about them, both not taken seriously. Told my management not to put me on shifts with them, because something was going to happen and that i was not taking the blame and losing my PIN for them employing unsafe people, (same ward different times). One eventually was struck off and made front page news, the other gave insulin to a pancreatectomy patient and put her in ITU, she was 'asked to leave' after playing the race card, thus shifting her on to some other hospital. Shocking state of affairs.
Ugh 😩
This is so sad. Those poor seniors, it breaks my heart.
The way she 👹 can explain the death's in such detail so calmly is cold , absolutely unbelievable . R.I.P to all victims ✨🤍✨✝️✨🕊️✨
I am an RN, a healthcare administrator, and an adjunct college professor. I remember seeing her interrogation video and found MYSELF becoming very angry at the AUDACITY of how callously she murdered these elderly people who were in her care!!🤬 These people were loved and it was her PROFESSIONAL DUTY to take care of them, not end their life!! She kept thinking she would get caught early on because she KNEW, if an autopsy were completed she would be done for as the high insulin levels would be found on toxicology reports. But, due to the circumstances, none was completed. So terrible...
Early in my career as a medic we got called to a nursing home for a full arrest. I couldn’t get anything back. One of the aides came into the room and yelled she’s a diabetic
I had just pushed epinephrine and atropine heard that and for shits and giggles we have her an amp PD D50 sugar iv push I then gave her sodium bicarb we got pulses and by the time we were at the hospital she was breathing on her own.
The charge nurse sometimes overdosed patients on insulin as a way to punishment for soiling her clothes
I heard this and several people reported it to the cops.
She was fired and the nursing home went out of business
That’s an evil nurse! I can’t even imagine thinking of something like that and I’ve worked in long term care for 40 years.
A lot of the stories you covered I learned about from a young age or over time being curious but I do enjoy revisiting the memory with a superb narrator like you
I'm not diabetic, but I do have episodes of low blood sugar thanks to a chronic stomach illness, and man is it a miserable feeling. I can't imagine how scary it would be to die that way, especially when you don't know what's going on. I can't say it's the same for everyone but when I have low blood sugar moments, I get like...this impending doom feeling I guess? Like it starts with just feeling like something horrible is about to happen, and that's usually my indication my blood sugar is about to drop. Can you imagine that being your last moment alive? Gives me shivers.
"The lawyer advised her to stay quiet." What a great human being!
Thank you for covering a Canadian case. Unfortunately, we Canucks can be monsters, too. 😥
I've been listening to this Chanel for like a year. Time to donate. I love this Chanel so much. Iltcsm ⚘️
Thank you for the upload!
What a surprise at 3:48 PM here in Florida, usually I wake up to a new upload, you just made my afternoon dude👍🏻✌🏻💕
This really makes me angry 😡...I'm a nurse who takes care of the elderly and I don't know how someone could do this evil shit, ughhhh..RIP to all her victims ❤️🙏
I am a male nurse and i work in nursing the elderly,its so disturbing that somewhat was doing the same work as me but chose to end lifes instead of making sure those people live a good quality life until they die naturally
I live in Geraldton Ontario, I remember when her arrest was public there was a murmur across the high school about this woman and how she worked at the hospital.
You've really unearthed some gems this season Giles. Well done!
This was huge all over Canada when it first came to light. Thank you for covering this story like you did. I would love to see you cover the Robert Pickton case. I still believe he did not act alone after he brought women back to the farm. Such a long and very convoluted case. I believe he took the fall for others. I don’t think he is innocent but I don’t thing he was alone in the murders.
Perfect timing for the trial of Lucy Letby killer baby nurse. A lot of commonalities between them in psychology, the parenting style they grew up under, repressed sexuality/sexual issues and their MO including anger, projection and displacement of anger, jealousy and the methods of attack and preferred drugs.
So She reached out for help many many times but everyone either didn’t believe her or told her to be quiet. I hate this world
I blame her parents. They knew something was wrong with her from the very beginning.
This is the only mini doc on her that I've been able to tolerate. Even her interrogation agitated me. As usual, you've made an excellent run at this story, things I've never read or heard before now. Thank you for your due diligence to your craft sir.
You said you couldn't tolerate watching any other pieces on the subject, no wonder you heard and read shit you hadn't before.
@Ѕқџ Gęṃἱחἱ there's an Interrogation of her that lines up when I hit autoplay and I just hit skip when I hear her voice. It aggravates me for some reason. Why would the specifics of my personal aggravation concern you so much that you commented? Step away from the tech, go for a walk, read a book......