nurse convicted Video Clip | Footage.net (2024)

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JOHN DEMJANJUK DIES AT 91 - HD

John Demjanjuk, a former guard convicted for war crimes while serving at the Sobibor concentration camp, passes away at the age of 91 in a nursing home in Germany. PLEASE NOTE - news reporter audio is for reference only and is not available for licensing purposes. Mastered in Apple Pro Res 422 HQ, available in all forms of HD and SD.

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News Clip: Genene Jones

Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story.

SJT 6H INFIRMIERE MURDER 7 BEBES VERDICT TODAY

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DN-LB-503 Beta SP

Relief Forces Begin Reconstruction of Hurricane Ravages

Disasters; hurricanes

Santa Domingo hurricane wreaks havoc on people, city; devasated city; ship sunk in harbor; ruined bridge; wrecked buildings; convicts help in rescue; homeless kids; nurses tend injured; homeless people; ruined city;

MAJORS VERDICT

MIXED AUDIO & NATS ON ORVILLE MAJORS, LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE CONVICTED OF SIX KILLINGS IN INDIANA HOSPITAL

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Killer Nurse Convicted

NURSE CONVICTED OF KILLING PATIENTS TO IMPRESS BOYFRIEND.

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'THE RAG OF RAGS'

Full Title reads: "'The Rag of Rags' Liverpool Students 'round up' the City in aid of Hospitals."<br/><br/>Liverpool, Merseyside. <br/><br/>High angle shot of rag parade. Float based on lorry drives past. It is made to look like a ship - The 'LSD Mudlark' - Students stand on the float dressed in costumes as fishermen. People watch from the pavements. Other floats and lorries pass by. One features people dressed as pirates. One has men dressed as nurses. One has men dressed as agricultural workers, with the banner 'Buy British Beef'. Lots of people in fancy dress.<br/><br/>Closer shot of flat bed lorry carrying people dressed as ghosts, skeletons and wizards. They carry a banner saying 'Dead Men Tell No Tales". <br/><br/>Closer shot of lorry with banner 'Haslam's Old Lags'. The students are dressed as convicts and have a sign saying 'We Want Women Warders'.<br/><br/>(Natural sound track only - No commentary)

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USA: INDIANA: NURSE CONVICTED OF MURDERING 6 PATIENTS

TAPE_NUMBER: EF99/1163IN_TIME: 03:18:38 - 09:05:37LENGTH: 02:04SOURCES: ABCRESTRICTIONS: No Access North America/InternetFEED: VARIOUS (THE ABOVE TIME-CODE IS TIME-OF-DAY)SCRIPT: Natural Sound A former nurse from the American Midwest has been convicted of murder in the deaths of six patients at a western Indiana hospital. Authorities say the victims were deliberately given lethal injections.Jurors hearing the case against Orville Lynn Majors told the judge they could not reach a verdict on the seventh count.A jury in the mid West American town of Brazil, Indiana, convicted former nurse, Orville Lynn Majors, of murdering six patients at Vermillion County Hospital in the mid-1990s. After four days of deliberations, the jury found him guilty of murder in the deaths of fourwomen and two men who ranged in age from 56 to 89 years old. The jurors could not agree on a verdict in a seventh case involving a 74-year-old woman.Majors was accused of injecting seven patients with lethal doses of epinephrine and potassium chloride while he was a licensed practical nurse at the rural hospital.Majors has maintained his innocence since his arrest in December 1997. His attorneys, during five weeks of testimony, repeatedly speculated that all seven patients died of natural causes. The defence even called family doctors of several patients as witnesses. The doctors told jurors their patients died from the illnesses that had put them in hospital. The judge set sentencing for November 15th. Prosecutors withdrew their request for life without parole, which would have requiredthe jury to return to the courtroom for a penalty phase. Majors faces a maximum of 65 years in prison on each count. Defence attorneys say they plan to appeal the guilty verdicts.SHOTLIST: XFA Brazil, Indiana, U-S. October 17, 19991. Orville Lynn Majors escorted by police into courthouse elevator2. Majors exiting courthouse with police3. Bulldozer digs grave in graveyard while police watch4. Newspapers with headline \"Majors Arrested\" come off press5. Mugshot of Majors6. Exteriors around Vermillion County Hospital7. Exteriors around Vermillion County Jail8. Majors gets out of car and goes into courthouse9. Various photos of the elderly victims of Majors?

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Witness at Milgaard Hearing

In Ottawa, Ron Wilson, a key witness for the David Milgaard case in review at the Supreme Court of Canada, is found to have lied in his testimony. Originally convicted for the murder of nursing student Gail Miller, Milgaard was ultimately declared wrongfully convicted and released from prison. PLEASE NOTE News anchor and reporter image and audio, along with any commercial production excerpts, are for reference purposes only and are not clearable and cannot be used within your project.

