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Aino
NYKOPP-KOSKI
Characteristics:
Nurse - Poisoner - No motive was established for the murders
Date of murders:
Date of arrest:
March 2009
Victims profile:
Location:
Activities
Between 2004 and 2009 Nykopp-Koski worked at a range of hospitals,
care homes and patients' homes. There she killed five elderly
patients using sedatives and opiates. She was apprehended in March
2009.
Nykopp-Koski was tried in Helsinki District Court in December 2010
and pleaded not-guilty, though the court convicted her. She was
sentenced to life in prison (minimum of 12 years before likely
pardon). Despite having a personality disorder she was deemed
culpable for her actions. The sentence was upheld by Helsinki
Court of Appeals in March 2012.
Similar cases in Finland
In March 2010 Katariina Pantila, another
Finnish nurse, was found dead in her prison cell. She had been
convicted of the murder of a patient and the attempted murder of a
baby in 2007.
The Helsinki Appeals Court has confirmed a life
sentence in Finland's largest-ever serial murder case
Yle.fi
March 29, 2012
The court upheld the earlier ruling by the
Helsinki District Court.
Aino Nykopp-Koski was convicted of five murders
and five attempted murders committed between 2004 and 2009.
The victims included her colleague and elderly
patients in facilities where she worked as a practical nurse.
Nykopp-Koski has consistently denied all
charges brought against her. While in prison, she married a man 20
years her junior, resulting in a change of surname.
The accused is to seek the right of appeal to
the Supreme Court.
Yle.fi
July 11, 2011
In what is an unusual trial in Finland,
convicted serial killer Aino Nykopp-Koski on Monday asked the
Helsinki Court of Appeals to strike down her sentence on five
counts of murder and five of attempted murder. This is the largest
murder case in modern Finnish history.
Nykopp-Koski, a nurse from Helsinki, was
convicted and handed a life sentence for the murders of five
people and the attempted murders of another five between 2004 and
2009. All of the victims were elderly bed-ridden patients in
facilities where she was employed. Most had been given high doses
of sedatives.
At the opening of her appeal on Monday,
Nykopp-Koski was reported as listening calmly as the prosecutor
read out the charges she was found guilty of by the Helsinki
District Court.
"Nykopp-Koski gave her patients medication with
the intent of killing. She had a pattern according to which she
acted. First, she gave the fatal medications. When the symptoms of
poisoning began to appear, she phoned the emergency centre and
often their relatives. She tried to use these calls to ensure that
no one would suspect her," State Prosecutor Leena Metsäpelto read
out to the court.
According to Metsäpelto, for years Nykopp-Koski
successfully murdered her defenceless patients. She added that
Nykopp-Koski has shown no regret for her actions.
Claims innocence
During police investigations and her first
trial, Nykopp-Koski denied all charges. She repeated her denial
when the Appeals Court convened on Monday, asking the court to
overturn her conviction and to release her.
"I met with my client a few days ago. She is
still certain of her innocence. For this reason she wants these
charges to be handled by the Appeals Court," Nykopp-Koski's
lawyer, Heikki Lampela, told YLE.
The Appeals Court will hear 90 witnesses, with
a decision expected after the end of the year.
Lampela was unwilling to give his own
evaluation of the need for a new trial.
"My client believes that the verdict will
change. My truth is my client's truth," said Lampela.
Telegraph.co.uk
December 22, 2010
A Finnish nurse was on Wednesday sentenced to
life in prison for murdering five elderly patients and attempting
to murder five more, in an apparently motiveless killing spree.
Aino Nykopp-Koski, 60, killed the patients, aged between 70 and
91, with drugs they had not been prescribed, including sedatives
and opiates.
The murders took place at various hospitals, care homes and
patients' homes between 2004 and 2009, the Helsinki court heard.
Media reported that the court had not been able to determine any
motive for the crimes.
Nykopp-Koksi, who has been in police custody since March 2009, was
also found guilty of other offences including aggravated assault
on a colleague and theft.
Psychiatric examinations concluded in November the nurse fully
understood the consequences of her actions even though she
suffered from a personality disorder, and could thus be deemed
responsible for the murders.
She pleaded not guilty, claiming the deaths were from natural
causes or because the patients had accidentally or intentionally
taken an overdose.
Defence lawyer Heikki Lampela told the STT news agency an appeal
would be lodged.
In March, Katariina Pantila, a Finnish nurse dubbed the "angel of
death" after she was sentenced to life in prison for murdering a
patient and trying to kill a baby with insulin, was found dead in
her jail cell.