Confessions Of A Serial Killer Nurse |Charles Cullen “The Good Nurse”

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  • Опубліковано 31 жов 2022
  • #Interrogation #truecrime
    This Video Is For Educational Purposes. It is meant to show the psychology behind how police interact with suspects to try and get their confession.
    This is the police interview of the real life good nurse, Charles Scullen. Charles was a nurse who spent his 16 year career taking the lives of his patients. There is currently a show on Netflix called The Good Nurse that tell the tale of the life of Charles Scullen.
    Our Second Channel / @redtreestories

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @RedTreeCrime
    @RedTreeCrime  Рік тому +262

    Press CC for subtitles. Sometimes they take an hour or so before they can be used. The Good Nurse is currently the #1 movie on Netflix and the police interview of Charles Scullen can only be seen here. We will be releasing the entire unedited 2 hour interview on our second channel this week so check the description for a link.

    • @pleasedpopper4521
      @pleasedpopper4521 Рік тому +16

      No captions available bro

    • @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey
      @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey Рік тому +8

      @@pleasedpopper4521 they usually come available after an hour or so. 🤞

    • @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey
      @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey Рік тому +1

      @@mikey.bananas in my experience they dont come up straight away but need an hour or so for them to work. 🤞

    • @tazukibaylon9743
      @tazukibaylon9743 Рік тому +5

      I clicked on cc and it doesnt work. Sorry just letting you know. My app is updated.

    • @2PiecePuzzle
      @2PiecePuzzle Рік тому +2

      @@pleasedpopper4521 ya they take an hour or so

  • @EducatedBlackMan
    @EducatedBlackMan Рік тому +223

    What is scary is not the serial killer nurse but all the hospital executives and workers that covered up for him. They should be serving long prison sentences with him.

    • @beaulieuc8910
      @beaulieuc8910 Рік тому +4

      exactly

    • @russellharvey698
      @russellharvey698 7 місяців тому +12

      Medical field is all about money!

    • @msmit612
      @msmit612 4 місяці тому +5

      Right!! I’ve just learned about this case and I’m SCREAMING. All of the times he could’ve been stopped, but hospitals covered it up to save their own ass at the expense of hundreds of innocent lives. Fuming.

    • @sarahmcswan
      @sarahmcswan 4 місяці тому +1

      Right, I've read and watched so many stories like this, too! People in the hospitals or care homes either knew or had strong suspensions that a nurse or doctor was killing patients and did nothing! At most they would be fired just to move on to the next hunting ground

    • @archael18
      @archael18 3 місяці тому

      You have to remain objective. That's like you being responsible for paying millions if your neighbor uses your shovel to kill someone. Hospitals wanting to protect themselves is not the issue. The lack of laws protecting the hospitals were the issue - but that has since been remedied.

  • @GummyBearWA
    @GummyBearWA Рік тому +2171

    I had to have an 'at home' nurse for a few months after a car accident. The first one who showed up was a creepy looking guy like this guy. After that first visit I told my doctor I wouldn't let that guy back in my house. He said a lot of strange stuff and looked like he was casing the place. He never came back and a few months later he and his gf were charged with killing his patient and robbing the house.

    • @keeper6458
      @keeper6458 Рік тому +321

      My God.. thank God you had your intuition... I cannot imagine how you feel... unbelievable... I hope you're doing ok...

    • @ladybuglover4eva52
      @ladybuglover4eva52 Рік тому +100

      Holy 💩! Scary!! Thankfully, you followed your gut & you successfully advocated for a change with your Doctor

    • @Dahmer_Jeff
      @Dahmer_Jeff Рік тому +42

      Are you for real 🤔

    • @URdead2
      @URdead2 Рік тому +49

      Sure 🙄

    • @catherineleroy7446
      @catherineleroy7446 Рік тому +4

      😱

  • @BillyG563
    @BillyG563 Рік тому +629

    A quiet, soft-spoken killer is amongst the most chilling of all.

    • @ChronicallyCassidy
      @ChronicallyCassidy Рік тому +27

      Absolutely chilling.

    • @sirvilhelmofyonderland
      @sirvilhelmofyonderland Рік тому +24

      Clinical depression runs in my family. My brother David has been on meds and went as far as electro shock therapy. This man’s talks just like him 😢

    • @Goingplaces365
      @Goingplaces365 Рік тому +9

      I was thinking just by his voice alone I know he’s crazy

    • @naimalee1046
      @naimalee1046 Рік тому

      Dangerous of them All yes

    • @honorladone8682
      @honorladone8682 Рік тому +4

      I've heard it said beware of the very old and the very quiet.

  • @gesundheit602
    @gesundheit602 Рік тому +277

    Can you imagine how horrible it would be to have lost one of your loved ones at that hospital because of this monster?

    • @raimeyewens7518
      @raimeyewens7518 Рік тому +25

      Yes. My grandfather (WW2 veteran) was at the VA hospital in Columbia Missouri in 1992. He was under the care of a male nurse Richard Williams and died unexpectedly. He was supposed to go home the next day. Before he worked there he worked at a nursing home and was let go because a large number of patients died under his watch. Then he worked at the hospital and 41 patients died under his watch. They believe he injected them with succinylcholine and watched them die. He went to trial, the fbi was involved. Something got messed up and they let this monster go free. My grandfather survived a war he didn’t except to live through and was then murdered by a sicko. It leaves you with a great anger and sadness. He’s roaming free out there somewhere. You can Google what I said. It’s on the internet.

    • @monikaazariah9237
      @monikaazariah9237 Рік тому +2

      @@raimeyewens7518 very sad to hear what you told us about your grandfather. It must be very triggering to know about this story too.

    • @gesundheit602
      @gesundheit602 Рік тому +4

      @@raimeyewens7518 I am so sorry your grandfather was a victim of this. He sounds like he was a courageous wonderful man.

    • @cje886
      @cje886 Рік тому +5

      Yes, he killed my Great Aunt Marion in 1994 I believe. I was a teenager at the time, dealing with severe health issues, so the time period blurs together. I remember being at my Grandpa's house when he got the call, being completely devastated by the news that she had unexpectedly died during an overnight stay for a routine stress test. They kept her because of her age at the time. She was relatively healthy, the stress test came back just fine, and he went in that night and gave her something in her sleep that killed her. She's not on his list of victims, but she was in the hospital he was at, at the time, and her children were told after he was arrested that it was likely she was a victim. I'm not sure if the hospital told them, or what, but they told us that he likely did it, since her heart was fine and there was no reason for her to just die suddenly. This devastated our family, she was such a vivacious, funny, loving, sweet, tough lady, who survived the depression, surviving an abusive marriage, raising her kids to be strong, loving folks. We'll never, ever forget the pain of hearing the shocking news of her passing, and I will not forgive him for stealing her from us.

    • @monikaazariah9237
      @monikaazariah9237 Рік тому +1

      @@cje886 this is very heartbreaking to hear ...sorry for your loss. Its sickening to know these people walk among us and are so sadistic

  • @Rainsnowreadysetblow
    @Rainsnowreadysetblow Рік тому +1279

    Right on time. Just finished the movie last night. What a psycho but also, the "Healthcare" system that did NOTHING to hold him accountable during the SIXTEEN years he was a nurse is just as guilty. They all have blood on their hands.