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7.30 am the newspaper: [issue of August 19, 2023]

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NURSES AIDS ACCUSED OF ABUSE (5/21/1998)

Nine New York area nurse’s aids are under arrest, charged with abusing patients in her care

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ARI-19 Beta SP (PAL)

MISC. NEWSREELS #19

[Outside tray: GB - PLATO NURSE SENTENCED FOR NEWBORN MURDERS]

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NURSING HOME CHECKS (09/16/1997)

TWO LEGISLATORS ANNOUNCE THAT THEY WILL FILE A BILL TO REQUIRE NURSING HOME WORKERS BE CHECKED FOR CRIMINAL BACKGROUNDS BEFORE BEING GIVEN JOBS.

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Germany Nurse - Nurse convicted and sentenced to life in prison for killing 28 patients

NAME: GER NURSE 20061120ITAPE: EF06/1114IN_TIME: 10:27:41:12DURATION: 00:01:34:14SOURCES: RTLDATELINE: Kempten, 20 Nov 2006RESTRICTIONS: SEE SCRIPTSHOTLIST: RTL - NO ACCESS GERMANY, Austria (with the exception of individual, non-tv-broadcast/closed-circuit AP Television clients), German-speaking Switzerland, Luxemburg and Alto Adige m1. Pan from close-up of sign in front of courtroom to visitors entering 2. Visitors undergoing security checks before entering courtroom 3. Pan from public in courtroom to waiting media 4. Various of defendant Stephan Letter walking into courtroom, attended by police5. Police officer removing Letter's handcuffs 6. Close-up of Letter7. Cutaway of public in courtroom 8. Judges entering courtroom 9. Mid shot of Letter10. Courtroom door being closed 11. SOUNDBITE (German) Peter Koch, prosecutor: "The accused has been sentenced because of murder in 12 cases. The accused has been sentenced to life imprisonment."12. Letter leaving courtroom after the verdict13. SOUNDBITE (German) Wilhelm Seitz, lawyer representing victims' families: "The verdict is lawful (right) and necessary. Necessary, when it has to be straightened out, as these crimes are not acceptable at all."14. Wide of people exiting courtroom after verdict STORYLINE: A nurse was convicted on Monday and sentenced to life in prison for killing 28 of his patients at a hospital in southern Germany.Stephan Letter was found guilty of 12 counts of murder, 15 of manslaughter and one of mercy killing in what has been described as Germany's biggest series of killings since World War II."The accused has been sentenced to life imprisonment," prosecutor Peter Koch confirmed after the hearing.According to evidence presented at his nine-month trial, 28-year-old Letter killed his victims by injecting them with a co*cktail of drugs.Letter testified at the start of his trial in February that he had killed patients, but said he could not remember how many.Letter's attorney, Juergen Fischer, had argued that his client was motivated by compassion for seriously ill patients.Presiding Judge Harry Rechner said Letter was an active proponent of assisted suicide and appeared to want to put an end to what he deemed to be senseless suffering. But, Rechner told the state court in Kempten, the evidence showed he "was interested, at best, superficially in the state of health of the patients."The deaths at the hospital in Sonthofen, southwest of Munich in the Bavarian Alps, began in February 2003, less than a month after the nursestarted working there.The last suspicious death occurred in July 2004, just before his arrest.The patients were between 40 and 94 years old, though most were older than 75. They included two gravely ill women, ages 40 and 47, but not all were seriously sick, authorities have said."The defendant ... killed patients with whom he was barely familiar, patients who had only been in the clinic for a few hours, or those who were on the road to recovery," the court said in its ruling.Police tracked down the nurse as they investigated reports that drugs were missing and compared the times when patients died with the hours he worked.Investigators said they found unsealed vials of the medicines at his apartment.

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David Milgaard at Supreme Court of Canada

At the Supreme Court of Canada, a review of the case of David Milgaard continues. Convicted of the stabbing murder of nursing student Gail Miller, Milgaard professes his innocence. Courtroom sketches depict the testimony of a witness who admitted to lying in the first trial. PLEASE NOTE News anchor and reporter image and audio, along with any commercial production excerpts, are for reference purposes only and are not clearable and cannot be used within your project.

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DN-LB-181 Beta SP

ERB KRANK ["Inherited Illness"]

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suicide - prisoner (02/04/1999)

A convicted killer hung himself Thursday in his Youngstown, Ohio state prison cell. The man was 28 year old Mark DiMarco... notorious for the 1996 murder of Cleveland nurse Mary Jo Pesho.

