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Innocent Murder ; The Trial of Sister Jessie McTavish, Edinburgh 1974 (Four Scots Trials Book 2)

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Colleagues of McTavish told the court how they had witnessed her inject a patient with an entirely unnecessary dose of phenobarbitone and then make no record of the injection, and that she had said at the time, "Doctor likes them to go quietly". [3] One of the relatives of the alleged victims said that McTavish had told her that they called her " Burke and Hare" in the mortuary. [7] McTavish admitted making this comment. [7] A nurse testified at trial that she had seen McTavish inject one patient three times, and also saw her taking a syringe towards another of the alleged victims. [8] The witness nurse also said that McTavish had said to her after being questioned by police: "I didn't do anything. They cannot trace it, anyway". [8] One other nurse recounted McTavish telling her and another colleague to stop bothering giving oxygen to a collapsed woman, saying: "I would not bother. She has taken a cerebral and she will be dead in five or 10 minutes", and they were allegedly again told by McTavish not to bother as they tried to make the patient comfortable. [10] Accused of being involved in the Babington plot to assassinate Elizabeth I, Mary, Queen of Scots was tried on 14 October 1586 at Fotheringhay Castle in Northamptonshire. From the outset Mary had protested against the legitimacy of the court, since she was not allowed any legal defence, could not call any witnesses and was not permitted to look at any of the documentary evidence against her. Mary was found guilty and was executed on 8 February 1587 at Fotheringhay Castle. Internet and network analysis tools provide detailed information about traffic and monitor user’s activity on the Internet;

a b c MacAskill, Grace (9 March 2008). "I WAS SO PROUD; EXCLUSIVE: MUM ON PERFECT SON TURNED MASS KILLER". Glasgow Mail. p.4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Colin Norris (Series 1, episode 8). Nurses Who Kill (TV documentary). Really. 30 November 2016.

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Dr Murphy continued: ‘Lucy Letby showed a preoccupation with the families of the babies – she searched for them on Facebook, she took a photo of a card she sent one couple. Ruchill Hospital was a fever hospital in the Ruchill area of Glasgow, Scotland. The hospital was closed in 1998 and was sold to Scottish Enterprise in July 1999. It was managed by NHS Greater Glasgow. With responsibility for client relations, his connections among trade union leaders were described in that 1992 Herald article as “unsurpassed” and his commitment to trade unionism "as virtually genetic”. Just wanting to come in on the comments (not directed at anyone in particular, as they’ve come up on a few threads) about why she’d leave her Facebook search history there or why she’d leave stuff in her house that “incriminated her” such as the note/handover sheets etc. a b c d e f Lucy, David; Aitkin, Colin (2002). "A review of the role of roster data and evidence of attendance and cases of suspected excess deaths in a medical context". Law, Probability and Risk. The University of Edinburgh. 1 (2): 142. doi: 10.1093/lpr/1.2.141.

His former partner said after his conviction that Norris had once hit him during an argument, bruising his head and once threw a bottle at him, which caused him to break up with him. [9] [10] He also said that, around the time of the murders, Norris had become engrossed by a storyline in Holby City, in which a serial killer nurse played by Rachel Leskovac killed patients with insulin before eventually being uncovered as a murderer. [9] This same storyline is believed to have inspired another UK nurse, Benjamin Geen, to kill his patients. [11] In the month in which he began killing patients with overdoses, Geen appeared in an edition of the Banbury Citizen which featured an interview with Leskovac. [11] Norris's partner would also reveal after Norris's conviction that Norris had experimented on his cat Casper before he began killing patients, injecting it with a lethal dose of insulin and killing it. [12] The partner had reported him to the police but Norris claimed the cat had died as it hit its head on a wall. [12] Dislike of elderly [ edit ] a b c Burns, Janice (5 March 2008). "YOU'RE AN EVIL AND DANGEROUS MAN; Angel of death caged for 30 years". Daily Record. p.9.Norris behaved particularly bizarrely in the interviews he had with the police. [13] Throughout the interviews he acted notably aggressive and arrogant, challenging detectives, and became physically angry at times to the point where he had to be restrained. [13] Investigators stated that Norris did not seem to be explicitly denying the murders, but insisting that they could not be proved, demanding officers told him how he did it and saying that he didn't think their facts were "good enough" to prove he had killed them. [1] Criminologist Dr Jane Monkton-Smith stated that it was particularly unusual that Norris didn't behave as if he wanted to defend himself in interviews, but instead wanted to challenge the police and act evasively. [13] Norris would later admit that he was trying to show how much more he knew than the police in interviews. [13] In 2004, during the investigation, he walked into the offices of the Yorkshire Evening Post and declared that the police had "nothing on him" to reporters. [44]

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