    • @hawtval7471
      @hawtval7471 Рік тому +52

      In my opinion it is because any employer that outted his actions would open the doors to lawsuits. They’d rather quietly have him leave the job rather than potentially lose millions to lawsuits

    • @Rainsnowreadysetblow
      @Rainsnowreadysetblow Рік тому +93

      @@hawtval7471 I know the laws and I know why they did what they did, which is wrong. My point stands and you've proven my point. Profits were placed over ppl. That completely defeats the purpose of calling yourself a Healthcare institution when you are knowingly releasing murderer to continue to kill. Even he said the reason he kept killing was because NO ONE STOPPED HIM.

    • @Rainsnowreadysetblow
      @Rainsnowreadysetblow Рік тому +14

      @@hawtval7471 Those policies need to change.

    • @hawtval7471
      @hawtval7471 Рік тому +38

      @@Rainsnowreadysetblow I’ve been a nurse for 19 years, I’m unfortunately aware of the sad state of healthcare. Patients are just $ to anyone who makes & enforcers the policies while the hands on staff suffer moral fatigue trying to give quality care while policies make that practically impossible.

    • @ahighlyobnoxiousadult
      @ahighlyobnoxiousadult Рік тому +11

      ​@@Rainsnowreadysetblow what's the name of the movie mate?

  • @Cutie11083
    @Cutie11083 Рік тому +407

    Killing people when they're at their most vulnerable is so cowardly and evil.

    • @sheilaboston7051
      @sheilaboston7051 Рік тому

      There was a doctor in the UK - Harold Shipman - who killed 200-250 people. He became known as Doctor Death. The coward hung himself in prison.

    • @hunkallgood73
      @hunkallgood73 Рік тому +18

      It's an illness. These people can no more stop themselves from doing harm to others than you can stop yourself from breathing.

    • @jennifers8843
      @jennifers8843 Рік тому +7

      @@hunkallgood73 yet we offer parole so the country can be Guinea pigs to see if rehabilitation worked

    • @JesuCristoEsDiosYSalvador
      @JesuCristoEsDiosYSalvador Рік тому +3

      He most surely is possesed by a demon, thats why he never said his reasons.

    • @umarjongi3590
      @umarjongi3590 11 місяців тому

      @@hunkallgood73 then kill him. It's evil to keep him alive

  • @A777K
    @A777K Рік тому +591

    Amy could have died (due to her heart condition), she could have lost her job, her kids' life was in danger by him. Despite that she was so brave, courageous and truthful to have done her duty. Her job not just as a nurse but the duty as a human being that we all have. So let's learn from Amy, a true hero. To be more kind, compassionate and be a human.

    • @thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010
      @thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010 Рік тому +9

      Deliberately killing patients though, WTF 🤬

    • @A777K
      @A777K Рік тому +8

      @@thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010 I know it's beyond comprehension for any sane mind. I cannot wrap my head around it. There is no excuse enough for doing that. And that's why it's a case of extreme mental sickness

    • @erfho8y
      @erfho8y Рік тому +9

      Actually she was able to *keep* all of that BECAUSE of him. He was the only one she ever told and if she would've come clean ti everybody else she would have list her job right away and lost everything. He kept that secret for her so she could keep her job and continue to support her daughters.
      Don't take it from me tho. *Those are her own words.*

    • @A777K
      @A777K Рік тому +9

      @@erfho8y yes, that was indeed a thoughtful thing done by him. Which made Amy believe that he couldn't have done what he did. We all have good and bad in us, like that he had it too.

    • @RealMcLovin
      @RealMcLovin Рік тому +2

      That's right, vote republican

  • @aaronallsbury9238
    @aaronallsbury9238 Рік тому +100

    What pisses me off is all the hospitals knew and did nothing but let him jump to the next hospital to do it again, and again they are just as guilty

    • @casperghost1467
      @casperghost1467 Рік тому

      They knew but they couldn’t prove it at the time.

    • @Total_Recall1984
      @Total_Recall1984 Рік тому

      they didn't know, systems back then didn't have alerts for nurses.

    • @ahill4642
      @ahill4642 9 місяців тому

      Exactly like the Catholic churches do with pedophilic priests.

    • @Gl49ers
      @Gl49ers 2 місяці тому

      Agreed but then we wouldn’t have gotten that Netflix show

  • @katrinahetherington3425
    @katrinahetherington3425 Рік тому +60

    Eddie Redmayne did a phenomenal job playing Charlie!

  • @Idontwantahandle324
    @Idontwantahandle324 Рік тому +442

    I can’t believe how much Eddie Redmayne accurately portrayed the real Charlie Cullen!! 😱

    • @keeper6458
      @keeper6458 Рік тому +8

      Agreed!

    • @ProjectEnglishII
      @ProjectEnglishII Рік тому +34

      Agree. Eddie Redmayne can do anything.

    • @donationworldnation7506
      @donationworldnation7506 Рік тому +83

      He can't. He can't. HE CAN'T! HE CAN'T!

    • @Raghy07
      @Raghy07 Рік тому +11

      He was more believable than the real guy.

    • @Azfa_
      @Azfa_ Рік тому +20

      @@donationworldnation7506 Idk why but I laughed out loud during this scene lmao. it got funny as he went on 😂🤣

  • @desisears6608
    @desisears6608 Рік тому +141

    My sister had cancer and the doctors were saying she could go home. The nurse on duty begged for them to keep her another day. That night my sister went in for emergency surgery as fluid was building up in her lungs. If the nurse didn’t fight to keep her one more night, my sister wouldn’t be here.

    • @fh3486
      @fh3486 Рік тому

      This is about nurse killing people . What are you doing

    • @desisears6608
      @desisears6608 Рік тому +7

      @@fh3486 sharing a story on how not all nurses are bad. What are you doing being offended?

    • @fh3486
      @fh3486 Рік тому +2

      @@desisears6608 why you took your time to defend this killer nurse? Do you want to follow his path?

    • @desisears6608
      @desisears6608 Рік тому +1

      @@fh3486 go away weird troll. Sorry your parents never showed you love.

    • @introusas
      @introusas Рік тому

      ​@@fh3486 She didn't defend him you fckin dingus

  • @lindalaferriere208
    @lindalaferriere208 Рік тому +42

    Hospitals don’t like reporting to state . They get fined . I am a retired RN and have seen it !

    • @scottdetter
      @scottdetter Рік тому

      Except during Covid when they would get money for doing so.

  • @scdawn8658
    @scdawn8658 Рік тому +399

    As a retired ER RN I was surprised he was able to get away with it for so long. I'm in the rural south and have been my whole career and he wouldn't have been able to get away with it in the smaller communities. We're too small a group. Word of mouth would have spread despite hospital politics. Hopefully that will alay the fears of anyone living in smaller communities.

    • @apextroll
      @apextroll Рік тому

      Nowadays they use an algorithm to look for statistically anomalous use. Two cases in the medical field I can think of was a doctor in California doing too many heart bypass operations and a doctor prescribing too much oxycontin. Essentially an audit due to a red flag.