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VTM-73BI Beta SP

MISC. NEWSREELS #24

Timéo died at the CHRU in Nancy in 2015: Conviction of 2 caregivers and the hospital

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Libya Medics - Libyan judicial council postpones decision in case of six medical workers, street scenes

NAME: LIB MEDICS 20070716ITAPE: EF07/0845IN_TIME: 10:49:31:09DURATION: 00:02:17:05SOURCES: AP TELEVISION/LIBYA TVDATELINE: Tripoli - 16 July 2007/ FileRESTRICTIONS: see scriptSHOTLISTAP TelevisionTripoli - 16 July 20061. Wide of Tripoli city skyline 2. Buildings in distance and traffic on roads at sunset 3. Traffic 4. Various of traffic 5. Wide of city and skyline Libyan TV - No Access Libya Tripoli - 16 July 20066. Supreme Judiciary Council sitting around table 7. Pull out of officials 8. Mid of table 9. Close of officials 10. Various of table 11. Pull out from head of table to wide AP Television FILE: Tripoli - 19 December 200612. Bulgarian nurse being walked through court holding cell13. Various of five Bulgarian nurses in court behind bars14. Travelling of the court audience and a man flashing the victory sign STORYLINELibya's highest judicial authority on Monday postponed a decision on the case of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor who are facing death sentences after being convicted of infecting children with the AIDS virus. The Supreme Judiciary Council would review the case on Tuesday and decide whether to approve or reject the convictions or set lighter sentences, a judicial official said. The official said the council was unable to discuss the case Monday as scheduled because it had other cases to review. Libya's Supreme Court last week upheld the death sentences for the medics, who have been jailed since 1999, in an appeal ruling. Meanwhile, a proposal has been under way to compensate the families of the children, which could pave the way for their release, Libyan officials have said. The six medical workers deny having infected more than 400 children and say their confessions were extracted under torture. Experts and outside scientific reports have said the children were contaminated as a result of unhygienic conditions at a hospital in the northeastern coastal city of Benghazi. Fifty of the infected children died.The six medical workers were convicted and sentenced to death in 2004, but the Supreme Court ordered a retrial after an international outcry over the verdicts.In a ruling that shocked many in Europe, the second trial ended with the same verdict in December despite a scientific report weeks earlier saying HIV was rampant in the hospital before the six began working there.

ITW Deliberate death of little Timéo: 2 caregivers and the CHRU condemned

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Libya Verdict FILE - FILE Court condemns nurses and doctor to death for allegedly infecting children with HIV

NAME: FILE LIBYA VER 20061219ITAPE: EF06/1235IN_TIME: 11:00:11:01DURATION: 00:01:25:05SOURCES: Libyan TVDATELINE: Tripoli, FIleRESTRICTIONS: No Access LibyaSHOTLISTFILE - 15 May 20061. Wide of judges entering court2. Wide of court room3. Presiding judge naming defendants 4. Various of defendants 5. Zoom out to wide of judges leaving court6. Zoom in from wide to mid of defendants with guards7. People holding banner with photos of victims 8. Close up of photographs of children infected with HIV9. Pan across relatives holding photos of children infected with HIV10. Various of soldiers in front of the court11. Pan along banner with photos of victims STORYLINE A Libyan court convicted five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor of deliberately infecting 400 children with the HIV virus and condemned them all to death on Tuesday.The accused reportedly did not react as the judgement was delivered. They have theright to appeal to the Supreme Court.The presiding judge, Mahmoud Hawissa, read out the verdict in a seven-minute hearing in a Tripoli court at the end of the defendants' second trial.The six defendants, detained for nearly seven years, had previously been convicted and condemned to death, but Libyan judges granted them a retrial after international protests over the fairness of the proceedings.Bulgaria contends the children were infected by unhygienic practices at their Libyan hospital.An international legal observer of Lawyers Without Borders, promptly criticised the retrial for failing to admit enough scientific evidence.Research published this month said samples from the infected children showed their viruses were contracted before the six defendants started working at the hospital in question.The long trial of the six foreign medical workers has become a bone of contention in Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's efforts to rebuild ties with the West.Europe and the United States have called for their release, indicating that future relations with Libya would be affected by Tuesday's verdict.But Libyans strongly supported a conviction. Some 50 relatives of the infected children - about 50 of whom have already died of AIDS - waited outside the court early on Tuesday morning, holding poster-sized pictures of their children and bearing placards that read "Death for thechildren killers" and "HIV made in Bulgaria."When the Supreme Court ordered a retrial in December 2005, friends and relatives rioted in Benghazi - the Libyan city where the children were infected in a state hospital.Bulgarians will be aghast at Tuesday's verdict. Hundreds of people staged peaceful protests in support of the five nurses in Bulgaria on Monday.Europe, the United States and international rights groups have accused Libya of prosecuting the six foreign staff as scapegoats for dirty conditions at the Benghazi children's hospital.Luc Montagnier - the French doctor who was a co-discoverer of HIV - testified in the first trial that the deadly virus was active in the hospital before the Bulgarian nurses began their contracts there in 1998.More evidence for that argument surfaced on December 6th - too late to be submitted in court - when Nature magazine published an analysis of HIV and hepatitis virus samples from the children.Using changes in the genetic information of HIV over time as a "molecular clock," the analysts concluded that the virus was contracted before the six defendants arrived at the hospital - perhaps even three years before.Idriss Lagha, the president of a group representing the victims, rejected the Nature article, telling a press conference in London on Monday that the nurses had infected the children with a genetically engineered virus.He accused them as doing so for research on behalf of foreign intelligence agencies.

nurse convicted Video Clip | Footage.net (2024)
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