Victims' kin confront serial killer nurse
CNN
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Somerville, New Jersey (US):
They have been waiting years, and on Thursday family members of victims of New Jersey's most prolific serial killer spoke their minds in court.Some called for former nurse Charles Cullen to "burn in hell" while others simply remembered their lost loved ones.
Cullen, 46, pleaded guilty to committing 22 murders in New Jersey and seven in Pennsylvania, and attempting to murder six others with drug injections while working as a nurse at hospitals in the two states.
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See Also:
New Jersey Killer Nurse Gets Life for 22 Murders
Victim families denounce NJ killer nurse as sentencing begins
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Judge Paul W. Armstrong sentenced him to 11 life sentences in New Jersey state prison for the killings. Parole is impossible, since he would first be eligible for it after 397 years. Cullen administered lethal doses of medication to patients under his care in nursing homes and medical facilities. He claimed to be serving as an angel of mercy trying to end their suffering. But some of the patients were not critically ill.
Mar 02, 2006
CNN
___
Somerville, New Jersey (US):
They have been waiting years, and on Thursday family members of victims of New Jersey's most prolific serial killer spoke their minds in court.Some called for former nurse Charles Cullen to "burn in hell" while others simply remembered their lost loved ones.
Cullen, 46, pleaded guilty to committing 22 murders in New Jersey and seven in Pennsylvania, and attempting to murder six others with drug injections while working as a nurse at hospitals in the two states.
___________________
See Also:
New Jersey Killer Nurse Gets Life for 22 Murders
Victim families denounce NJ killer nurse as sentencing begins
___________________
Judge Paul W. Armstrong sentenced him to 11 life sentences in New Jersey state prison for the killings. Parole is impossible, since he would first be eligible for it after 397 years. Cullen administered lethal doses of medication to patients under his care in nursing homes and medical facilities. He claimed to be serving as an angel of mercy trying to end their suffering. But some of the patients were not critically ill.
Mar 02, 2006