February 12, 1976 - Colin Norris
A nurse working in Leeds hospital wards, Norris occupied a position of trust that gave him regular, unsupervised access to vulnerable patients and controlled substances. His conviction rested on a pattern of suspicious hypoglycaemic collapses that followed him between two separate hospitals, combined with circumstantial evidence placing him alone with victims at critical moments. The case has remained contested on forensic grounds, with expert disagreement over whether the insulin detected in victims was externally administered — though the absence of C-peptides in blood tests has been cited as significant counter-evidence to natural causation.
From Wikipedia
Colin Campbell Norris (born 12 February 1976) is a British serial killer who was convicted of the murder of four elderly patients and the attempted murders of two others in two hospitals in Leeds, England, in 2002.
A police investigation showed Norris to be on duty when five patients fell into sudden hypoglycaemic comas. Suspicions were raised when Norris predicted that healthy Ethel Hall would die at 5:15 am one morning, which is when she went into cardiac arrest, and tests revealed that she had been injected with an extremely high level of man-made insulin. Insulin was missing from the hospital fridge and Norris had last accessed it, only half an hour before Hall fell unconscious.
Subsequent investigations would find that the unnatural hypoglycaemic attacks followed him when he was transferred to a second hospital, and hospital records revealed that only he could not be eliminated as a suspect. Detectives believed that Norris was responsible for up to six other suspicious deaths where only he was always present, but a lack of post mortem evidence and other factors meant that investigators and the Crown Prosecution Service could not pursue convictions for these deaths.
Doubts were later raised about his conviction by, among others, Vincent Marks, an expert on insulin poisoning, who concluded from his own studies that there was a 1 in 10 chance that each patient's arrest could have happened naturally. However, others have pointed out that C-peptides are produced in hypoglycaemic attacks caused by insulin produced naturally in the body, and these were not detected in any of the blood tests of the victims, indicating that the insulin had been introduced to their bodies externally and artificially.
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