    • @Mr.T-BAGGIN-UR-MOM
      @Mr.T-BAGGIN-UR-MOM Рік тому +36

      This is the result of a failure in the chain of command somewhere. If he was able to do this for that long somebody somewhere wasnt doing their job.

    • @SlitWhistle
      @SlitWhistle Рік тому +17

      They also said all the records were on paper and not in computer systems. So yea this would be harder to get away with now regardless

    • @jul2027
      @jul2027 Рік тому

      Hospital politics are worse than you realize. COVID proves it.

    • @melluques8475
      @melluques8475 Рік тому

      Now you know how incompetent is your register Counsil 🤷‍♀️

  • @ferashdaib7674
    @ferashdaib7674 Рік тому +44

    Eddie Redmayne did an amazing job of portraying his character.

  • @robyn874
    @robyn874 Рік тому +69

    As a Nurse we are there to take care as per Dr’s orders, our role is not to play God in choosing who lives & who dies. Our role is to preserve life, & ensure patient care is up to the Hospitals standards always following policies & procedures. This creep is a serial killer, he knew what he was doing, & chooses to be a vague coward when it suits. No responsibility, no remorse. Just Evil!!

    • @thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010
      @thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010 Рік тому

      .......but he was invisible, if he was popular and social loving it would not have happened.

    • @Total_Recall1984
      @Total_Recall1984 Рік тому

      people with severe depression or bipolar don't have a good memory, sociopaths, and psychopaths as well. That's how they can keep killing so much.

  • @markwhelan9887
    @markwhelan9887 Рік тому +88

    After 16 years of taking lives he got caught. This man is a vile evil creature and the Department of Health is also guilty of negligence in a major way. how on earth can this continue to happen for so long.

    • @hw5091
      @hw5091 10 місяців тому

      Yeah, and it only happened because his actions ramped up, which is usually what happens towards the end of serial killers "lifetimes".

  • @geoiekrull1716
    @geoiekrull1716 Рік тому +36

    Hospitals should be reprimanded for behaviors like this. They shouldn’t be “allowed” to turn a blind eye to wrongdoings to preserve their institution. It’s crazy already at what they charge for services and constantly complain about money issues?

  • @furrybear9416
    @furrybear9416 Рік тому +433

    How on earth these hospitals were not seriously sued by future victims familes for not stopping him is beyond me!

    • @hensonlaura
      @hensonlaura Рік тому +55

      That's why he was fired repeatedly but not accused. No body wants to be blamed.

    • @giovannifranco6255
      @giovannifranco6255 Рік тому +14

      They were sued

    • @kimf442
      @kimf442 Рік тому +1

      Right!!!

    • @furrybear9416
      @furrybear9416 Рік тому +3

      @@giovannifranco6255 Really...do have any approximate digits, was it individual or class action also?

    • @addminusDIY
      @addminusDIY Рік тому

      Best way hospital to get away with this is get rid of the roots so they will not be responsible for it. Obviously with the movie “the good nurse” the hospital knew about it, from pxyis cancellation of insulin and digoxin . Especially this patients has no order of any those medications. Im also a nurse i know how to check if someone is stealing med in pyxis

  • @letolethe3344
    @letolethe3344 Рік тому +19

    The administration of every hospital that allowed him to continue should be indicted.

  • @wiebkescantick947
    @wiebkescantick947 Рік тому +49

    One of my greatest fears had always been making a mistake that might have caused permanent harm to a patient. I always double checked everything I did before administrating any medication and would even go as far as questioning and/or refusing to carry out a doctor's order if I thought it wasn't accurate. I just can't understand the reasoning behind his actions.

  • @AllHaiLKINGTIsHeRe3
    @AllHaiLKINGTIsHeRe3 Рік тому +37

    These murderous nurses are the absolute scariest types of killers to me. And I've realized that the reason for me is because all of their victims have no control over their situation. Everyone's gonna get old, everyone's gonna get sick, and you're gonna find yourself being under the control of someone that you can only hope has good intentions. With other types of killers, I always have this sense in the back of my mind that I wouldn't find myself in a situation to be victimized by them. Like "I'd never marry that person, they have so many red flags" or "I'd never let that person drug my drink, I'm way too careful" etc. I'm not saying those thoughts are rational, but it's just a feeling you get that gives you some sense of security over these murderers that you would be able to avoid taking the steps that inevitably lead to encountering them. But these people, nope. Someone is probably gonna put a drug in your IV one day, and you better hope they're sane.

    • @sookie4195
      @sookie4195 Рік тому

      Nurses are trusted.

    • @beaulieuc8910
      @beaulieuc8910 Рік тому

      I totally agree, You can do your best by good situation awareness but when you are unconscious etc can be so vulnerable. I remember once that I asked to have a second person in the room as I didn't want to be alone with a male nurse, they said No, but I said keep the door open

    • @Ruth78620
      @Ruth78620 11 місяців тому

      Look into Dr Harold Shipman in the UK he's suspected to have killed hundred over the reign of his career.

  • @jomaro8
    @jomaro8 Рік тому +67

    I think he was mad at everyone else who bullied him and he was too much of a coward to go after them. But then he becomes a nurse and he realizes that he has victims that can’t fight him back, perfect for a coward.

    • @mahoganysweets67
      @mahoganysweets67 Рік тому +3

      Exactly!

    • @seashell1893
      @seashell1893 Рік тому +13

      This is why schools (not all unfortunately) take bullying seriously now. Bullying can cause psychological damage to the point of creating a monster and many other life long psychological problems. Now this is NO excuse for monstrous thing this pos did. Just saying that you have a good point on his history with bullying.

    • @hunkallgood73
      @hunkallgood73 Рік тому

      He's mentally ill and obviously a sociopath with psychopathic tendencies. These people can no more stop themselves from doing harm to others than you can stop yourself from breathing. It's their nature. If you're a christian than you should know Cullen and the rest of us was/is created In the image of our lord and all of the killings are part of His devine plan.

    • @Personellety
      @Personellety Рік тому

      I have no proof besides the movie but I wonder if the patients having happy relationships with loved ones and spouses was a factor too.

    • @evgeniababaeva6510
      @evgeniababaeva6510 Рік тому

      in the movie (not sure if it is a true) he says that his mother has passed away in the hospital and he saw her dead half naked body. If it's true, due the trauma, he had gotten a 'special feelings' when seeing dead bodies. All psychos made up in a childhood

  • @ashesblue9560
    @ashesblue9560 Рік тому +36

    My dad's fraternal great grandmother needed a at home nurse her last months. The nurse was very nice till she got caught stealing half of my Granny's pills. So she was fired. We had to send a complaint to the company she was hired through before calling police because a bs contract and they assured us she was fired.
    3 years later my dad's maternal great grandfather needs a nurse at home, guess who is sent over? Same women. Sent back as soon as we see its her.

  • @therookiesplaybook
    @therookiesplaybook Рік тому +15

    The fact that Amy, someone working in healthcare couldn't lose her job in healthcare or she would lose her healthcare says a lot about the American healthcare system.

