German suspected serial killer nurse jailed for life

Updated 27 February 2015
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German suspected serial killer nurse jailed for life

OLDENBURG: A German nurse was sentenced to life in prison Thursday for murdering two hospital patients but authorities fear a far higher death toll after he admitted killing 30 people in a thrill-seeking life and death game.
The 38-year-old man, identified only as Niels H., has admitted to injecting his patients with lethal drug doses in a bid to try to revive them and shine as a savior before his medical peers.
“The accused is sentenced to life in prison,” said the presiding judge, finding the defendant guilty of two murders and two attempted murders, and noting the “severity” of the crimes.
The former nurse was on trial for causing the patients’ deaths in an intensive care ward in northern Germany around a decade ago, but admitted during the trial that he had played his deadly game on 90 patients, leading to 30 deaths.
Authorities said Monday they would exhume the bodies of more former patients to test them for traces of the lethal doses of heart medicine amid fears H. is one of the worst serial killers in German post-war history.
The sweeping investigation is looking into some 200 fatalities recorded at the hospital where he worked and at his previous places of employment to find out whether the confirmed cases are only the tip of the iceberg.
The defendant has admitted he injected critically ill patients with lethal doses of heart medicine so he could then show off his skills in resuscitating them at the Delmenhorst hospital near the northern city of Bremen.



“Usually the decision to do it was relatively spontaneous,” the handcuffed defendant — who was not fully named under Germany’s strict court reporting rules and shielded his face behind a paper folder — told the chamber last week.
“There was tension there, and an expectation of what would happen next,” said the tall and heavy-set man, who apologized to victims’ relatives for his deadly obsession.
He said he felt euphoric when he managed to bring a patient back to life, and devastated when he failed. Each time he would then vow to himself to end his deadly game, he said, only to strike again soon after.
Defense lawyer Ulrike Baumann had pleaded for a shorter term on lesser charges of manslaughter, arguing that the defendant’s aim was not to take lives.
“Mr H. did not want to kill, he wanted to conquer death,” she said. “There is no doubt about his guilt, but there is doubt about the severity of his guilt.”
The defendant was first caught in 2005 when a colleague saw him inject a patient in Delmenhorst clinic in the northern state of Lower Saxony, where H. had worked for two years.


EU countries give final approval to Russian gas ban

Updated 2 sec ago
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EU countries give final approval to Russian gas ban

BRUSSELS: European Union countries on Monday gave their final approval to the bloc’s plan to ban Russian ​gas imports by late 2027, allowing it to pass into law.
The policy makes legally-binding the EU’s vow to cut ties with its former top gas supplier, nearly four years after Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of ‌Ukraine.
Ministers from ‌EU countries approved ‌the ⁠law ​at ‌a meeting in Brussels on Monday, although Slovakia and Hungary voted against.
Hungary said it would take the case to the European Court of Justice.
The ban was designed to be approved by ⁠a reinforced majority of countries, allowing it to overcome ‌opposition from Hungary and Slovakia, ‍who remain ‍heavily reliant on Russian energy imports and ‍want to maintain close ties with Moscow.
Under the agreement, the EU will halt Russian liquefied natural gas imports by the ​end of 2026 and pipeline gas by 30 September 2027.
The law allows ⁠that deadline to shift to November 1 2027, at the latest, if a country is struggling to fill its gas storage caverns with non-Russian supply ahead of the winter heating season.
Russia supplied more than 40 percent of the EU’s gas before the Ukraine war. That share dropped to around 13 percent in ‌2025, according to the latest available EU data.