Benjamin Geen

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Benjamin_Geen an entity of type: Thing

Benjamin Geen is a double murderer who killed two patients and committed grievous bodily harm against 15 others while working as a nurse at Horton General Hospital in Banbury, Oxfordshire in 2003 and 2004. Geen was believed to be motivated by his 'thrill-seeking' temperament, and injected a number of patients with dangerous drugs in order to cause respiratory arrest so he could enjoy the 'thrill' of resuscitating them. He was apprehended after staff at the hospital noticed that it was always when he treated patients, most of whom only had minor injuries such as dislocated shoulders, that they inexplicably had respiratory failures. Upon his arrest, a syringe full of some of the drugs he used to attack patients was found on his person. When he saw officers approaching, he discharged the syri rdf:langString
rdf:langString Benjamin Geen
rdf:langString Benjamin Geen
rdf:langString Benjamin Geen
xsd:integer 6032242
xsd:integer 1122996792
xsd:date 2004-02-09
<second> 9.46728E8
rdf:langString 'Ben Allitt'
rdf:langString right
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString United Kingdom
rdf:langString October 2022
rdf:langString Erica and Mick Geen
rdf:langString "It is clear that he wanted to be the centre of attention and in order to fuel this desire, brought some of his patients to the brink of death and coldly murdered two of them."
rdf:langString The current source is insufficiently reliable .
rdf:langString —Detective Superintendent Andy Taylor, who led the murder investigation, after Geen's trial in 2006.
xsd:integer 2
<perCent> 20.0
rdf:langString Benjamin Geen is a double murderer who killed two patients and committed grievous bodily harm against 15 others while working as a nurse at Horton General Hospital in Banbury, Oxfordshire in 2003 and 2004. Geen was believed to be motivated by his 'thrill-seeking' temperament, and injected a number of patients with dangerous drugs in order to cause respiratory arrest so he could enjoy the 'thrill' of resuscitating them. He was apprehended after staff at the hospital noticed that it was always when he treated patients, most of whom only had minor injuries such as dislocated shoulders, that they inexplicably had respiratory failures. Upon his arrest, a syringe full of some of the drugs he used to attack patients was found on his person. When he saw officers approaching, he discharged the syringe contents into his jacket pocket in an attempt to hide the fact he had removed potentially lethal drugs from the hospital without authority. He was found guilty at trial in 2006 and sentenced to a minimum of 30 years imprisonment. Geen has maintained his innocence but his multiple appeals have failed. Two applications for appeal to the Criminal Case Review Commission, the independent body which investigates alleged miscarriages of justice, have been rejected, most recently in 2020.
rdf:langString December 2003
rdf:langString February 2004
xsd:date 2004-02-09
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 28777
rdf:langString 'Ben Allitt' (reference toBeverley Allitt)

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