    • @seashell1893
      @seashell1893 Рік тому +4

      Yep, the truth of life in great America where you either need to be rich or very poor to survive. Forget the middle class

    • @yasdiaz2118
      @yasdiaz2118 Рік тому

      @@seashell1893 very poor people are not surviving either. the rich are squeezing the life and every cent they can out of everybody else. the concept of the middle class is a political talking point to get voters to support a politician because many people see them selves as middle class, even people who are living in poverty. the reality is that it is all of us against a few of them.

  • @toupac3195
    @toupac3195 Рік тому +55

    My WW2 Veteran grandfather died at age 69, not a VA hospital, just a city hospital, after a simple surgery. None of it made sense. My grandma died 6 months after from a lonely broken heart. Grandma is understandable, but Grandpa was strange. I will never know. They were great Americans. ❤

    • @matthewewers9558
      @matthewewers9558 Рік тому +1

    • @r.m.5548
      @r.m.5548 Рік тому +7

      Anesthesia is dangerous for anyone. Every surgery is serious

    • @Johnjohn-dt6hw
      @Johnjohn-dt6hw Рік тому

      The VA hospital in Sandusky Ohio almost killed my father. We dropoed him off and 3 weeks later cause of alzheimers and a munir fight he was a vegetable with a crash helmet on in the dining area.Saddest day of my life

    • @ninofuller719
      @ninofuller719 Рік тому +1

      How’s 69 years old WW2 veteran.

    • @toupac3195
      @toupac3195 Рік тому

      @@ninofuller719 I don't understand your comment. It's all good, buddy.

  • @larryphillips7349
    @larryphillips7349 Рік тому +16

    What gets me is why do we care when this phyco was born or bullied or mom died or poor upbringing etc etc. As if there some excuse for intentionaly taking a life. Im tired of excuses for these killers that know right from wrong and make a choice to kill anyway.

    • @klz9500
      @klz9500 Рік тому +1

      ​@@Lilboozibert what exactly would you do to prevent it? Stop kids from bullying? Stop child abuse? Alter genetic predisposition? We already do a piss poor job of preventing the things we can and we certainly can't play god and start genetically altering fetuses. So this idea that we can prevent a serial killer is kind of absurd. They are an extremely rare breed of creature.

  • @luvbig41
    @luvbig41 Рік тому +13

    Wow!!!! He lost count? The fact that he was hired on so many different occasions says alot about the background checks hospitals do.

  • @michaelevans4059
    @michaelevans4059 Рік тому +39

    I've had 3 major accidents across civilian and military life, luckily I was a bad patient and the staff had nothing but kindness and help. I would have been an easy mark for him

  • @hahaha9076
    @hahaha9076 Рік тому +65

    It's amazing how many psychopaths, sociopath slip under the radar.

    • @mikelisteral7863
      @mikelisteral7863 Рік тому +2

      my emotions shut off by about 80% when i was 23

    • @colonthree
      @colonthree Рік тому

      We need psychology checkups on politicians.

    • @hahaha9076
      @hahaha9076 Рік тому +1

      @@colonthree they'd all come back positive.

  • @lindalumae
    @lindalumae Рік тому +247

    In my family we have members that are chronically and terminally ill. So we have an unwritten rule; no one is left at a hospital alone unless they are completely capable of caring for themselves, advocating for themselves, and walking out under their own steam. This isn’t because we think someone is trying to kill them, it’s because mistakes happen and although we believe most medical personnel are good and competent people, there are those who are incompetent, uncaring, or worse.
    Sometimes we have to get pushy in order to stay, especially overnight, but the only time we were ever forced to leave (by security) was in the ICU which was an open bay and they were concerned about the privacy of other patients. But, by staying, I know we have prevented at least 2 potential disasters and those we love, that are ill, are able to rest easy and feel safe.

    • @booognish
      @booognish Рік тому +14

      My father was in the hospital for 6 weeks recently and I wish I had the familial support to maintain that. He made it out, but they had him on an anti psychotic out of nowhere that had him extremely messed up and more of a potential danger to himself, we had to demand that he be taken off it, and they put him back on it without our knowledge, which was beyond infuriating.. The reason I have the same attitude as you, is that I saw my grandfather go from what seemed like a routine stay in the hospital (after an initial misdiagnosis that lengthened his stay) to his death. Something happened overnight and we never quite found out what, but they were not at all forthcoming about it and we were all too deep in a state of grief to attempt to dig into it. It was only after that grieving period that we realized that something abnormal had happened.. The initial misdiagnosis was bad enough, it had exacerbated the issue that had brought him in (which I believe was a heart attack, but again this was in 2004, and it was all kind of a blur) but once they’d properly diagnosed that, he seemed to have stabilized. We visited him one day, and I can’t remember the exact details anymore, whether we got a phone call or we just came up, but something happened overnight and he was never the same.

    • @ambervanderhooft
      @ambervanderhooft Рік тому +13

      That's a good family policy! I live at the other side of the country than my family. One day, my father had to do some tests in the hospital. Within a couple of days after, he got quite sick with a high fever and delirium. The doctor told my stepmother that he needed to rest, but as soon as he would start throwing up, he needed to go to the hospital or something. The only thing she told my brother, was to call her if he would throw up and she told him not to tell me or my sister about it "so we wouldn't be worried." She left the house and he started throwing up. My brother tried to call her, but she didn't pick up the phone. I'm not sure what happened after and how long everything took, but luckily he ended up in the hospital. It turned out he got blood poisoning (likely from hygiene issues with the tests a couple of days before), which can even lead to death... Still, she told my brother to not inform me or my sister. He did, and when we showed up at the hospital, she got pissed at my brother. My father was super happy to see us and recovered quickly😊

    • @mangyan101
      @mangyan101 Рік тому +4

      Apprently icu and OR and covid ward are not allowing patient relatives

    • @hhuodod2209
      @hhuodod2209 Рік тому +10

      In my countrie you would have been removed by the police x

    • @sansiveria578
      @sansiveria578 Рік тому +16

      Doesn't stop someone tampering with a drip bag in a store room prior to it being used. How would you know?

  • @ruddyy123
    @ruddyy123 Рік тому +109

    I was so lucky to be treated by amazing doctors and nurses. I broke my back in 2004 and had to spend 7 months in hospital and the care I received from everyone was second to none. It’s crazy to think that people like this can get a job and mess up all the hard work and care been given. Shout out to all the hard working caring doctors and nurses out there. Anyone to do with hospital patients work deserves love and respect x❤

    • @christopherlgilbert
      @christopherlgilbert Рік тому +3

      No, you just got service that's supposed to be the norm. Functional professionalism shouldn't be considered extraordinary.

    • @working2bselfsufficient724
      @working2bselfsufficient724 Рік тому +1

      Likewise. I was in motorcycle accident in 2003 broke my back pelvis crushed all right ribs collapsed lung kidneys failed had liver laceration etc etc and had a 10% chance of survival and 0% chance of walking. Now you couldn't tell I ever went thru that if you saw me. Walking running fine and barely any health problems from it these days. Had great hospital staff and a crazy good surgeon team. Hospital staff was great and had no complaints (besides good wasn't very good back then). One of the lucky ones. I have a lot of family in medical fields and it's sad nowadays people's arnt trustworthy. The dea did a sting not long ago at hospital not to far and nurses where selling drugs out of the parking lot they stole from patients and hospital. Crazy times and no one is trustworthy until theyve proven themselevs these days. Not like when we went thru it.

