Canadian True Crime - The Crimes of Elizabeth Wettlaufer [1]
Episode Date: June 15, 2019A two-part series — The decision to place an elderly relative in care is often a difficult and emotional process. That's why it’s vital that long term care facilities offer families peace of mind ...and reassurance that their loved one is safe and well cared for. This is a tale of where it all went terribly wrong.Look out for early, ad-free release on CTC premium feeds: available on Amazon Music (included with Prime), Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast. Full list of resources, information sources, credits and music credits:See the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi guys, today is part one of another two-parter. Now, I know a bunch of you weren't fans of the way I
released the Jane Hirschman series. You can't blame me for trying something different. So I will be going
back to the standard release schedule for this one, the first and the 15th of the month. Yep,
this means there'll be two weeks between these two parts. So maybe save up part one so you can
binge them both when the second one comes out. Or just listen to it.
Part two will be released early on Patreon though and without the ads for just $2 a month.
To learn more, just look me up on Patreon.
That's p-a-t-r-e-on.com and search for Canadian True Crime.
Speaking of ads, I've just moved to a new hosting platform,
and the good news for you is that my ads will now be geo-targeted.
This means that from now on you'll only hear ads from sponsors that are relevant to your
location. And with that, it's on with the show.
This podcast contains course language, adult themes, and content of a violent and
disturbing nature. Listener discretion is advised. Getting older is not something that everyone
looks forward to, and as a large percentage of our population ages rapidly, facing our own
mortality as the years pass is a sobering realization. Whether it's
physical or mental, aging often means losing varying degrees of independence and capacity.
When it comes to taking our last breaths in this world, it's fair to say that the sense of
security, dignity and comfort brought by being able to see out our last days in our own homes
surrounded by the care of our loved ones cannot be underestimated.
But various personal circumstances don't always allow for this to happen.
and sometimes the care needs of many older people in the community or those with complex health needs can often only be met by placement in a long-term aged care facility.
Most facilities aim to provide their residents with a safe, comfortable and dignified environment where compassionate and experienced staff are on hand to attend to their needs.
The decision to place an elderly relative in care is often a different,
difficult and emotional process, which is why it's vital that long-term care facilities offer
families' peace of mind and reassurance that our loved one is safe and well-cared for.
In the province of Ontario, there are more than 600 long-term aged care homes, housing a total
of about 78,000 residents. As many as 30% of people aged 85 years and older live in long-term care,
Of those, more than 60% suffer from dementia, including Alzheimer's disease.
For those residents who haven't been diagnosed with those debilitating conditions,
over 90% suffer from some form of cognitive impairment,
meaning they have problems with memory, language, judgment and general thinking,
problems that are worse than others in their age group.
A peaceful, pain-free death is something we all hope to have.
because the thought of a painful, drawn-out death where final moments are those of fear is terrifying.
And it's the last sort of scenario that anyone would expect to encounter
in a long-term care facility dedicated to caring for one of the most vulnerable groups in our community.
This is Christy, and you're listening to Canadian True Crime, Episode 48.
This story takes place in Woodstock, a city in Strait,
Southwestern Ontario that has just over 30,000 residents.
Located on 5th Avenue is Carescent Care,
a privately owned long-term aged care facility,
the biggest in the county.
Built in 1975, it could accommodate up to 160 residents in five wings.
The motto of Carescent Care was,
caring families, yours and ours together.
In late July of 2007, 84-year-old James Silcox, known as Jim, became a resident at Carescent Care.
One of three children, Jim was just 17 years old when he enlisted in the Royal Canadian Army Service Corps during World War II.
He went on to spend four years serving overseas in Italy, France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Jim had been married to his wife Agnes for over 60 years and was a proud father of six,
grandfather of 13 and great-grandfather of 8.
He loved watching Saturday morning cartoons with his youngest grandchildren when they visited.
Jim also attended Old St. Paul's Church every Sunday, was a renowned handyman
and was a long-time employee of the Standard Tube Company before he retired.
Jim also enjoyed playing the organ.
He was a loyal member of several community clubs,
and he had an abiding love for dogs.
Jim snowplowed his neighbor's driveways and mowed their lawns
and wouldn't take any payment in return.
He was a kind man.
But in 2004, at age 81,
Jim suffered a stroke which limited his mobility.
At the same time, he had diabetes,
which was controlled with daily insulin injections of 25 units at breakfast and 13 units at supper.
Jim had also developed dementia, and following hip replacement surgery that August,
it had become increasingly difficult for his beloved wife, Agnes, to care for him at home.
