Nurse facing 8 murder charges now accused of trying to harm 6 more patients - Action News
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Nurse facing 8 murder charges now accused of trying to harm 6 more patients

A former Ontario nurse charged with first-degree murder involving eight seniors in two long-term-care homes is now accused of attempting to kill others in her care.

Charges of attempted murder and aggravated assault against Elizabeth Wettlaufer announced Friday

Wettlaufer appears in court

8 years ago
Duration 0:59
Accused of killing long-term-care facility seniors, former Woodstock, Ont., nurse seen arriving and departing

A former Ontario nurse charged with first-degree murder involving eight seniors in two long-term-care homes is now accused of attempting to kill others in her care.

Ontario Provincial Police announced Friday that six more charges have been laid against 49-year-old Elizabeth Wettlaufer four counts of attempted murder and two counts of aggravated assault.

Wettlauferwas charged in October with eight counts of murder, involving residents at nursing homes in the Ontario cities of Woodstock and London.

News of the additional charges came about an hour before Wettlauferappeared briefly in a packed courtroom in Woodstock, where family members of those she is accused of killing saw her in person for the first time.

'I can't say anything to this individual'

Susan Horvath, the daughter of one of the alleged victims, was emotional outside the courthouse.

"I'm just picturing my father as her patient what he went through and how he couldn't talk, how he couldn't say 'help' and how nobody cared and how he lied in that bed and had to die," she said. "I went through torture because I can't say anything to this individual and I can't do anything."

Susan Horvath, the daughter of one of the patients allegedly killed by former nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer, talks about her father's death outside the Woodstock courthouse Friday. (CBC)

Laura Jackson, a friend of one of the alleged victims, was one of several people to speak outside the courthouse.

"I think we just wanted to see and let her see the pain that she has created in thesefamilies," she said. "Shestands before us and we want her to see how hurt and how much pain we have for our loved ones and how much pain she has created."

The latest charges relate to incidents that allegedly occurred between June 2007 and August 2016 in three locations, including the Caressant Care nursing home in Woodstock where Wettlaufer spent years working as a nurse.

"This is something that happened systematically over a 10-year period in at least two nursing homes," Laura Jackson said. "Something needs to be done. Somewhere along the lines of screening, hiring practices, psychological interviews something."

Elizabeth Wettlaufer is escorted into the courthouse in Woodstock, Ont., on Friday. Ontario Provincial Police have laid six more charges against the 49-year-old, four counts of attempted murder and two counts of aggravated assault. (Dave Chidley/Canadian Press)

Wettlaufer, who has been in custody at the Vanier Institute for Women in Milton, Ont., since late October, looked out silently at the public benches where friends and family of some of her alleged victims sat. Her case was put over to Feb. 15 after a Crown attorney updated the court on the new charges.

Wettlaufer is now charged with the attempted murder of Caressant Care residents Wayne Hedges, 57, between September and December 2008, and the attempted murder of Michael Priddle, 63, between January 2008 and December 2009.

She is also charged with the attempted murder of Sandra Towler, 77, a resident of Telfer Place in Brant County, Ont., in September 2015, and Beverly Bertram, 68, at a private home in Oxford County in August 2016.

The aggravated assault charges involve Caressant Care residents Clotilde Adriano, 87, and Albina Demedeiros, 90, between June and December of 2007.

Police said four of the seniors named in the new allegations all the Caressant Care residents have since died, but their deaths have not been attributed to Wettlaufer.

Court documents accuse Wettlaufer of injecting the six new alleged victims with insulin.

Records from the College of Nurses of Ontario show Wettlaufer was first registered as a nurse in August 1995 but resigned Sept. 30, 2016, and is no longer a registered nurse.

OPP did not provide details on the alleged incidents, saying the investigation is ongoing.

"It's a very intense investigation and obviously there's still a lot more questions than answers but it's an ongoing investigation," said Sgt. David Rektor. "We'll just follow the evidence and take it to where it leads us."

The people Wettlaufer is charged with killing include:

  • James Silcox, 84.
  • Maurice Granat, 84.
  • Gladys Millard, 87.
  • Helen Matheson, 95.
  • Mary Zurawinski, 96.
  • Helen Young, 90.
  • Maureen Pickering, 79.
  • Arpad Horvath, 75.

Anyone who might have information on the Wettlaufer case is being encouraged to contact police, said Rektor.

With filed from CBC News