    • @bm-ww8kb
      @bm-ww8kb Рік тому

      anyone? perhaps minus the angel of deaths lol..

  • @aquarius5461
    @aquarius5461 Рік тому +16

    Loads of people suffer from depression they don kill, lame excuse.

    • @blanketflunky9823
      @blanketflunky9823 Рік тому

      He’s very obviously a sociopath he’s not trying to make excuses lmao

    • @Rose-jd7le
      @Rose-jd7le Рік тому +1

      Exactly I couldn't agree more with you. People make there own decisions in life

  • @mollyhoisington7230
    @mollyhoisington7230 Рік тому +14

    Jeffery Dahmer was soft spoken and NICE during his interviews as well……what in the hell is going on with these ppl?? 😢

  • @moon_child87
    @moon_child87 Рік тому +5

    Just what I needed! A new video!

  • @Alaska_Gal
    @Alaska_Gal Рік тому +92

    I can’t help but think of the stress & anxiety I’ve felt when my elderly parents have been hospitalized & all I wanted was for them to be OK. How awful for the families. This guy is a monster.

  • @jayclark5912
    @jayclark5912 Рік тому +69

    As an ICU survivor this scared me good. Your life is in someone elses hand. An ICU nurse saved my life.

    • @NuttyProfessor-
      @NuttyProfessor- Рік тому +5

      An icu survivor? Jesus anything to feel apart of something lmfao

    • @jadmohsen8880
      @jadmohsen8880 Рік тому

      @@NuttyProfessor- you do realise how serious your injuries have to be in order to be put in the ICU right? So if you survive the ICU, you are an ICU survivor. It’s a completely valid thing to say. In fact, if anybody is trying too hard to a part of anything, it’s you. Seems like you’re trying to appeal to edge lords by mocking somebody who actually had the strength to go through a traumatic experience. People like you really don’t realise how embarrassing you really look.

    • @keeper6458
      @keeper6458 Рік тому +1

      Agreed...I was so dependent on my ICU nurses after my brain surgery. I know exactly how you feel

    • @Sophie-ts2wq
      @Sophie-ts2wq Рік тому +12

      @@NuttyProfessor- He means he was sick enough to be admitted to ICU and survived that

    • @apextroll
      @apextroll Рік тому +4

      @@Sophie-ts2wq ICU doesn't necessarily mean sicker, just higher maintenance.

  • @courtneybunch5114
    @courtneybunch5114 Рік тому +18

    Love all of your content! Wish I could afford to buy some merch and support. When I’m able to - I will. You’re one of the few crime channels I have alerts set up for.

    • @RedTreeCrime
      @RedTreeCrime  Рік тому +28

      Just watching and leaving a comment is more than enough

    • @0ddddduck
      @0ddddduck Рік тому +5

      @@RedTreeCrime idk why but this just brought tears to my eyes haha

    • @courtneybunch5114
      @courtneybunch5114 Рік тому

      @@RedTreeCrime and stuff like that is why we love you and your channel. Your comment makes want to buy your merch even more 😂 what’s the cheapest thing you have?! Lol
      Always Team Red over here! 😝

    • @courtneybunch5114
      @courtneybunch5114 Рік тому +1

      @@0ddddduck right?! Like how sweet?! 😂

  • @katrinahetherington3425
    @katrinahetherington3425 Рік тому +2

    OMG.. thank you for this video! ❤️

  • @wesleyalan9179
    @wesleyalan9179 Рік тому +3

    Always a pleasure to watch these, thanks!

  • @Spumoon
    @Spumoon Рік тому +7

    Absolutely horrific. There's a doctor in a West Virginia Veteran's Affairs hospital who is being looked at for over a dozen insulin overdose deaths inflicted on veterans... doesn't seem to be going anywhere. Can't nail her with anything for whatever reason. It's inconceivable to me.

  • @nutmeg8399
    @nutmeg8399 Рік тому +10

    This is scary. How many nurses like him are out there I wonder?

    • @nerztobias3863
      @nerztobias3863 Рік тому +1

      not really many that kill people. but too many who don't really want to do their job. it's a tragedy really. but hey: here in my country you are bound by law to show your criminal record if you want to work as a nurse/social worker. so, there's that. does that mean its bettet? no. it's humans themselves who live their miserable lives working at a job they dont want. wouldn't be a problem. But with these jobs, you really should like the enviroment...

  • @Liss1122
    @Liss1122 Рік тому +12

    After watching a ton of these, “nurses who kill” videos down this UA-cam rabbit hole, I’m convinced we need psychological evaluations for nurses, much like there are for other fields with security or lives at stake.

    • @modestmeeshka
      @modestmeeshka Рік тому +1

      It'd be great, but I doubt it'll ever happen because they're so desperate for nurses.... We're lucky they're not just throwing scrubs on just anyone they pull off the streets

  • @DMR1010
    @DMR1010 Рік тому +23

    I hope all the hospitals who enabled this by not investigating, holding him to account, allowing him to move on unchecked, hold themselves responsible for their part and feel the shame. Deep deep shame. Hope the families file a negligence suit or whatever is civil/legal claim as appropriate.

    • @gypsylee333
      @gypsylee333 Рік тому +3

      I'm sure they didn't unfortunately, at least I highly doubt it, corporations have no shame or compassion and hospitals especially are pretty used to death. So many die from medical malpractice or accidents.

    • @staceyshere
      @staceyshere Рік тому

      I watched the movie about this case and none of the hospitals were held accountable

  • @dinafritz4082
    @dinafritz4082 Рік тому +32

    I worked with Charles at sacred heart hospital in Allentown pa. He was dating another nurse by the name of Katherine. Myself and Katherine my friend Sharon and Charles went out to lunch. He was extremely dainty in feminine very odd quiet. A month later Catherine told us she was pregnant they had broken up he had been fired already by sacred heart and then she went underground when all this popped out and she was about to give birth when he got busted and she quit I never knew whatever happened to Catherine after that she wasn't brought up in the movie either on Netflix and I wonder if they ever even knew about her but he has another child and it was a little girl I believe but Catherine I've never talked to her since then I wonder whatever happened to her

    • @ChubbyUnicorn
      @ChubbyUnicorn Рік тому

      I hope she and her baby made it out alive.

    • @andrewprindiville119
      @andrewprindiville119 Рік тому +6

      maybe because she doesnt want people talking about her online like you are now

    • @dinafritz4082
      @dinafritz4082 Рік тому +5

      Well I certainly wouldn't give her last name or anything like that I mean let's be realistic but what's real is real and what's not is not and that wasn't a real situation that they portrayed I happen to know the real situation I was there. That was not it

  • @Janesomeone
    @Janesomeone Рік тому +14

    It’s hard to catch angel of death serial killers. Especially if the family doesn’t want an autopsy.

