Mind of a Serial Killer - SERIAL KILLER: "Doctor Death" Pt. 1
Episode Date: June 30, 2025He was a doctor sworn to save lives—but Michael Swango used his white coat to cover up a far more sinister obsession. In Part 1, we trace his chilling evolution from a traumatized child to a doctor ...obsessed with suffering. How many people had to die before the truth came out? Find out how Michael Swango manipulated the medical system—and got away with murder. Killer Minds is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don’t miss out on all things Killer Minds! Instagram: @killerminds | @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is Crime House.
Every doctor abides by the mantra, first do no harm.
Beyond its obvious meaning, it's an important ethical guideline for every physician to follow,
to carefully think about their actions so we
can trust we're in good hands. Michael Suongo took advantage of that trust
in the most terrifying way possible. Michael was obsessed with death and destruction. All
he wanted was to make people suffer and die. He decided the best way to do that was to seek people out at their most vulnerable.
As a doctor, he could unleash all the suffering he wanted, and nobody would see him coming. The human mind is powerful.
It shapes how we think, feel, love and hate.
But sometimes it drives people to commit the unthinkable.
This is Killer Minds, a Crime House original.
I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm Dr. Tristan Ingalls.
Every Monday and Thursday, we uncover the darkest minds in history,
analyzing what makes a killer.
Crime House is made possible by you.
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subscribe to Crime House Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Before we get started, be advised this episode contains descriptions of child abuse and murder.
Today we begin our deep dive on Michael Suongo, a doctor and serial killer who used his position
to harm and kill numerous patients.
For years, Michael evaded detection, leaving a trail of death and unanswered questions in his wake.
As Vanessa goes through the story, I'll be talking about the horrible things Michael witnessed in his childhood,
his growing desire to watch people suffer and die, and the underlying
psyche at play as he manipulated colleagues and defrauded medical institutions.
And as always, we'll be asking the question, what makes a killer?
Hey there, it's Nicole Lapkin.
This week on Crime House, it's a brand new episode of scams, money and murder, diving
into the wolf of Wall Street himself.
Want to get deeper into these unbelievable stories?
Catch our recent episode with journalist Jessica Pressler, the reporter who uncovered the real
story of Anadelphi.
Listen now on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey everyone, Vanessa Richardson here. I'm narrating the first audiobook from Crime House
Studios called Murder in the Media. Told through the lens of five heart-pounding murder cases,
this thrilling audiobook traces the evolving and sometimes insidious role the media has
had in shaping true crime storytelling.
Murder in the Media is a Crime House original audiobook.
Find it now on Spotify.
From the time Michael Swango was young,
he was fascinated with other people's suffering,
and he saw a set of rules.
He treated their family like a military unit, designating Michael's older brother as a
military man.
He was a man of great power, and he was a man of great power.
He was a man of great power, and he was a man of great power.
Michael's father was a man of great who enforced a strict set of rules.
He treated their family like a military unit, designating Michael's older brother, Bob,
as an officer over his siblings.
In Virgil's mind, officers were responsible for those under their command, which meant
that any time Michael or his little brother misbehaved, Bob paid the price, usually in the form of a belt-whipping.
But as much as Virgil clearly loved being in the military, it also haunted him.
He frequently abused alcohol and seemed to have a hard time coping with his wartime experiences,
because he often told his sons detailed accounts of the killings he'd carried out. We don't
know the details of what Virgil said, but this couldn't have been good for Michael.
No, there's a lot going on here that greatly impacted Michael. Firstly, he's the middle
child, and middle children are more prone to rebelliousness, insecurity, low self-esteem,
jealousy, and competitive behavior, as well as having difficulty forming healthy attachments.
And this is because they often feel overlooked
or less valued than the eldest or youngest child,
especially in families where there are poor dynamics
already there.
Which brings us to the next thing that stands out here,
his father, Virgil.
