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Playing God: Nurse gets life for killing 3 patients after giving them excessive insulin

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Heather Pressdee, Pennsylvania nurse sentenced after pleading guilty to murder of 3 patients and attempted murder of another 19 administering excessive insulin.
Heather Pressdee, Pennsylvania nurse sentenced to 376 years after pleading guilty to murdering 3 and attempted murder of another 19 patients under her care after administering excessive insulin.
Heather Pressdee, Pennsylvania nurse sentenced after pleading guilty to murder of 3 patients and attempted murder of another 19 administering excessive insulin.
Heather Pressdee, Pennsylvania nurse sentenced to 376 years after pleading guilty to murdering 3 and attempted murder of another 19 patients under her care after administering excessive insulin.

Heather Pressdee Pennsylvania nurse gets 376 years after pleading guilty to killing 3 patients and 19 attempted murder counts after giving patients in her care excessive insulin as she sought to determine who would get to live or not. 

‘She’s pure evil,’ offered a relative of one of the victims… A Pennsylvania nurse connected to the deaths of 17 patients who were given fatal doses of insulin was sentenced Thursday to 376 years behind bars.

Heather Pressdee of Natrona Heights pleaded guilty in a Butler County courtroom to three counts of first-degree murder and 19 counts of criminal attempt to commit murder, Attorney General Michelle Henry’s office said in a news release.

Presdee, 41, was a nurse at Quality Life Services prior to her arrest in May 2023. It was while working for five different care facilities in the PA area from 2020 that the nurse perpetrated her crimes on unsuspecting patients she’ d been entrusted to take care of and ‘playing God’ over their lives.

Pressdee’s crimes began in 2020, with her administering ‘lethal and potentially lethal doses of insulin’ to at least 22 patients at facilities Allegheny, Armstrong, Butler and Westmoreland counties, prosecutors said. Seventeen of the patients ‘died very soon’ or ‘sometime later’ after receiving the insulin doses, according to Henry’s office.

The application of insulin involved patients required insulin to treat diabetes, while some of them did not have diabetes, Henry’s office stated.

Pressdee will be incarcerated for three consecutive life sentences after pleading to three counts of first-degree murder, plus an additional 380 to 760 years of consecutive jail time for the 19 counts of criminal attempt to commit murder, according to prosecutors.

‘The defendant used her position of trust as a means to poison patients who depended on her for care,’ Henry said in a statement. ‘This plea and life sentence will not bring back the lives lost, but it will ensure Heather Pressdee never has another opportunity to inflict further harm. I offer my sincere sympathy to all who have suffered at this defendant’s hands.’

Heather Pressdee, Pennsylvania nurse sentenced after pleading guilty to murder of 3 patients and attempted murder of another 19 administering excessive insulin.
Heather Pressdee, Pennsylvania nurse sentenced after pleading guilty to murder of 3 patients and attempted murder of another 19 administering excessive insulin.

Relatives of Pressdee’s victims spoke during the registered nurse’s sentencing hearing and said they experienced ‘pain and anguish caused by learning their loved one’s death was not natural, but was caused by a criminal act,’ Henry’s office said.

‘She’s pure evil,’ said Melinda Brown, the sister of victim Nicholas Cymbol, according to WTAE-TV. ‘There’s no justice for this. We’ll get justice when she meets her maker.’

Elizabeth Simons Ozella, daughter of victim Irene Simons, told the station that unlike some other victim family members, she will never forgive Pressdee.

‘We’re angry and hurt that she disguised herself as a caring nurse,’ she said. ‘She took someone from this earth that she had no right to take, and she played God when she didn’t have that right.’

Marissa Hiles told the outlet that her aunt, Betty Hutchinson, survived Pressdee’s heavy dose of insulin but suffered a stroke and can’t feed herself or speak.

Henry became aware of Pressdee’s crimes when her office received a referral in late 2022 regarding a patient under the nurse’s care, according to Henry’s office. A ‘comprehensive investigation’ ensued and revealed the ‘numerous deaths’ caused by Pressdee’s actions.

Pennsylvania state records show Pressdee’s registered nurse license was issued on July 31, 2018, and was going to expire at the end of October 2023. The license was renewed in August 2021 and marked active on the Pennsylvania Department of State website in May 2023 before Pressdee’s arrest according to USA Today

Pressdee was also disciplined at 11 former nursing jobs in Western Pennsylvania for ‘abusive behavior toward patients or staff, and either resigned or was fired from each facility,’ according to the initial criminal complaint obtained by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.

Charges against Pressdee were filed in May and November 2023, prosecutors said. Presdee remained incarcerated in Butler County prison since being arrested in her home. 

The initial goal for Pressdee’s attorneys, Phil DiLucente and James DePasquale, was to avoid the death penalty, which their client did on Thursday.

While a lot of family members didn’t forgive Pressdee for her crimes, some did, which DiLucente said he and DePasquale did not expect.

‘That’s a little bit different than typical cases we handle,’ the attorney said according to KDKA.

Pressdee at one time ‘truly believed’ that ‘she was helping’ her patients, DiLucente said.

Before becoming a nurse, Pressdee worked in a veterinary clinic and her job was to euthanize animals, according to the attorney.

Pressdee believed she was ending the suffering of a lot of people by doing what she did, but now ‘she knows that that’s not the case and she apologized for her actions,’ DiLucente said.

Pressdee has said ‘she felt bad for their quality of life and she had hoped that they would just slip into a coma and pass away,’ according to the initial criminal complaint filed in the case.

According to court documents, Pressdee sent her mother texts between April 2022 and May 2023 in which she discussed her unhappiness with various patients and colleagues, and spoke about potentially harming them. She also voiced similar complaints about people she encountered at restaurants and other places.

When asked by one of her lawyers why she was pleading guilty, Pressdee said, ‘Because I am guilty,’ the AP reported.

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