    • @tyronejohnson4708
      @tyronejohnson4708 Рік тому +3

      This is the reason I will not get my surgery cause people like Him/Her😢

    • @Janesomeone
      @Janesomeone Рік тому

      @@tyronejohnson4708 The likelihood of you running into a serial killer is extremely low. Go have your surgery.

    • @donkey085
      @donkey085 Рік тому +2

      @@tyronejohnson4708 just get it. Not getting surgery because of a 1 in a million chance is dumb

  • @blueindigoqueen7077
    @blueindigoqueen7077 Рік тому +1

    Hello 👋 Thank u as always for another great case! 💙💙

  • @gazpearce3700
    @gazpearce3700 Рік тому

    Awesome as usual mate, thank you 👍👍

  • @glee_again2594
    @glee_again2594 Рік тому +15

    I saw the movie. Now I see the real man. It is so bone-chilling and horrific to see how much his complete lack of empathy exhibits and how very calm and cool he acts about these deaths. As if just notches in his belt.

    • @serenityinside1
      @serenityinside1 8 місяців тому

      “ man “ ?!! Beast more like 🤨

  • @arieswoman824
    @arieswoman824 Рік тому +5

    Just shocking that hospitals preferred to just dismiss him and he was able to work in so many hospitals and kill so many. The hospitals should be held accountable. This is typical of the American medical system. More worried about being sued and losing money.

  • @emmaedele1754
    @emmaedele1754 Рік тому

    Omg thank you for this!!!

  • @armenrastgouian2988
    @armenrastgouian2988 Рік тому +2

    I just saw the movie! Thanks for the upload 👌🏼

  • @pleasedpopper4521
    @pleasedpopper4521 Рік тому +25

    The irony of one of the most prolific serial killers in history being a medical personnel is palpable

    • @j.nalley3480
      @j.nalley3480 Рік тому +6

      Wait until you look up Harold Shipman.

    • @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey
      @WakeyWakeyEggsandBakey Рік тому +5

      Have you heard of Harold Shipman? He was a fellow Brit and he murdered about 300+ people who were his patients. He was a GP (General Practitioner/doctor) 😧

    • @UnCannyValley67
      @UnCannyValley67 Рік тому +8

      @@j.nalley3480 it’s not a race, or a contest.
      It’s all horrific.

    • @pleasedpopper4521
      @pleasedpopper4521 Рік тому +3

      @@UnCannyValley67 some of these guys do indeed treat it like a race like Robert Pickton who remarked that he was trying to "make it to an even 50" whilst being secretly recorded in his jail cell

    • @heatherreadsreddit8579
      @heatherreadsreddit8579 Рік тому

      @@UnCannyValley67 BTK wanted to be the most famous serial killer ever known, iirc.

  • @my2cents464
    @my2cents464 Рік тому +35

    For a guy who try to commit suicide over 20 times when he was younger, why would he care if he got the death penalty? It's puzzling to think about the thought process of these psychopaths.

    • @klz9500
      @klz9500 Рік тому +9

      Because if he really intended to die, he would have. You don't "try" to commit suicide twenty times.

    • @Tiareaaa
      @Tiareaaa Рік тому +9

      Agree! Just a creep and a coward. Sending vulnerable people to their demise and then trembling at the thought of his own. The logic lol

    • @immaculatepeter5529
      @immaculatepeter5529 Рік тому +1

      @@klz9500 I really don’t believe him I think he was trying to make himself seem less evil, but every suicidal way he tried to as just ridiculous and got other people to call for help

    • @maryamabubakar9532
      @maryamabubakar9532 Рік тому

      Exactly my thought

  • @BeeBeeimonotfact
    @BeeBeeimonotfact Рік тому +2

    This dude just driving up and down the highway by my house. Working at all my local hospitals. Thank God he is behind bars.

  • @Bajanprince67
    @Bajanprince67 Рік тому +6

    The fact that he never looked up during the trial, made my blood boil. He tries to portray himself as a merciful killer when in reality m he’s just a piece of garbage.

  • @Jess.Loves.Gaming
    @Jess.Loves.Gaming Рік тому +92

    So so so crazy what he did! I could never ever think of harming one of my patients. We had a nurse at one hospital I worked for that I was highly suspicious of and reported her. I would come on and she would have things running dangerously high. For instance, one patient was on heparin drip which is a blood thinner. It runs at a very specific rate using a formula based upon blood clotting lab results. One patient was supposed to be at 21cc/hr. She had it at 250cc/hr. Thank God she JUST started it maybe 20 minutes prior to me coming on. There were other suspicious events that made NO sense and she was no longer employed after she was reported. I'm not sure what happened to her after that! Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if she was employed somewhere else. Her license is still active.

    • @ChronicallyCassidy
      @ChronicallyCassidy Рік тому +18

      Thank you for reporting suspicious behavior!!!!!

    • @woodyssnake8562
      @woodyssnake8562 Рік тому +8

      Why didn't you report her to the nursing board too?

    • @aryannadefreitas1141
      @aryannadefreitas1141 Рік тому +12

      The pumps let it run that high???? That is insane. Our pumps lock us out at any mildly high dose of dangerous meds. Great job making sure your patient was safe! Crazy story

    • @heatherreadsreddit8579
      @heatherreadsreddit8579 Рік тому +11

      Contact the police about her, please. She could be killing people right now.
      It’s good that you reported her; always report to the police, too, in case the person quits or is fired.

    • @jaynerobson317
      @jaynerobson317 Рік тому +1

      Ffs so if said person kills anyone it will be some of your fault

  • @daniellesve5595
    @daniellesve5595 Рік тому +5

    This is nuts. I was born in that hospital. My mother died in that hospital. So crazy.

    • @aoctis
      @aoctis Рік тому

      what!! how did she past

  • @YourFavNurse
    @YourFavNurse Рік тому +45

    As a nurse, this is wild and sad.

    • @Ferrucci_1666
      @Ferrucci_1666 Рік тому +2

      Hell awaits

    • @HelloImNik
      @HelloImNik Рік тому +1

      and worrying

    • @Dahmer_Jeff
      @Dahmer_Jeff Рік тому +9

      As a non-nurse, this is wild and sad
      I hate when people lead with "as a...." In an effort to sound more convincing. It doesn't make you more relateable to the topic.

    • @joanneshaw3071
      @joanneshaw3071 Рік тому +4

      Nurse in Australia here. Blows my mind how this guy got away with what he did for so long. Makes me wonder if his colleagues noticed anything

    • @johnlane1475
      @johnlane1475 Рік тому +4

      @@Dahmer_Jeff he said that probably because he works the same job and understands that it was wild he wasn’t caught before he was. lol what? ur only hating bc u misunderstood the simple thing he said😭

  • @kimmohekey7850
    @kimmohekey7850 Рік тому +3

    I would love to see a second part to this interview as I also found his psychology interesting

  • @reds1325
    @reds1325 Рік тому +5

    I had part of my lung removed after a fight for my life against pneumonia. Coming out of the Anastasia I guess I pooped and made the male nurse help me who i made hold my hand the entire time and thought he was my dad. Even though we were the same age and my parents lived on the other side of the United States. He was an amazing nurse that I'll always remember. I spent 3-4 months there with them

    • @jayrose6312
      @jayrose6312 Рік тому

      I have a genetic connective tissue disease and needed an emergency spine surgery a couple of years back. I spent a week inpatient and had the same nurse about half those nights. The first night she must have had a bad day or something, but she was great from that point on. We ended up having a very important conversation one night about my wanting to be DNR because my full body pain is so severe and literally NEVER goes away. Sadly, it’ll only get worse. She ended up convincing me that I want to live and I changed my Living Will to include “full code” (previously “no code”) the day before he surgery. Yeah, I’m still in tons of pain and though I will never have the life I once had, I realize that it would be far worse for those who love me if I just gave up. I honestly doubt that I would have even needed the DNR since my disease is highly unlikely to code me, but I explained that it was my “insurance policy” at the time since I wouldn’t do anything to speed it along, but wanted an “out” in case it did.

