Commentary

Criminal profiles of medical murderers


 

Today’s health care professionals run the very real risk of being sued. This is especially true when a patient dies unexpectedly. But many times, doctors find that they’re defending themselves against very serious charges, such as murder and attempted murder.

In Mexico, a physician can be wrongfully accused of such crimes, as was Azucena Calvillo, MD, last year in Durango. The case drew much media attention, and the accusations were so implausible and ridiculous that the charges were dropped and the case was dismissed.

There are instances in which the authorities create a circuslike atmosphere by making farcical and false accusations against healthcare professionals. Still, there are medical murderers – and these killers are among the most difficult to identify. As John E. Douglas put it, “Medical murderers (physicians, nurses, elder care workers) can have a long list of victims, longer than other kinds of serial killers.” Ted Bundy, one of the most written-about serial killers, confessed to 30 murders. The cases discussed below involve from 60 to 200.

Mr. Douglas was a special agent with the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation. He is the author of Mindhunter, a nonfiction crime book in which he recounts the early days of the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit and how he and his colleagues began to study the criminal profiles of serial killers. The book has been adapted into a Netflix TV series of the same name.

He is also one of the authors of Crime Classification Manual: A Standard System for Investigating and Classifying Violent Crime. In this book, there are descriptions of criminal profiles of medical murderers.

According to the authors, there are two types of medical murders: pseudo-mercy homicide and pseudo-hero homicide. Each type is associated with a different motive. In the former, the murderers believe that they’re alleviating the patient’s suffering; in the latter, the murderers create a medical emergency so that they can play the hero in what they know will be an unsuccessful attempt to save the patient’s life.

Pseudo-mercy homicide

An example of pseudo-mercy homicide is the infamous case of Harold Shipman, MD, who was convicted of killing 15 people, although an investigation found that more than 200 persons, and possibly as many as 250, died at his hands. In Prescription for Murder: The True Story of Dr. Harold Frederick Shipman, biographer Brian Whittle writes that the general practitioner is England’s (if not the world’s) most prolific serial killer. Dr. Shipman is the only physician in that country’s history to have been convicted of killing his patients.

His modus operandi? Injecting morphine. Most of his victims were elderly women. And though unconfirmed, his youngest victim may have been only 4 years old. It was the death of 81-year-old Kathleen Grundy that led to the physician’s arrest. Her family became extremely suspicious when they learned that her will named Dr. Shipman as the beneficiary of her entire estate.

He always denied being involved in the murders, for which authorities have yet to determine a motive. The speculation is that he enjoyed watching people die. Almost none of the cases attributed to Dr. Shipman involved a critically ill individual with a life-threatening condition. Therefore, his acts were not real acts of mercy. He would make a house call to carry out a routine visit. Once in the patient’s home, he would inject a lethal dose of morphine. Sometimes, relatives and physicians alike would be struck by the strange turn of events.

In 2004, Dr. Shipman committed suicide in prison. His case led to numerous changes to British law with respect to the use of controlled substances, the issuance of death certificates, and the procedure for reporting healthcare staff suspected of engaging in illegal activities. Biographer Whittle concluded, “It is very unlikely that the world will ever see another physician as unrelentingly wicked as Dr. Shipman.”

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