Even though Jim's daughter, Andrea, who worked in aged care herself,
bought her parents matching walkers, Jim hated the idea of aging,
After he was hospitalized because of his complex health issues,
his family made the heartbreaking decision to place him in long-term care.
This caused some conflict between Jim's children,
but ultimately it was decided that the move was in their ailing father's best interests.
Dementia often brings with it cognitive impairment changes,
like loss of memory or judgment,
but it also impairs the brain, causing psychological,
changes, like changes in personality, depression and anxiety, and inappropriate behaviour.
Often, people with dementia will be generally irritable.
When Jim Silcox was admitted to care, his care plan noted some issues with inappropriate
behaviour, and a behaviour intervention strategy was put in place to manage this.
On the evening of August 10, 2007, after only being a resident,
for a few weeks, the World War II vet could be heard yelling out, I love you.
Hours later, he was found unconscious in his bed and not breathing. He had passed away.
Elizabeth Tracy May Parker was born in Toronto on June the 10th, 1967, to parents Doug
and Hazel Parker, who also had an older son. Elizabeth was her full name, but everyone actually
called her Bethy from a very young age. When she was four years old, the family moved to Woodstock,
Ontario, where she and her brother would grow up. Father Doug worked as a salesman and Mother Hazel
did secretarial work, just an ordinary working class family. Bethy's shyness and awkwardness made her
a target of bullies in elementary school. When she was seven, she decided that she wanted to be known
as Beth, choosing to spell it B-E-T-H-E. The E would be silent. Surely this would help
minimize the bullying, she thought. A neighbor called Glenn Hart grew up across the street from Beth
and knew her since they were kids. He later described her family as having a leave it to beaver
type image, referencing the 1950s American sitcom that portrayed a loving family unit.
However, behind closed doors, Glenn also said that Beth's parents were known to be quite controlling.
They were a fundamentalist Christian household with highly conservative values
and the family attended church services twice a week at South Zora Baptist Church.
Doug Parker held the respected position of elder in the local church
and his wife Hazel deferred to him as the head of their household.
When Beth started high school at Huron Park Secondary School, things improved for her socially.
She played trombone in the school band, sang in the school choir and was a goalie for her school field hockey team.
But internally, Beth was struggling with her sexuality, and she felt a lot of guilt and disgust that went with it,
because her church, like many other fundamentalist Christian churches,
strongly disapproved of the LGBTQ community.
Coming out to her family was not an option unless she was willing to be rejected.
So Beth continued to keep her secret,
and it was during these school years that she first started experimenting with drugs and alcohol.
She was said to have later developed feelings for a female neighbor,
which were unrequited.
Academically, Beth described herself as an average student.
She had an ambition to study drama after high school,
but when she graduated, she decided to enroll in a journalism course instead.
After a year, though, she found she didn't have the passion to be a news reporter,
so she enrolled at London Baptist Bible College,
now known as Heritage Baptist College, for four years,
where she earned a bachelor's degree in religious education with a minor in counseling.
At the same time, Beth's father Doug also took some courses at the Bible College
in an attempt to monitor his daughter's behavior for some reason.
Despite her father's presence on campus, Beth continued to explore her sexuality.
She started attending a gay-friendly church, but this was soon discovered by her
family who were angry and disappointed.
Beth begged for their forgiveness and in an effort to atone for her sins, she commenced
a highly controversial therapeutic practice known as conversion therapy, created with the
goal of curing homosexuality.
Tactics used during conversion therapy include insisting to the patient that traumatic
incidents they experienced as a child had created a false sense that.
they were gay and with treatment they could revert back to their real self, a heterosexual.
Other tactics included using psychotropic drugs along with sedatives and things called
reparenting sessions, which basically replicates the patient's infancy through role play.
The efficacy of conversion therapy has since been widely debunked, not to mention the ethical
implications that come into play when a person commences treatment because it's not usually something
they want to do or have chosen to do. Not surprisingly, in many cases, conversion therapy has caused
further emotional and psychological trauma to those who have been forced to undergo the radical
practice. It's not publicly known what tactics were used on Beth during her conversion therapy,
but she was deemed to have completed it and released from treatment.
Around this time, she started drinking heavily, often going on binges.
Despite this, she graduated from Bible College with her counselling degree,
but was still unsure as to whether she was on the right career path.
She went back to study high school maths and science for a year
and then enrolled in a three-year nursing course at Conestoga College in Stratford
Ontario. It seemed like she'd finally found her calling. Unlike high school and Bible college,
Beth excelled in her nursing studies, even though she was by now a consistent heavy binge drinker.