He's using authoritarian-style parenting,
which is a parenting style characterized by
high demands and low responsiveness. So, for example, there are strict rules and demands
for blind obedience with very little communication, warmth, or affection. This parenting style
alone is known to lead to negative outcomes, including diminished capacity for empathy,
increased emotional detachment, aggressive and controlling
behaviors, and impaired ability to form safe and trusting relationships.
And for a middle child who, according to research, frequently gets the least attention, getting
only abusive attention can have a very profound impact.
Authoritarian parenting is also correlated with higher rates of behavioral deficits and delinquency in children.
Also, Virgil is clearly struggling with untreated trauma, and as a result is self-medicating through alcohol,
and that indicates that there's also emotional instability in the home.
And children learn how to regulate their emotions and self-soothe through their caregivers,
and instead poor emotional regulation is what's being modeled here. Virgil is essentially teaching Michael
that vulnerability is weakness, obedience is a requirement, and emotional
expression with the exception of violence is punishable or unacceptable.
And when we consider all of this, we can see how this environment really shaped
Michael's personality and who he would become.
I'm curious, how traumatizing is it for a young child to be confronted with death so early,
particularly since he's hearing stories that his own father is a killer?
Right. A parent's supposed to be a source of safety and guidance and moral grounding for their children.
And in general, when that figure becomes associated
with danger, deception, or death,
it can cause a child to struggle with confusion,
guilt, fear, and shame.
But in Michael's case, it certainly sounds like Virgil
was sharing these graphic stories with pride
and without a strong moral framework.
He is normalizing death and violence for Michael.
These early exposures don't cause someone
to become a killer, of course, because, I mean,
his siblings didn't grow up to be killers.
But they can affect a child's capacity for empathy,
and it can distort moral reasoning
or contribute to the formation of antisocial traits
if combined with other risk factors.
And I've outlined several additional risk factors
already so early on in his life.
Well, fortunately, in 1968, when Michael was around 14,
he got a break from Virgil's torment.
By this point, the family had relocated to Quincy, Illinois.
But Virgil wouldn't be there for much longer,
because he was about to be deployed to serve in the Vietnam War.
However, Virgil wanted to be sure Michael continued to learn proper discipline, so he
enrolled Michael at a Catholic high school that enforced a strict moral and ethical code.
Virgil thought the rigid environment would keep Michael in line.
And it did.
Michael excelled in this highly controlled environment.
When he graduated in 1972, he was the valedictorian.
Afterward, 17-year-old Michael enrolled at the local college, Milligan University, where
he continued to thrive.
He'd gotten a full ride, he was making friends, and he started dating someone.
He seemed destined for a bright future, just like his dad wanted.
But then, Michael's girlfriend broke up with him, and he couldn't seem to handle this
sudden overwhelming heartbreak.
This was the first time in his life that Michael was personally on the receiving end of serious
hurt and suffering.
It was too much for him to handle, so he retreated
into his military upbringing to regain a sense of control.
Michael suddenly began dressing in military attire, including combat boots and fatigues.
It seems like he was emulating his father as a way to feel powerful again. In more ways
than one, Michael became obsessed with weaponry and violence.
Not only that, he started pouring through copies of the National Enquirer because he
loved reading articles about car crashes and other gruesome deaths. He even cut out the
stories and photos and glued them into a notebook for safekeeping. Over time, he had stacks of journals like this. The
grisly details seemed to make him feel stronger, more alive. The breakup that
Michael had with his girlfriend may have activated some deep abandonment wounds
or possibly even mirrored the rejection and inconsistent care that he got from
his father. It certainly appears as if it were a precipitating stressor for this
escalating behavior. Like I mentioned, based on his early childhood experiences that normalized
violence, Michael was possibly desensitized to it. He likely tried to find ways to bond with his
father or even understand him, and because his father emphasized violence and death, it could
have caused Michael to believe that violence and death were an identity
that he needed to embody.
And this likely primed him for some sadism as well.
I'm wondering, why would learning about other people's
violent, tragic deaths make Michael feel better
about his own life?
