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Medical Murders

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They took an oath to save lives, but instead, developed more sinister specialties. Examine the formative years and motives of history’s most infamous killer doctors, and dissect their medical backgrounds with expert analysis from guest Dr. David Kipper. Medical Murders is a Spotify Original from Parcast.
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Over the ages, arsenic has had many lives — beauty fad, household product, medical prescription… and weapon of choice wielded by killers everywhere from Alabama to ancient Rome. Brine your turkey, knead your dough, and listen to our Thanksgiving Special on the regime-changing, assassination-aiding King of Poisons. Learn more about your ad choices. …
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By 1848, Dr. J. Marion Sims had gone from just experimenting on enslaved women, to becoming an enslaver himself. His quest for fame while finding a cure for vesico-vaginal fistulas meant performing inhumane surgeries on the women he held captive. Women whose plight would remain unknown for over a century. Women who would ultimately take down Sims’ …
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After a failed start to his medical career, Dr. J. Marion Sims settled in Alabama to continue his training. There he found success and started his own practice — specializing in the treatment of enslaved women and their children. But as Sims’ business grew, so did his ego. His desire to experiment on patients meant many of them didn’t make it out o…
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In the wild frontier days of turn-of-the-century South Africa, women were expected to settle down young and produce a legion of children. Daisy de Melker dared to pursue a nursing career first. When she finally did find herself in the constraints of a marriage, she just as quickly set herself free. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastcho…
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During the autumn of 1888, an infamous serial killer terrorized civilians across London, brutally slaying at least five women. While many call him “Jack the Ripper,” little else is known of his identity. However, his murders may offer one major clue about who he may have been: a doctor. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adc…
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Fresh out of school, Ben Geen became an emergency nurse at a hospital in Oxfordshire, England. But his growing arrogance spiraled into a quest to prove himself. One by one, Ben’s patients fell victim to unexplained respiratory attacks while in his care. It would take months for his colleagues to realize: it was no coincidence. Learn more about your…
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Prestige, profit, and private practice were the three things that Dr. Anthony Pignataro wanted most. When he couldn't obtain it on his own merit, he forged documents to help achieve his dreams. But not even a patient's death or a jail sentence was enough to reform this con man. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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She was a first-generation Colombian immigrant who paid her own way through dental school. After graduation, she married a handsome orthodontist from a good Christian family. Clara Harris thought she had everything. But when she discovered her husband was having an affair, she knew somebody would pay the price. And she didn't care who it was. Learn…
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In October 1909, two members of the Swope family suspiciously fell dead, leaving a one million dollar inheritance on the line. Months later, a typhoid outbreak swept through the household – leaving everyone questioning whether the culprit was diseased water or a greedy in-law. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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When one of Missouri's most prominent real estate tycoons fell sick in 1909, his family members awaited their plum inheritance. But a fair split wasn't enough for Dr. Bennett Clark Hyde. While he was just an in-law, he wanted the entire fortune, even if it meant using his medical expertise for murder. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcast…
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When Scottish travel agent Colin Norris took up a career as a nursing student, he seemed to think it would give him authority and power. What he found instead was burnout and resentment. Rather than find a healthy outlet, Collin weaponized insulin — lethally injecting his elderly patients. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/…
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When May Greineder dies in a public park, it looks like the work of a serial killer. But intrepid detectives believe May’s allergist husband may be behind the crime. With the family taking sides, law enforcement races to determine whether the doctor really did murder his wife. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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During a six week span in the summer of 1975, dozens of patients at the Ann Arbor VA Hospital suddenly stopped breathing. Two Filipina nurses went on trial for five counts of murder, ten counts of poisoning, and one count of conspiracy. The only problem was that they didn't do it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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When Vickie Dawn Jackson was still a teenager, she looked up to Florence Nightingale and even modeled her career after the pioneering nurse. But as problems at home mounted, Vickie began taking her frustrations out on her patients. In two months, she killed at least ten people at a Texas hospital. Parcasters, we have exciting news! Our first book h…
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Enabled by his wife, Tommie, Dr. John Kappler continued to hide his mental illness instead of getting the help he needed. Then one day in April 1990, he altered the lives of three people forever. Countdown to the CULTS book release! Parcast’s first book hits shelves July 12th. It’s an unflinching exploration of shame, secrecy, power, exploitation, …