In January of 1995, Beth moved northwest in Ontario, where she took a job at Geraldton District
Hospital as a student nurse. By June of that year, she was licensed,
and registered. But just months later, another nurse found her nearly falling into a bathroom trash can.
It turns out she'd shown up to work under the influence of Adavan, or benzodiazepine, laurasopam,
an addictive drug used to treat anxiety and sleeping disorders. Beth was hospitalized at Woodstock
General Hospital as a psychiatric patient.
revealed to her employer that she'd previously been treated for depression,
and they believed that she'd consumed the drugs in an attempt to take her own life.
She told the director of nursing that she took the drugs because she wanted to take the edge off,
because she was very nervous since she'd not worked at her new job at Geraldton Hospital for very long.
The mental health consult notes from this time states that Beth, quote,
gives the impression that she's extremely lonely,
and she talked about how she hides a lot of things from her family.
Beth told management of Geraldton Hospital
and the Ontario Nurses Association, the Union,
that she was seeking help and had accepted that what she did was wrong.
She was confident that it would never happen again.
She was allowed to continue to work for the hospital
and started moonlighting as a support worker at a community living center
that provided personal and residential support to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
She would work there for a year.
But Beth's world was soon to come crashing down.
Not long after her first brush with working under the influence,
her superiors at Geraldton Hospital discovered that she'd stolen more of the drug Adavan
from a patient while she was on shift.
She was promptly fired.
When the nurses union intervened on her behalf,
her termination was amended to a voluntary resignation,
but with a restricted nursing license.
In February of 1996, Beth moved back to Woodstock,
telling people there that the reason she left Geraldton Hospital
was because she felt isolated.
Two months later, in April of 1996,
Beth was gainfully employed as a registered nurse again,
having secured a position at Victoria Rest Home in Woodstock.
The owner of the facility later stated that she felt Beth was a good nurse,
but didn't necessarily demonstrate sound judgment in decision-making.
She resigned after just six months, taking work at a group home instead.
It was seeming like Beth just couldn't get settled when in 1997 at age 30,
she met a truck driver called Daniel Donnie Wetlifer at their local Baptist church.
Beth continued to repress her attraction to women, married Donnie, and the couple settled down in Woodstock.
During this time, Beth got treatment for drug dependence as well as borderline personality disorder.
A mental illness generally marked by an ongoing pattern of varying moods and behaviours,
often resulting in impulsive actions and issues in relationships.
1998 marked three years since she'd been found with the stolen Adavan and had her nursing license restricted.
During this time, Beth picked up casual work in long-term care homes in the Woodstock area.
But her restrictions were removed.
and she was able to work as a full registered nurse again.
Over the next few years, Beth and Donnie continued to live their lives together
and she continued to get treatment for her mental illnesses.
Things culminated in 2006 when she took psychiatrically for two weeks
after being hospitalized for obsessive, compulsive behavior and depression.
She attempted to take her own life from a drug overdose,
but wasn't successful.
After her hospitalisation,
she started seeing a psychiatrist in Woodstock once a month.
But she later admitted that she had difficulties trusting him
and described him as not a nice man.
Beth was still married to Donnie at this time,
but it wasn't going well.
She wanted kids, he didn't.
And of course, she continued to struggle with her sexuality.
Eventually, she got on the internet to seek out the company of women in secret.
In early 2007, Donnie discovered that Beth was planning to move to New Brunswick to pursue a same-sex relationship.
He was devastated and ended the marriage.
Beth didn't end up going through with her plans to move to New Brunswick, though.
She met a local woman online instead, moved in with her and the couple eventually became engaged.
By this time, Beth obviously wasn't doing a good job of hiding her relationships from her conservative Christian family,
although she hadn't officially told them that she was gay.
Her mother insisted on referring to Beth's female partners as roommates,
and preferred to view the situation as Beth just being a kind person,
who was simply happy to help others who needed a place to stay.
Former neighbour Nancy Gilbert did agree,
with this characterization, saying that she found Beth to be caring.
In fact, Beth's friends and other neighbors remembered her as liking to travel and laugh,
a normal, everyday person.
But at home, things were quickly becoming tough for Beth and her new partner,
who had a combination of medical conditions, including Parkinson's disease, diabetes, and epilepsy.
Beth later claimed that her partner was also dependent on alcohol
and because of her health conditions she wasn't able to work
so Beth was supporting them both and finances had started to become tight
Beth needed a better paying job
In June of 2007
Beth left the group home she'd been working out with a reference stating she had
quote, solid concern and dedication to the individuals for whom she has provided service.
