Richard Angelo | |
---|---|
Born |
Richard Angelo August 29, 1962 Long Island, New York City, New York |
Other names | Angel of Death |
Criminal penalty | 50-years-to-life in prison |
Conviction(s) |
Murder Manslaughter Criminally negligent homicide Assault |
Killings | |
Victims | 8 killed, 26 poisoned but rescued |
Span of killings
|
April 1987–October 1987 |
Country | United States |
State(s) | New York |
Date apprehended
|
November 15, 1987 |
Richard Angelo (born August 29, 1962) is an American serial killer and former nurse at the Good Samaritan Hospital in West Islip, New York. In 1989, he was convicted of murdering several of his patients and sentenced to 50-years-to-life in prison.
He became known as the "Angel of Death".
Angelo was born on August 29, 1962, to parents who were both working in the educational sector.
His mother was an economics teacher, and his father was a high school guidance counselor for the Lindenhurst school district on Long Island. He graduated from St. John the Baptist Diocesan High School in 1980 and then entered a two-year nursing program at Farmingdale State College, where he was a well-regarded honor student.
Angelo first came to the attention of the public in October 1987 when he was suspected of poisoning a patient at the Good Samaritan Hospital on Long Island, where he worked as a nurse.
He was accused of injecting Gerolamo Cucich with a drug into his I.V. Cucich did not feel well after the injection, so he paged another nurse to help him. Later it was found that he had Pavulon in his urine, which he had not been prescribed.
He was arrested for assault on the 73-year-old patient because he was the only person to match the description given to the police (a "heavyset man with a dark beard and glasses").
Following his arrest, he confessed to having poisoned other patients with Pavulon and Anectine. As a result, as many as 30 recently deceased patients were exhumed and examined for traces of these powerful paralyzing agents.
It was later concluded that he had poisoned at least 35 people at the hospital while working there for seven months. The poisoning resulted in ten deaths. He claimed that his motive was to portray himself as a hero. After poisoning his victims, he would wait until they went into cardiac arrest and then come by and save them in front of his colleagues.