    • @lindasvalesen5237
      @lindasvalesen5237 Рік тому

      I was reading and waited for the plot twist.... and now we are married with 2 kids.

  • @poochiepaws
    @poochiepaws Рік тому +7

    You can't trust anyone these days...🙄

  • @scottsmanonahorse
    @scottsmanonahorse Рік тому +2

    Never trust anyone who crosses their legs like that.

  • @Agathanagatha
    @Agathanagatha Рік тому +6

    So he can’t remember killing people but he remembers being in the army and the conversations he had

  • @sonyareyes1732
    @sonyareyes1732 Рік тому +5

    Funny how he don't want the death penalty yet, all his patients got the death penalty without cause by his hands.

  • @PumpkinSpiceCornbread
    @PumpkinSpiceCornbread 11 місяців тому +3

    "If you think strong men are dangerous, wait until you see what weak men are capable of"

  • @mollyhoisington7230
    @mollyhoisington7230 Рік тому

    Thanks!

  • @Anonymous38572
    @Anonymous38572 Рік тому +11

    These medical serial killers really get to me bc they're supposed to uphold a moral integrity with their patients, and also my fear is being slowly poisoned unknowingly by someone close to me lol I have trust issues and this video isn't helping!

  • @jaymebritton3517
    @jaymebritton3517 Рік тому +18

    Those officers were so kind and understanding. Even hospitable. Loved the video!

  • @marcirathbone8998
    @marcirathbone8998 Рік тому +9

    I just wanted to say I love your channel!! I'm a crime channel fanatic lol I watch almost all of your interrogations!! Thank you so much for all your hard work in getting these to us!!! 🙂💖😊💞

  • @EDITMODE
    @EDITMODE Рік тому +5

    My mom died as a result of a nurse putting her feeding tube into her lung instead of her stomach and pumping food into it. I can't imagine how painful that had to be. And they would roll her around when changing her bed sheets as if she was already dead. They just didn't care whatsoever. And lawyers wouldn't take the case because there wasn't enough evidence that she wouldn't have died otherwise. They literally refused the case because "she was dying anyway and they could say the cause was her other issues." When realistically her records wouldve shown she was recovering up until that event.

    • @ChubbyUnicorn
      @ChubbyUnicorn Рік тому +2

      I'm so sorry for your loss. It's awful to lose your mom but when it is due to incompetence and no one seems to care that's 1000 times worse. I hope your family finds some kind of peace. Your mother obviously raised a caring family.

    • @AshCupric
      @AshCupric Рік тому +2

      That is so sickening! So sorry that your mom had to go through that. I hope justice gets served in some way. RIP to your mom and so sorry for your loss.

  • @mickideg1837
    @mickideg1837 Рік тому +2

    I'm happy now! Thanks for posting ❣

  • @jianfalco2133
    @jianfalco2133 Рік тому +15

    Thank you! Great content as always. First time I actually got to watch an interview of him. Doesn't sound like he was born a psych0path but his utter calm during the interrogation and flat affect is definitely chilling to watch

    • @j3611
      @j3611 Рік тому +3

      I think he'd been killing for so long that it became routine & if he began killing because it excited him, by the end he seemed bored & apathetic. CC is someone who should be studied, to find out what his motivation was and why he continued to commit murders while seemingly getting nothing from it. The worst thing is that he appears so harmless, no-one would expect it or look too hard at him because of his calm unflappable demeanor; and the hospitals who suspected him ignored the risk to future patients by quietly removing the threat from their own. Thankfully he can't kill any more patients.

    • @jianfalco2133
      @jianfalco2133 Рік тому +1

      @@j3611 Yes. They ought to make him a case study in Psych / Criminology classes. The things he did piqued my interest when I first heard about him, and not just 'cause I used to work in a medical center.
      After watching the Netflix docu and the movie they made about CC (and a video on another True Crime channels a while ago), I still couldn't pinpoint his motivation(s) for committing those crimes over and over. Was his behavior caused by his longtime mental illnesses + being severely bullied when he was younger + his mother's death + his family life and relationships just deteriorating over the years? Or did he intend to kill hundreds of people mostly because he became a sociopath due to his past experiences and ailing mental health? I remembered he kept saying he just wanted to end the patients' suffering because he was "overwhelmed" by having to witness people dealing with excruciating pain and sickness, and maybe at times it was mostly "mercy killing". Or, he just had this sadistic, compulsive, selfish desire to feel Godlike, and when his bosses and the authorities didn't do jacksh!t to stop him, he just kept going because then he felt like it was all a game he had complete control over and it distracted him enough from dwelling on the terrible state of his personal life which had already been fueling his chronic depression. It's still a puzzle to me. It's also strange that he didn't think he could be called a "serial killer", until years later. And yes, thank heavens for Amy and the others who warned the others about him. Helping others is truly their passion.

  • @cvteypvige
    @cvteypvige Рік тому +16

    This is so scary because when I go to a hospital, I trust the doctors and nurses and everyone else with all my heart. I don’t question anything they say would be best for me.

    • @ginanovo6285
      @ginanovo6285 Рік тому +2

      lol i don't. i dont trust anyone and I am glad. i was once almost given the wrong IV drug at an ER once. I questioned it, the nurse went to check her paper and said oops! lol

    • @thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010
      @thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010 Рік тому

      Trust no one, even ya lil ole granny could go rogue at any time.

    • @ginanovo6285
      @ginanovo6285 Рік тому

      @@thecultofjohnnydelr.soulsw7010 LOL

    • @jayrose6312
      @jayrose6312 Рік тому

      The truth is that people like him are VERY RARE, but those are the ones we all see on the news. For every one of him there are ten million excellent (or at least satisfactory) providers! Think about it, the “news” is ALWAYS bad news, because good news doesn’t captivate viewers! I think you’ll be fine if ever in need of care at a hospital, but if you get a bad feeling, ask for a different provider because we do have an innate voice that alerts us when something is just not right. I believe this is how he got away with it for so long, he preyed on those that couldn’t raise their suspicions because they were not capable of doing so!

  • @jennalyn7008
    @jennalyn7008 Рік тому +3

    It's crazy how this guy got away with this for so long and never got stopped and yet more recently Rhonda Vaught was going to face jail time for giving the wrong medication. Although a fatal medical mistake, she was held accountable, so maybe there is hope for improvement in the Healthcare system. It is just sad that hospitals are considered a "business" and yet the patients who seek help on possibly their worst days, are the ones who suffer.