She then got a full-time job at Carescent Care Long-Term facility back in Woodstock.
They believed the reference she'd received from the hospital
and had no idea about the issues with her previous employment.
After an initial orientation, Beth was put in charge of 32 patients.
Her responsibilities included changing dressings, completing paperwork, and administering medication.
It was busy and Beth didn't particularly enjoy the work given the large volume of patients,
but she ensured that she fulfilled her obligations every shift.
At least twice a month, she worked double shifts that started at three in the afternoon
and went until seven in the morning the next day,
and she was put in charge of her shift, something that she did enjoy.
Around this time, Beth officially came out to her family as gay.
She later said her brother was so upset about this revelation that he didn't talk to her for 10 years,
and her mother Hazel never publicly acknowledged Beth's same-sex relationships,
continuing to tell people that they were just roommates.
As the months passed, Beth's role at Corridor,
recent care expanded to taking on responsibility for 90 to 95 residents while on night shift,
as well as supervising personal support workers known as PSWs. At that time, care homes in
Ontario only required one registered nurse to be on duty at all times, regardless of the number of
residents. As the registered nurse on duty for the eight-hour night shift, Beth was earning a
approximately $60,000 per year, and this supervisory position at night meant she was
responsible for managing and dispensing all medication to residents. She was highly experienced in
managing blood sugar conditions like diabetes and administering insulin. Insulin is the hormone
naturally released by our pancreas into the bloodstream, where it converts glucose from the food
we eat into ourselves where it can be used for energy.
When a person's blood sugar level is too low, they can develop a condition called hypoglycemia.
Symptoms include claminess, perspiring, chills, lightheadedness, dizziness, shaking,
increased heart rate and blurred vision.
Severe cases of hypoglycemia can also result in seizures, loss of consciousness, frothing at the
mouth shut down of vital organs and death.
This kind of death is by no means quick or pain-free.
The person affected can suffer for hours.
All of these symptoms caused by blood sugar levels being too low
can also be caused by taking an overdose of insulin.
At caressant care, insulin pens were allocated to and labelled for individual
residents and then locked in the medication cart, but there was always a spare pen available.
And unlike other medications, insulin is not a controlled substance in long-term care homes,
and facilities are not required to monitor insulin use through regular stock audits.
The main stockpile of insulin was stored in an unlocked fridge in the windowless medication room.
On August 10, 2007, barely two months after Beth started working at Carescent Care,
84-year-old World War II vet James Jim Silcox was found unconscious in his bed and not breathing.
As you'll recall from the beginning of the episode, he relied on daily insulin injections to deal with his diabetes.
When his family was notified that he'd passed away, they were shocked and dead.
devastated and requested an autopsy. They were desperate for answers as to how the health of their
beloved father and husband could have deteriorated so rapidly. But given Jim's advanced age and that
he was a long-term care resident at the time of his death, the coroner declined the family's request,
satisfied that Jim's cause of death was an embolism related to his prior hip surgery. Jim's eulogy
described him as a gentleman, a problem solver, a fixer, a builder, a prankster, an animal lover,
a true card, a compassionate and loving human being, and a man of deep abiding faith.
Months later, just before Christmas of 2007, 84-year-old caressant care resident Morris Granat,
known as Mo, was looking forward to seeing his family for the holidays.
He was born in Saskatchewan and was a widowed father of three, two daughters, as well as one son who had previously passed away.
He was also the beloved grandfather of five and great-grandfather of 11.
He'd previously worked as a mechanic in Tilsonburg, Ontario, and loved to fix up cars, do body work and fix their engines.
But in December of 2006, he became a resident of caressant care following a bad fall.
Elderly people are extremely vulnerable to falls.
In fact, they're the leading cause of injuries resulting in death to this age group,
and also the most common cause of trauma-related hospital admissions.
After his admission, Mo was also found to be battling metastatic prostate prostate.
cancer. As Christmas of 2007 approached, his family were greatly looking forward to having him
home for the holidays. It was going to be a happy time for everyone. But two days before Christmas,
84-year-old Moe was found by night shift staff lying in bed unresponsive. He died on December
the 23rd, 2007. Meanwhile, Beth Wetlalfa continued.
to battle her addictive behaviors. Her addiction to prescription medications deepened and now
included hydromorphone, a highly addictive opioid analgesic and narcotic. It's most commonly used to treat
moderate to severe pain, usually in long-term cancer patients. It can also be used as an alternative
to morphine. As Beth started relying heavily on the drug, she chose not to
to doctor shop for prescriptions, but to steal the allocated medications of residents.
