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Former New South Wales nursing home employee Garry Steven Davis has been sentenced to 40 years in jail for murdering two residents and attempting to murder a third.
In September, the 29-year-old was found guilty of injecting residents with insulin at the SummitCare nursing home in Wallsend over a two-day period in October, 2013.
We had a male nurse in Oregon, USA about 25 years ago who did the same thing-giving lethal injections to older patients-sometimes overdosing insulin and not feeding diabetic patients, and giving too much morphine to some with cancer. It turned out he was not actually trying to kill them-just to make his workload lighter for that shift. He lost his nursing license and was sentenced to manslaughter instead of murder, because he did not intend to kill them. I thought that was an injustice-if he did not know he was giving lethal doses then he should not have had the license in the first place-it was murder not an accident when some of them died after he gave them higher than prescribed doses of their medications-
I would think you are giving us the version after the lawyer had garbled it. You must admit it's imaginative to claim that someone innocently killed some people just to lighten his workload. It's not a logical defence (English spelling) since he must have noticed they weren't asking to go to the toilet so much.We had a male nurse in Oregon, USA about 25 years ago who did the same thing-giving lethal injections to older patients-sometimes overdosing insulin and not feeding diabetic patients, and giving too much morphine to some with cancer. It turned out he was not actually trying to kill them-just to make his workload lighter for that shift. He lost his nursing license and was sentenced to manslaughter instead of murder, because he did not intend to kill them. I thought that was an injustice-if he did not know he was giving lethal doses then he should not have had the license in the first place-it was murder not an accident when some of them died after he gave them higher than prescribed doses of their medications-I also wondered how he got away with using more medication than he should have because pain killers are tightly controlled in the hospital.
We had a male nurse in Oregon, USA about 25 years ago who did the same thing-giving lethal injections to older patients-sometimes overdosing insulin and not feeding diabetic patients, and giving too much morphine to some with cancer. It turned out he was not actually trying to kill them-just to make his workload lighter for that shift. He lost his nursing license and was sentenced to manslaughter instead of murder, because he did not intend to kill them. I thought that was an injustice-if he did not know he was giving lethal doses then he should not have had the license in the first place-it was murder not an accident when some of them died after he gave them higher than prescribed doses of their medications-I also wondered how he got away with using more medication than he should have because pain killers are tightly controlled in the hospital.
Although you would think that law is based on logic it actually isn't-ours is based on legal precedent and intent.I would think you are giving us the version after the lawyer had garbled it. You must admit it's imaginative to claim that someone innocently killed some people just to lighten his workload. It's not a logical defence (English spelling) since he must have noticed they weren't asking to go to the toilet so much.
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