It's actually not uncommon for people to compare themselves
to individuals that they perceive as less fortunate
or in worse circumstances as themselves. It's something called downward social comparison.
Obviously, Michael's taking this a little bit more extreme because with him learning about others
who suffered likely reinforced his own sense of control and superiority. It also likely helped
him diminish the pain of that breakup
and allowed him to feel less vulnerable
or victimized by comparison.
Because if we remember, he was being taught very early on
that vulnerability is weakness
and that was just not acceptable in his home.
Also, individuals with, let's say, narcissistic
or antisocial traits, for example,
can activate a sense of dominance or invincibility when they learn about others suffering.
It was his way of feeling safer by comparison, smarter by comparison, stronger by comparison, and in some ways validated.
But more notably for Michael,
he's making the military and his fixation on death his identity, like we talked talked about and that stems from his relationship with his father
He's trying to become the version of himself that he believed would be valued
Feared and admired in the same way that he likely viewed his father and it stems from identity and security
emotional deprivation and a need for power and validation
validation, and a need for power and validation. Well, Michael's obsession with death might have helped him feel better, but it alienated
his friends.
By the end of his sophomore year of college, they had all stopped talking to him.
Michael acted like their rejection didn't bother him.
He was ready to move on from them, too.
Even though he was doing well in school, Michael dropped out and joined the Marines.
He wanted to experience the things his father had told him about when he was younger. If
he could just fire a bullet and stand over someone as the life drained from their eyes,
that sense of power would last forever. No one could take it from him.
It didn't work out that way, though. After basic training, he
mostly ended up doing administrative work. Then, after about two years, in 1976, 21-year-old
Michael was honorably discharged. It's not clear what happened, but Michael had a backup
plan. If he couldn't watch people die on a battlefield, he'd do it in an operating room.
In Michael's mind, being a doctor was the best profession, other than being a soldier,
to see people die every day.
And if he was clever enough, he could kill them himself, and nobody would know.
So Michael returned home to Illinois and applied to the pre-med program at a local university
called Quincy College.
He knew his grades were good enough for him to get in, but he wanted to be absolutely
sure.
So he lied about his military service on his application, falsely claiming that he'd earned
a bronze star and a purple heart.
No one questioned it, and he was accepted.
This behavior is very notable because obviously it's indicating several concerning pathological
traits, such as narcissistic tendencies, manipulation and deceitfulness, lack of remorse or guilt,
entitlement, and once again, identity and security. Once Michael was on campus, he pursued his studies with single-minded focus, double majoring
in chemistry and biology.
But his academic pursuits weren't satisfying Michael's morbid urges, so he became a certified
paramedic.
That way he could witness disaster and death, all while bolstering his resume.
It all worked just like Michael planned.
He graduated near the top of his class in 1979, and that fall the 24-year-old started
classes at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, about 200 miles from Quincy.
But while the admissions office had been impressed with him, Michael's classmates kept their
distance.
This was partly because he constantly wore his military uniform, which they thought was
over the top.
Not only that, he made a big show of getting up early in the morning to work out and shout
Marine chants on the lawn while everyone else was still trying to sleep.
His antics didn't win him a lot of friends.
And before long, Michael's old feelings of rejection
bubbled to the surface.
This kind of social rejection
could be a serious risk factor,
given the emerging personality traits
that I've already outlined.
For starters, someone with narcissistic traits
would experience something called a narcissistic injury
from this kind of rejection,
especially after his first big rejection from his girlfriend. A narcissistic injury is a
deep wound to an already fragile self-esteem. The military behavior, chanting on the lawn
and wearing his uniform was an attempt, once again, to craft a persona, and that persona
was mocked and rejected. And that could trigger rage and resentment in someone like Michael.
This rejection was a way for Michael to justify his sense that other people were the problem,
and that likely caused him to lean even deeper in that downward social comparison
to regain control and a sense of superiority.