To avoid detection, Beth gave residents laxatives instead of their hydromorphone,
and no one was any the wiser. When hydromorphone supplies delivered to caressant care
weren't checked in straight away, Beth skimmed the top and took them home.
Another method she used to steal the drug was to open residents' medications.
capsules, empty the contents, and put the capsule back together empty for the resident to take,
and then later on she would consume the contents herself.
Remember, the vast majority of patients who end up in long-term care
suffer from dementia, Alzheimer's or some form of cognitive impairment,
so may not have been able to communicate effectively that their medications weren't working.
In January of 2008, Beth's relationship with her fiancé broke down.
Straightaway, she got back online to seek out a new partner.
She started communicating with a woman called Sheila and Prince Albert Saskatchewan,
telling her that her marriage broke down because she was attracted to women.
The two continued to talk online and that summer, Beth flew to Saskatoon to meet Sheila and stay with her for a week.
Beth was extremely excited over what she perceived to be a serious relationship
and declared her love for Sheila almost immediately.
The pair were intimate on the first night of Beth's holiday,
but the very next day, Sheila knew there was no future for them as a couple.
But Beth still had six days left of her stay,
and during this time, Sheila's first impression was confirmed.
She couldn't quite put her finger on what she found disconcerting about Beth's behaviour,
but it did concern her.
Beth had a lot of temper tantrums and frequently acted childishly.
And for someone who took a lot of pride in her career as a nurse,
Sheila thought it was odd that Beth showed no interest in meeting her elderly mother
who was in hospital at the time.
When the week-long visit came to an end,
Sheila told Beth the relationship wouldn't progress any further.
Beth was devastated, but threw herself back into her work.
By 2009, she was in another relationship with a woman,
but the couple eventually split due to ongoing conflict.
44-year-old Beth decided to take up creative writing.
From 2011, she started posting poems online under the screen name Betty,
on the website all poetry.com,
a website that encourages poets to share their work
for an online community to enjoy.
In her profile, she said she had a love of the English language,
had an active and full life, and lived with three cats.
She posted a poem called Inevitable,
which seems to be speaking from the voice of a female serial killer.
She watches some life drain.
from the notch in his neck vein.
As it soothingly pools, it smothers her pain.
Sweet stiletto so sharp craves another cut,
obeying a call, she moves to his gut.
Blade traces a line from navel to spine,
grating on rib bones, slicing intestine.
Her knife sings a love song to the splattering gore,
slicing through breastbone,
romancing some more.
Heart beats, then sprays,
as this next victim pays her.
her death daggers bill. Does it quench her craze? Sharp thirst recedes as she dances in blood,
satiated for now, no longer a flood. This macab waltz ended. Her desire has been tended
by drinking the death brew that her passion blended. All others are safe from obsessions greed,
until she hears again from her knife and her need. Beth was still working at caressant care,
but her superiors noticed odd behaviour that was starting to affect her work.
By August of 2011, she was regularly turning up late to work and missing shifts.
Carescent care had concerns about her mental health
and recommended she take leave, but she refused.
Beth continued working, as usual.
One of the patients under her care was 87-year-old Gladys Millard.
Gladys was born in Nova Scotia and was a long-time member of Knox Presbyterian Church.
The mother of two, grandmother of two and great-grandmother of five loved to bake,
worked as a seamstress and was also a member of Rose Rebecca Lodge,
a branch of an international service-based organisation in Woodstock.
Her husband, Henry, passed away in 1997,
and nine years later, Gladys became a resident of Co-Crow.
caressant care because of a combination of dementia and metastatic breast cancer.
Four years later, during the night of October 13, 2011, the 87-year-old widow suddenly passed away
and was discovered the next morning by staff. This was less than two months after Beth refused
to take a leave as recommended by caressant care. Two weeks later, 95-year-old Helen
Matheson, another resident under Beth's care, was enjoying a few bites of blueberry pie and
ice cream, her favourite. It had been bought for her by a nurse as a special treat. Helen was a
widowed mother of two sons who also had three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. She was a
retired teacher, active long-time member of the Uniting Church in Inakip, Ontario and the Ladies' Aid Society.
Helen's husband Carl passed away in 1998,
and not long after that, Helen developed Alzheimer's disease
and ended up being admitted to caressant care.
She was a quiet resident,
and despite the decline in her cognitive capacity,
she was otherwise well.
She didn't have diabetes.
But that night, she stopped eating and drinking.
According to nurses' notes from the time,
she seemed very pale and listless.
