Former German nurse Niels Högel has admitted to murdering some 100 patients under his care. If convicted, his admission would make him one of Germany’s most notorious post-war serial killers.
The 41-year-old Högel confessed to the crimes on the first day of his trial, which took place Oct. 30 in Germany’s northwestern city of Oldenburg.
Högel is alleged to have killed 36 patients in a hospital in Oldenburg between 1999 and 2002, and 64 patients in another hospital in Delmenhorst between 2003 and 2005, according to media reports.
According to reports, the trial began with a minute of silence in memory of the victims, whose ages ranged from 34 to 96.
Investigators said that Högel had induced heart attacks in his patients by injecting them with fatal doses of medications. He then tried to revive the very people he had drugged, but most of his resuscitation attempts failed.
Cremated
Högel’s admission comes almost a year after prosecutors alleged in November 2017 that he was responsible for at least 106 deaths.According to reports, police said Högel may have killed more, but the true number of victims may never be known because many patients who died at his hands were cremated.
Bührmann said the goal of the trial was to bring to light the full extent of Högel’s crimes that have not been formally acknowledged for years.
Already Serving Life in Prison
The German nurse has already spent nearly a decade in prison for other patient deaths.At his second trial in 2014-2015, he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on six convictions—two murder charges, three attempted murder charges, and one charge of dangerous bodily assault.
During Högel’s second trial, a court-appointed psychologist said that Högel had told her he had injected 90 patients with heart medication during his stint at Delmenhorst Hospital. Of these, 30 patients died although he was close to killing 60 more.
Following the admissions, police expanded their investigation. Investigators poured over more than 500 patient files and hundreds of hospital records. They also exhumed some 134 bodies from 67 cemeteries and interrogated Hoegel six times, according to media reports.