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In March 2003 de Berk was found guilty of the murder of four of the individuals and the attempted murder of three others. [12] In every one of the cases de Berk was responsible for their care and medication, or was the last person present before they died or declined. [ 11 ]
Table detailing the charges for which Letby was convicted at her first trial. Final verdicts were returned by the jury on 18 August 2023. [88] Letby was found guilty of seven counts of murder of seven babies. Letby was also found guilty of seven counts of attempted murder of six infants. Letby was found not guilty on two counts of attempted ...
The headline, “Nurse found guilty of murdering seven babies” should have read, “Nurse found guilty of murdering seven babies in her absence” – the whole truth, writes John Wright.
State of Tennessee v. RaDonda L. Vaught was an American legal trial in which former Vanderbilt University Medical Center nurse RaDonda Vaught was convicted of criminally negligent homicide and impaired adult abuse after she mistakenly administered the wrong medication that killed a patient in 2017. [1] She was sentenced to three years' probation.
On April 23, 2007, McGuire's murder trial jury found her guilty of first-degree murder, finding that the evidence established her culpability for the murder beyond a reasonable doubt. [13] She was also convicted of the lesser charges of perjury, desecration of human remains, and possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose.
In addition to these charges, Hansen was found guilty of giving her own 7-year-old daughter strong prescription sleeping medicine that is dangerous for children and only suitable for adults. [5] A forensic psychological evaluation determined that Hansen suffered from histrionic personality disorder. [6]
A week after he began complaining, staff finally took Alexander to the hospital. He died there two days later. A doctor told the Texas Rangers that Alexander could have survived had staff taken him to get a chest X-ray when he first reported feeling sick. In 2002, a judge found Reyes guilty of negligent homicide.
Prior to the trial, the lawyers for the two nurses discovered similarities between Gilford's death and the 1994 murder of Liberty de Guzman, another nurse at the same complex, but that case was judged to not be relevant to the trial. [4] The actual trial was relatively swift, in large part due to the confession that the two nurses had signed.