The next day, she was crying out in pain and given morphine.
She was moved to palliative care and her son was called to the hospital.
He sat with her that night, falling asleep here and there,
and finally he woke up and noticed that she'd passed away.
He notified staff.
Helen's causes of death were listed as natural causes, weight loss,
failure to thrive, old-aged debility and dementia.
Helen Matheson was remembered as a good and decent person.
Just over a week later,
Carescent Care lost a third patient
under the care of Beth Wetlalfa.
Mary Zerwinski was a 96-year-old widow
who'd been married twice with four sons, outliving three of them.
Mary grew up in Sudbury, Ontario, and worked as a waitress.
Despite developing dementia in her,
her later years, resulting in her admission to caressant care in 2011, Mary was described as
feisty, outspoken and fun. She was looking forward to celebrating her 100th birthday in a few years
with her loved ones around her. Even at 96 years old, Mary loved to look good and continued to
wear lipstick, jewelry and nail polish. The night of November the 6th, 2000,
2011, Mary died in her sleep. No autopsy was performed. The next day, Beth flew to Florida for a 10-day Caribbean cruise. She'd previously booked it with her ex-girlfriend before they broke up, and they both still decided to go.
As she flew away for vacation in November, the staff at Carescent Care were talking. Three residents had died in as many weeks, which was
wasn't that unusual in and of itself.
But by this stage, staff had started to complain
that Beth was showing up to work
under the influence of alcohol.
On one occasion, she was found passed out
in a basement on night shift.
But worst of all, her colleagues started to complain
that she was being neglectful
and even suspected that she was abusing the residents.
Two months later, in January of 2012,
a personal support worker complained that Beth gave improper and incompetent treatment,
one time regarding a resident's hematoma,
and another time with a resident who had a suspected hip fracture.
Carescent care management warned Beth that she was at risk of being reported
to the College of Nurses of Ontario to attend a hearing to determine whether she was still fit to practice.
The College of Nurses is the regulatory body for Ontario's nurses
and responds to workplace complaints.
By this stage, Beth was under investigation for assaulting a resident
and more complaints had come in about her failure to follow instructions,
openly discussing inappropriate things with other staff,
and general bullying and harassment.
But still, Beth continued working.
Helen Young was born in 1923 in Edinburgh, Scotland, and was described as the apple of her father's eye.
When she was 16, World War II broke out and she joined the Royal Navy, stationed at various locations in Britain, doing clerical work.
In her spare time, Helen loved dressing up in her heels to go out dancing.
In 1948, she married her Canadian husband, Peter.
and following the war, left to relocate to Peter's home country to start their post-war life together.
The couple wouldn't have any children, but they loved to travel and were active in both their local Lions Club and the Humane Society.
They eventually moved to Woodstock, Ontario in 1971.
Peter passed away in 1988, but Helen was very independent and continued to travel on her own.
At age 86, Helen was admitted to caressant care in December 2009.
She was known to be straightforward and outspoken and was particularly close to her niece Sharon who visited often.
During the night of July the 13th, 2013, nurses were called to her room and found her moaning loudly in pain with a red face and bulging eyes.
90-year-old Helen passed away the next morning.
Sharon expressed her gratitude to staff for the care her aunt had received at the long-term facility in her final days.
79-year-old Maureen Pickering was another resident at Carescent Care.
She was born in Montreal in 1935 and studied economics at McGill University before marrying her husband Hugh in 1962.
Maureen worked for the telecommunications company Bell Canada.
and was known to be intelligent, elegant, strong-willed and kind.
Her husband Hugh passed away in 2008,
after a long battle with Parkinson's disease
where Maureen was his primary carer.
Maureen herself developed Alzheimer's disease,
and as the couple had no children,
her friends and cousins stepped in to care for her at first
before she was admitted to caressant care in September of 2013.
Just six months later, the 79-year-old had a stroke and died.
The doctor who attended following Maureen's passing
noted that she had unexplained low blood sugar levels and notified the coroner,
but it was decided that no further investigation was required.
By this time, caressant care management were again concerned about Beth Wettlalfa.
More complaints had come in.
Beth was alleged to have spoken inappropriately to several residents.
One, she sarcastically asked if he needed a psychiatric assessment or a Haldol injection.
That's an antipsychotic medication.
Another staff member complained that she spoke inappropriately to Maureen Pickering
when the resident with Alzheimer's accidentally wandered into another resident's room.
And another colleague complained that Beth told a palliative care resident that, quote,
It's okay to die.
Finally, she was fired after making an error with medication that placed a resident at significant risk.