  • @pikodegallo4479
    @pikodegallo4479 Рік тому +4

    Its absolutely gonna be a meme in 365 years that he's eligible for parole

  • @hiyorioh
    @hiyorioh Рік тому +4

    I wanted to see the “I can’t”

  • @user-jg5em8ms8z
    @user-jg5em8ms8z Рік тому +15

    It is hard to believe he got away from stealing medication and killing patients for 16 years. In the hospital I work in, cameras are everywhere. Just look at the cameras in the medication room, you will absolutely see that he put vials of meds in his pocket. How on earth could he get away?

    • @FatalShotGG
      @FatalShotGG Рік тому +1

      Easy. No one ever looked at the cameras

    • @FatalShotGG
      @FatalShotGG Рік тому +2

      They don't pay someone to sit there and watch 10 screens of live security footage in a locked room like in the movies

    • @kellyvaccaro6719
      @kellyvaccaro6719 Рік тому

      They don't even have to look at the camera...the count would have been off and if they ran his pyxis report they would notice the count always off on his shifts

    • @lisagardner903
      @lisagardner903 Рік тому +1

      Back in the 1980's and 1990's there were not cameras all over the hospital and the Medication records were written on paper charting.

  • @mommyof3_908
    @mommyof3_908 Рік тому

    Nice. Just watched the documentary about him last night.

  • @rynoX88
    @rynoX88 Рік тому

    The interrogation video is so blurry, the Nurse seems to be in his early 20s here. But thanks for the upload, with having watched the movie very recently, I was excited all day to watch this upload tonight.

  • @luminousnutria3555
    @luminousnutria3555 Рік тому +9

    Eligible for parole in 2388? Why? What's the point?

    • @stevesteiner6844
      @stevesteiner6844 Рік тому +1

      So he can spend the last years of his life as a free man.

    • @rosamy2017
      @rosamy2017 Рік тому +2

      I think setting a number like that is for the sake of parole and reduced sentencing. Like let’s say he gets a hearing and gets his sentence halved. He’ll still have to serve 183 years. It ensures his life sentence will truly be life.

    • @luminousnutria3555
      @luminousnutria3555 Рік тому +3

      @@stevesteiner6844 At the ripe old age of 400-something?

    • @stevesteiner6844
      @stevesteiner6844 Рік тому +1

      @@luminousnutria3555 Something like that.

  • @13ritneyanne
    @13ritneyanne Рік тому +21

    Eddie Radmayne played Charles Cullen in the Good Nurse and he nailed it! He was also main character in Fantastic Beasts.

    • @carriehobbs8100
      @carriehobbs8100 Рік тому +1

      I thought that was him!

    • @ExposeDrift
      @ExposeDrift Рік тому +7

      Underrated? he's an Oscar winner lol

    • @13ritneyanne
      @13ritneyanne Рік тому

      @@carriehobbs8100 ya I couldn't pinpoint who he was at first when I was watching The Good Nurse then it all the sudden came to me 🤣

    • @13ritneyanne
      @13ritneyanne Рік тому +2

      @@ExposeDrift ya true. He just isn't talked about as much as some of the bigger actors! He won multiple awards for acting I believe

    • @Angie_NG
      @Angie_NG Рік тому +3

      I wouldn't say he is underrated, he is just not taking on as many roles per year like some other actors, which i think is deliberate. He is also playing in theatre. 😊

  • @Mushroomguy88
    @Mushroomguy88 Рік тому

    My oman and I just recently finished the movie, "The Good Nurse"!! Thank you guys for this episode!!!

  • @abeal49
    @abeal49 Рік тому +2

    why weren't the hospital administrators charged with obstruction of justice and criminal conspiracy?????

  • @GhostlordGames
    @GhostlordGames Рік тому +7

    Dude literally "cull"ed the patients

    • @apextroll
      @apextroll Рік тому

      Probably means sheep killer.

  • @markthani9883
    @markthani9883 Рік тому +3

    Hang in there man, just 365 more years to go...

  • @salahuddinmuhammad3251
    @salahuddinmuhammad3251 Рік тому +1

    I was at the hospital, when he was there. No joke. I became upset when I was in pain, he walked by and I yelled for help. He didn't come in that day. Thank goodness. St Lukes hospital. Then later, I saw the news. Crazy stuff.

  • @alicia_dawnkygirl5148
    @alicia_dawnkygirl5148 Рік тому +2

    I'm watching the good nurse right now!!!

  • @4weentertainlifenaturetrav436
    @4weentertainlifenaturetrav436 Рік тому +4

    Unbelievable, how he randomly killed people and it's for no reason.I'm blessed that I didn't cross path with this crown and I feel bad and pray for the victims and the victims family. So senseless. So heartbreaking. So Evil.

  • @maar8314
    @maar8314 Рік тому +8

    Can you imagine sending a family member to a doctor and then later finding out they were murdered by said doctor under their care? Oof

    • @larryphillips7349
      @larryphillips7349 Рік тому

      Yea thats real funny till its you.

    • @cahatlady
      @cahatlady Рік тому +2

      He was a nurse, not a doctor.

    • @maar8314
      @maar8314 Рік тому +3

      @@cahatlady yeah I know, I was just generalizing the medical community

    • @Jeremy_the_bot
      @Jeremy_the_bot Рік тому

      Bet there were some guilty folks

  • @letolethe3344
    @letolethe3344 Рік тому +1

    Can you post the entire interview if you have it?

  • @lostnvenus3488
    @lostnvenus3488 Рік тому +2

    I'm so early for the first time ever, hey yall!!! Watching millions of interrogation videos led me to wanna study criminal psychology, anyone else?

    • @darkness3308
      @darkness3308 Рік тому

      That's great, good luck with that. The first thing you should do is fix the god damn audio in these interrogation rooms.

  • @michelelarson6487
    @michelelarson6487 Рік тому +4

    I have to say many people say suffer from depression and their first thought isn’t to end another’s life. Trust me, I suffer depression and I would never take another’s life. Complete opposite, I’d suffer and be the martyr?

  • @lorimac0260
    @lorimac0260 Рік тому +3

    Sitting there like a little child. Poor baby.

  • @jonk5669
    @jonk5669 Рік тому +2

    He would be a hero nurse in today's Canada.

  • @allisonjames2923
    @allisonjames2923 Рік тому +1

    The fact he was found at the missile console of a vessel when he was in the navy is chilling.

  • @IratePuffin
    @IratePuffin Рік тому +23

    Just watched the movie about him last night. I can’t believe he got away with it for so long!

  • @lesaatuatasi6267
    @lesaatuatasi6267 Рік тому +3

    Just watched the movie last night and man this guy is as cold as they come!! The Hospitals should be held accountable for all those lives instead they worried about lawsuits and covered it all up!! Bet, the lawsuits are piling up on their desks now

  • @truecrimefan1433
    @truecrimefan1433 Рік тому +2

    How have I never heard of this 😳

  • @brittnierene03
    @brittnierene03 Рік тому +1

    Oh my gosh!!!!! Just watched this on Neltfix the Good Nurse and this story was sickening.