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He had a difficult childhood filled with death and traumas. But instead of seeking treatment for his grief, Dr. John Kappler suffered silently, never showing the pain he truly felt. His wife, Tommie, told him he was sick. But the voices in his head told him otherwise. Parcasters, we have exciting news! Our first book hits bookshelves July 12th. Don…
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By the end of 1914 dozens of residents at the Archer Home had died suddenly and suspiciously. It would take local reporters, community members, and police working together to bring “Sister Amy” down, and end the wickedness of her “Murder Factory” once and for all. Parcasters, we have exciting news! Our first book hits bookshelves July 12th. Don’t m…
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Just two years after the Archers opened their elder care facility in Windsor, Connecticut, rumors began spreading around town that “Sister Amy” was abusive and cruel. The reality would prove even worse: she was a serial killer who preyed on the vulnerable in order to turn a profit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoice…
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In the 1950s, Australia’s rising star in psychiatry was the young, charismatic Harry Bailey. He would go on to champion the deeply controversial and dangerous Deep Sleep Therapy, where patients were put into drug-induced comas for days and weeks. Some never woke up. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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By 1991, a court had blocked Dr. Kevorkian from helping patients end their lives. So he started meeting them in secret. Nearly a decade later, he took it a step further. Assisting suicides led to the more radical — and more legally dubious — medical euthanasia. The doctor directly killed a patient. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastcho…
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In the 1980s and ‘90s, Dr. Jack Kevorkian pushed the ethical limits of healthcare with his controversial ideas around death and suffering. What he believed in most was a patient’s right to die with the help of a physician. And for a decade, he assisted in the deaths of over 130 terminally ill patients. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcas…
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As the days count down to Hale-Bopp’s arrival, 39 people prepare for ascension. They’d abandoned their old lives, embraced a new ideology, weathered the death of a beloved leader… and finally, made themselves worthy of the Next Level. Now, the comet was coming. And with it, the spaceship that would ferry them onward. In March of 1997, they left eve…
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The group’s belief system had never been infallible. There had been adjustments along the way; revisions meant to keep the wheels turning whenever prophecies didn’t manifest. But then, in 1985, Bonnie Lu Nettles died. And her passing threw Heaven’s Gate’s whole world askew. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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1976 was a turning point for Heaven’s Gate. The spaceship that was promised had not arrived. Members were defecting. Nettles and Applewhite gathered their truest believers in Wyoming and made it clear: Things were going to be different from here on out. Much different. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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When Bonnie Lu Nettles and Marshall Applewhite meet in Houston in 1972, it’s not for the first time — at least, not according to their birth charts. They’ve known each other in a past life. And in this lifetime, they have a joint mission. They set out, amid a wave of social and political upheaval, to find it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit…
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28-year-old Hans Peterson had spent four long years nursing rage against Dr. David Cornbleet, the dermatologist who prescribed a drug that's side effects turned Peterson's life upside down. And in October 2006, Peterson rented a car and drove it to Chicago for a final confrontation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoic…
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In June 1992, Dr. John Kemink was fatally shot by a former patient, retired car salesman Chester Leo Posby. Posby blamed the doctor for an injury that had upended his entire life. But he also believed that Dr. Kemink was conspiring to kill him. In Posby’s delusion, the only way to save his own life was to take the doctor’s. Learn more about your ad…
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In January of 2013, Dr. Ron Gilbert was shot and killed in his office by a new patient who said his name was Allen Gold. Only he wasn't a new patient and his name was actually Stanwood Elkus. It had been 20 years since Dr. Gilbert originally diagnosed him, and Elkus was back for revenge. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/ad…
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In the aftermath of Marilyn Sheppard’s murder, media speculation drove the narrative against her husband Sam. He was convicted and imprisoned for a decade before getting a second chance at freedom. Sam Sheppard finally had a new lease on life — but his reinvention would come at a cost. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adch…
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By 1938, Philadelphia’s Arsenic Ring had collected an estimated $100,000 in insurance payouts. But like many criminals on a lucky streak, they got sloppy. As investigators unravelled the threads of the ring’s vast conspiracy, the “Rabbi” decides to put on one last show. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices…
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As we look ahead to the new year, we want to take one last chance to say thank you for the year that was — and present our "Best of 2021"! Please enjoy this episode from our fan-favorite podcast, Solved Murders. In August 1969, actress Sharon Tate was living the Hollywood dream. Until it turned into the bloodiest kind of Hollywood nightmare. Learn …
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For the better part of two decades, Charles Cullen homed in on a pattern that allowed him to continue his killing spree nearly uninterrupted. But in 2003, a nurse friend of his became an informant — piecing together exactly how he was able to outsmart hospital administrators and detectives alike. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoic…
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