This came after she was disciplined at least nine times for medical errors,
four of which had resulted in suspensions.
Normally, in cases where nursing staff engage in behaviour that places their charges at risk,
the College of Nurses of Ontario is notified so they can be involved in the disciplinary process.
But in Beth's case, with all her warnings and eventual dismissal,
there was a lack of evidence that the College of Nurses were ever involved
in the disciplinary aspect of Beth's termination of employment.
In the book Lethal Injections, author Lloyd Billingsley describes how in 2014
the College of Nurses concluded that no formal investigation into Beth's conduct was required.
And then the Ontario Nurses Association, the Union, intervened on Beth's behalf,
resulting in her lodging a grievance regarding the proposed termination.
The ruling went in Beth's favour.
Not only did her dismissal turn into a voluntary resignation,
but caressant care promised to provide a positive reference for Beth,
as well as paying her $2,000 in damages.
She was continuing her creative writing endeavours during this time.
One poem she posted online at the time read,
Where am I left then? What would they say?
Yes, what will be?
they say when the real truth is known, when it has found out what I do alone. In another poem,
she wrote about how much she enjoyed her work and working with the elderly. She talked about
things she likes about them, including the way they smell, before turning to complain about other
nurses who didn't treat them very well. Yet another poem called Responsible revealed a different,
darker side to Beth. In it, she talks about confessing to some wrongs she'd done and how it affected
the person that she confessed to. It wasn't known who or what exactly she was talking about.
Just a few months after she left caressant care, she interviewed for another nursing position in
London, Ontario, a city about 40 minutes drive southwest of Woodstock. At her second,
second interview at the Meadow Park Care Centre, she was honest and told the manager that she'd been
fired from caressant care for making medication errors. They told her that they believed in second
chances and she was offered a one-year contract on night shift. She started there in August of 2014.
Meadow Park Care Centre had room for 120 patients. One of them was
75-year-old Arpad Horvath, known as Art, had been there for just over a year.
Art was born in Hungary in 1939 and grew up there, but during the 1956 communist uprising
in Budapest, he fled to Austria with his brother Frank. The pair soon moved to Canada,
where Art met his wife Lana and started a family in London, Ontario.
In the late 1960s, art started his own company called Central Tool and Die, which did metal stamping and fabricating.
Art was the chief engineer.
He was also active in the local Hungarian community, going on to become the long-time president of the London Hungarian Club.
He was described as larger than life and had two kids, Arpad Jr. and Susan.
Art loved playing poker, travelling and spending time with his family.
He was especially close with his son.
They worked together at the family-run business,
and even when Arpad Jr. lived in the UK for a few years, the two remained close.
Leading up to 2013, Art suffered a series of strokes and needed a high level of care.
His wife Lana was aging too, and did.
didn't know what to do. So their son, Arpad Jr., was trusted with deciding what to do regarding
his father's care needs. He made the heartbreaking and difficult decision to place art in a facility.
Art trusted his son and the move didn't break the close bond between them. Arpad Jr. would say he
visited his father every single day. But despite everything seemingly going well with Art's transition to
the care facility, his daughter Susan had a nagging feeling she couldn't shake.
She spoke of how after visiting her father on one occasion, there was evidence of bruises on his
arms and that he looked very scared and full of fear. At one point, she mentioned it to her mother,
Lana, telling her that something didn't feel right. Along with vascular dementia,
Art had type 2 diabetes, which was managed by an oral hypoglycemic medication.
It was initially noted that art periodically displayed aggressive and agitated behaviours,
which of course is a common manifestation of dementia or Alzheimer's.
On August the 24th, 2014, 75-year-old art was rushed to the ICU in Victoria Hospital in London,
after lapsing into unconsciousness.
His son Arpad Jr. rushed to the hospital
and made it just in time to whisper to his father that he loved him
and that he would miss him.
Art passed away.
His family were devastated,
but just assumed it was from the sheer physical burden
of having had nine strokes,
in addition to living with dementia,
and that his body simply couldn't take any more.
Elizabeth Wetlaufer only lasted about a month at Meadow Park Nursing Home.
She left about a month after Art passed away to focus on treating her addictions again.
She checked herself in to drug rehab for a month.
When 2015 rolled around, she'd been out of rehab for two months but was still unemployed,
relying mainly on government assistance to support herself financially.
In January, she found part-time work as an agency nurse
through a private, unlicensed care agency called Lifeguard Home Care.
The next month, she was assigned to a long-term care facility called Telfer Place in Paris, Ontario,
a town located about half an hour northeast of Woodstock.
