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Arnfinn NESSET
Classification:
Serial killer
Characteristics: Nurse
- Poisoner
Number of victims: 22 +
Date of murders: 1977 - 1980
Date
of arrest: January
1981
Date of birth:
October 25,
1936
Victims profile: Men and women (geriatric
institution patients)
Method of murder:
Poisoning(Curacit, a muscle relaxing
drug)
Location: Orkdal, Norway
Status: Sentenced to 21 years in prison in 1983; the maximum
punishment possible by Norwegian law. Released in 2004
Arnfinn Nesset (born
October 25, 1936
in Norway) is a Norwegian nurse who became one of the most notorious
serial killers in Scandinavian history. He was convicted on 18 March
1983 of poisoning 22 patients with Curacit, a muscle relaxing drug, at a
Geriatric institution in Orkdal, Norway where he was the director.
During the investigations he claimed to have killed
several more over many years both at this and other institutions where
he had previously worked, but later retracted several of these
statements.
Curacit becomes increasingly difficult to trace in a
corpse as time passes. Consequently, the earliest murders Nesset
confessed to having committed were impossible to investigate.
After a two year investigation and a five month long
trial (where he was accused of murdering 27), he was found guilty in the
murder of 22 people and sentenced to 21 years in prison; the maximum
punishment possible by Norwegian law. Released in 2004, he is presumed
to be living at an undisclosed location in Norway, under a new name.
Arnfinn
Nesset
To look at Arnfinn you would not pick him as a savage
killer. A balding, mild mannered nursing home administrator, Arnfinn is
believed to have slaughtered up to 138 patients over a 20-year nursing
career. In 1977 Arnfinn became the director of the Orkdale Valley Nursing
Home. As he took his post, an unusual number of patients started dying.
No one suspected anything until 1981 when an employee
noticed the purchase of a large amount of curacit, a derivative of the
poisonous curare used as a muscle relaxant.
Police brought Arnfinn, the man in charge
of purchasing the curacit, in for questioning. First he claimed he bought
the drug to kill a pack of wild dogs around the nursing home. Then,
inexplicably, he started confessing to killing 27 patients. At one point
he exclaimed "I've killed so many I'm unable to remember them all."
In 1983 the lethal administrator was convicted of 22 murders. He was
handed a 21-year sentence, the maximum allowed by Norwegian law. Last we
heard from him, Arfinn is back on the streets.
Norway's all-time record-holding killer
was exposed in 1981 as a result of journalistic curiosity. The Orkdal
Valley Nursing Home was opened during 1977, and its patients soon
experienced a high rate of mortality.
Considering their ages, this was not
especially unusual; in early 1981, however, local journalists received a
tip that hospital manager Arnfinn Nesset had ordered large quantities of
curacit, a derivative of curare, the same poison used by South American
Indians on the tips of their hunting arrows. Under questioning, Nesset
first claimed he purchased the poison for use on a dog, later confessing
to the murders of twenty-seven patients between May 1977 and November
1980.
At forty-six, Nesset had already cinched the Scandinavian record for mass
murder, but he was not finished talking, yet. "I've killed so many
I'm unable to remember them all," he told authorities, prompting
police to request lists of patients who died in three institutions where
Nesset had worked since 1962. In all, detectives were left with a list of
sixty-two possible victims, but autopsies were useless, since curacit
becomes increasingly difficult to trace with passage of time.
Nesset offered a variety of motives for the murders mercy killing,
schizophrenia, simple morbid pleasure in the act itself - which led
defense attorneys to suggest that he was mentally unbalanced. Four
psychiatrists examined the balding, bespectacled killer, each pronouncing
him sane and fit for trial.
Before his day in court, the suspect proved
his sanity by suddenly recanting his confessions, leaving prosecutors in a
quandry. He was finally charged with killing only 25 of the established
Orkdal Valley victims; five counts of forgery and embezzlement were added,
based upon the killer's misappropriation of some $1,800 from his victims.
Nesset pleaded innocent on all counts
when his trial opened in October 1982. Five months later, on March 11,
1983, jurors convicted him on 22 counts of murder, one count of attempted
murder, plus five counts of forgery and embezzlement. Nesset was acquitted
on the three remaining murder charges, but it scarcely mattered.
Judges
were unmoved by the defense plea that Nesset considered himself a "demigod,"
holding the power of life and death over his elderly patients. Upon
conviction, he drew the maximum sentence possible under Norwegian law: 21
years in prison, with a possibility of ten more years preventive detention.
Arnfinn
Nesset
The deadliest Norwegian of the Archives.
A balding, mild mannered nursing home administrator, Arnfinn is believed
to have slaughtered up to 138 patients over a 20-year nursing career. In
1977 Arnfinn became the director of the Orkdal Valley Nursing Home. As he
took his post, an unusual number of patients started dying. No one
suspected anything until 1981 when an employee noticed the purchase of a
large amount of curacit, a derivative of the poisonous curare used as a
muscle relaxant.
Police brought Arnfinn, the man in charge of purchasing
the curacit, in for questioning. First he claimed he bought the drug to
kill a pack of wild dogs around the nursing home. Then, inexplicably, he
started confessing to killing 27 patients. At one point he exclaimed "I've
killed so many I'm unable to remember them all."
In 1983 the lethal administrator was convicted of 22
murders. He was handed a 21-year sentence, the maximum allowed by
Norwegian law, which would put him back on the streets by 2004.
Mayhem.net
Nesset, Arnfinn
Norway's all-time record-holding killer was exposed in 1981 as a result of journalistic curiosity. The Orkdal Valley Nursing Home was opened during 1977, and its patients soon experienced a high rate of mortality.
Considering their ages, this was not especially unusual; in early 1981, however, local journalists received a tip that hospital manager Arnfinn Nesset had ordered large quantities of curacit, a derivative of curare, the same poison used by South American Indians on the tips of their hunting arrows.
Under questioning, Nesset first claimed he purchased the poison for use on a dog, later confessing to the murders of twenty-seven patients between May 1977 and November 1980. At forty-six, Nesset had already cinched the Scandinavian record for mass murder, but he was not finished talking, yet. "I've killed so many I'm unable to remember them all," he told authorities, prompting police to request lists of patients who died in three institutions where Nesset had worked since 1962.
In all, detectives were left with a list of sixty-two possible victims, but autopsies were useless, since curacit becomes increasingly difficult to trace with passage of time. Nesset offered a variety of motives for the murders mercy killing, schizophrenia, simple morbid pleasure in the act itself - which led defense attorneys to suggest that he was mentally unbalanced.
Four psychiatrists examined the balding, bespectacled killer, each pronouncing him sane and fit for trial. Before his day in court, the suspect proved his sanity by suddenly recanting his confessions, leaving prosecutors in a quandry. He was finally charged with killing only 25 of the established Orkdal Valley victims; five counts of forgery and embezzlement were added, based upon the killer's misappropriation of some $1,800 from his victims.
Nesset pleaded innocent on all counts when his trial opened in October 1982. Five months later, on March 11, 1983, jurors convicted him on 22 counts of murder, one count of attempted murder, plus five counts of forgery and embezzlement.
Nesset was acquitted on the three remaining murder charges, but it scarcely mattered. Judges were unmoved by the defense plea that Nesset considered himself a "demigod," holding the power of life and death over his elderly patients.
Upon conviction, he drew the maximum sentence possible under Norwegian law: 21 years in prison, with a possibility of ten more years preventive detention.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia
of Modern Serial Killers - Hunting Humans