At this facility, one registered nurse was responsible for 45 residents.
One of the residents was 77-year-old Sandy Towler, who was known for her great sense of humour.
Sandy had lived in Brant County where she raised two children.
Eventually, she moved in with her son and daughter-in-law to a granny flat on their property.
But she was living with dementia and her care needs were becoming too high to continue that living arrangement.
So she was placed in Talfa Place in February of 2013.
The same month that Beth was assigned there.
Staff saw problems with Beth almost straight away.
They complained that she was lazy.
She didn't finish her tasks,
did things half-heartedly and didn't communicate well with other staff,
forgetting to tell them important information about patients.
One complaint came after a stomach bug outbreak
caused 77-year-old Sandy to have diarrhea.
her ear. Beth washed her off a bit, then said, okay, that's good enough. But when another nurse
checked in, the elderly woman still had soil on her back, which could have caused further infection.
Sandy had diabetes, which, like Art Horvath, was controlled by oral medication instead of insulin
injections. One day, a vigilant staff member noticed that Sandy was sweating and checked her bloodshund,
sugar levels. They were extremely low, so the paramedics were called. Sandy was lucky to survive,
but no one could explain how her blood sugar had suddenly fallen to near-fatal levels.
Beth continued her assignments as an agency nurse and other facilities in Ontario,
and it seemed that things started to turn around as far as her addiction issues went.
In September of 2015, she wrote a Facebook post.
My own voice called to me in the darkness.
Others' hands lifted me when I chose the light.
One year ago, today I woke up not dead.
365 days clean and sober.
By this stage, she lived alone,
with only her cats and Jack Russell Terrier named Nashville for company.
But people who knew her noticed some unusual behaviours.
One day, Beth asked to join her neighbours for a chat
and then said she was going to get changed,
but instead came back with alcohol.
Her neighbour Nancy thought this was odd.
Beth was drinking again.
Another neighbour was concerned and asked Beth if she was okay.
She said she'd been fired from caressant care for stealing medication,
and was then fired again from her next nursing role,
saying that she was intoxicated and gave incorrect medication
that almost resulted in a death.
It was now 2016,
and the facilities that she'd been assigned to were getting fed up with her.
In February, one contacted her agency, Lifeguard Home Care,
to say they didn't want her back because of how she interacted with staff.
In April, Talfa Place, where Sandy Towler almost died from her blood sugars suddenly plummeting, also contacted the agency, asking for Beth's contract with them to be terminated.
They'd tried unsuccessfully to counsel her over medication errors, missing scheduled shifts, failing to meet her responsibilities to residents and inappropriate conversations in the workplace.
But the agency still continued to give her assignments.
And that's where we'll leave it for part one.
Part two will be released in two weeks on the 1st of July.
I apologize for the gap, but I hope you understand why I made that decision.
Again, go to Patreon and look for Canadian True Crime to get Part 2 early and ad-free.
Thanks for listening and a huge thank you to Gemma Harris for writing this case.
And my wonderful voiceover assistance was from Bonnie,
the Canadian podcaster behind writing about crime,
who voiced Elizabeth Wetlalfa.
You have heard her promo on the show before,
but definitely check her out.
Today's podcast recommendation is a new investigative podcast from CBC Ottawa,
and it's called The Band Played On.
I have just binged the entire series,
and it's really quite something that deserves more,
attention. He's a promo.
I love the band so much. I didn't want to do anything that was threatened that.
He had a room where he could see out where no one could see in.
Was it my fault? Did I seduce him? Did I make him do this?
Three teachers. Five decades, dozens of victims.
I knew there was something wrong with him.
Why was he allowed to continue teaching?
The band played on. Now available for free on Apple Podcasts or your favorite.
podcast up.
Today I'm saying thank you to these patrons.
Sorry, the lists of names are a bit longer now.
I got a little bit behind, so I'm saying extra to try and catch up.
Sorry, guys.
Natalia O, David H.
Lauren D.
Krista C.
Ruthie R.
Shanna S.
Jasa A.
Alison V.
Greg C.
Emma J.
Amanda B.
Kylo W.
Allen B.
Nancy M.
Edel B.
Megan M. Lisa D. Jolene C. and The Murder in My Family podcast. Thank you all so much.
This episode of Canadian True Crime was researched and written by Gemma Harris,
and audio production was by Eric Crosby. The host of the Beyond Bazaar True Crime podcast
voiced the disclaimer, and the Canadian True Crime theme song was written by We Talk of Dreams.
I'll be back with part two on July the 1st. See you then.