It also could intensify his need to reassert control and forcing it through dominance,
which is a learned abusive behavior from his own childhood.
But also, social isolation is a risk factor in itself for someone like Michael who is
fixated on death and violence.
His distorted thinking is just intensifying and it's going largely unchecked, and that
is concerning.
Well, Michael wasn't about to let his classmates think
they were better than him.
He was going to make them sorry for being so cruel.
They had no idea what he was really capable of.
But soon, they'd find out, and he'd be the one laughing.
laughing. In the fall of 1979, 24-year-old Michael Swango started medical school at Southern Illinois
University.
His main goal was to become a doctor so that he could kill patients without suspicion.
But he wasn't making it easy on himself.
Michael's classmates thought he was strange and stayed away from him, which meant he had
to embark on one of his first major projects on his own.
First year students were divided into groups to dissect a specific part of a human cadaver
and deliver a presentation on it, but nobody wanted to work with Michael, so he was forced
to work by himself.
Students were given keys to the anatomy lab and could work on their dissections whenever
they wanted.
The lab was busiest in the afternoons when faculty were available to help, but Michael
only ever went in after midnight so he could be alone and nobody could see what he was
doing.
When the day came for his presentation, everyone was eager to see what he'd done.
This was everyone's first chance to show what they were made of, to show that they were
cut out to be a doctor.
When Michael unveiled his presentation, his classmates were shocked and not in a good
way.
Michael's dissection was so badly mangled it was unrecognizable.
His classmates were speechless.
Finally, someone said it looked like Michael had used a chainsaw instead of a scalpel.
The rest of the class laughed uncomfortably.
But Michael didn't care.
In fact, he liked getting a rise out of everyone.
That's why he'd done this in the first place.
He wanted to scare them.
Yeah, this wasn't incompetence or poor judgment.
It was a calculated performance, and it was intended to be provocative.
And truly, it's rooted in sadism, narcissism, and a need for dominance.
He knew that it would horrify the class, like you said, which means that he gets enjoyment in controlling the emotional states of others, particularly
through fear, and that is the hallmark of sadistic behavior. It also speaks to his emotional
detachment and ability to dehumanize so easily and callously. He saw this cadaver not as a once living human being that had a family and people
who loved them, but rather he saw it as a tool that doesn't deserve basic decency and respect,
and that is deeply troubling and very indicative of psychopathic traits. He clearly lacks empathy.
This was also very attention-seeking, which aligns with his narcissistic tendencies. He's attempting to establish superiority because to him
he had to prove to himself that he wasn't failing to fit in, he was
choosing not to. And this was to protect his fragile self-esteem and to
overcompensate for being perceived as vulnerable. Do you think this seems like
an escalation in his behavior?
Obviously, we know he went on to become a serial killer,
but would this have been a warning sign?
Yes, this is absolutely an escalation and a warning sign.
It's a clear shift from a morbid fantasy
to a real life enactment.
And while this behavior on its own
is not enough to predict future murder, like we mentioned,
we know he goes on to become a serial killer, this moment alone is not enough to predict
that.
But it is very concerning, especially for the medical field.
It's an indication that he lacks a standard of professionalism, and it really highlights
his true reason for entering the medical field, which is in direct contradiction to the core ethical
and psychological foundations of medicine.
If Michael wanted to shock his peers, he definitely succeeded.
But when it came to intimidating them, he wasn't as successful.
Instead of being scared of Michael, they made fun of him.
Like always, Michael tried not to let it bother him.
And besides, getting to mangle a cadaver like that had satisfied some of his itch to destroy
and kill.
But it still wasn't enough.
He needed more.
So he picked up another job as an EMT, this time for a company called America Ambulance
in Springfield, Illinois, a hundred miles from campus.
It was risky because it was against school policy for him to have a job, so he didn't
tell anyone.
But people caught on pretty quickly.
And yet, Michael didn't get in trouble.
In fact, some of his professors actually respected his dedication to getting first-hand experience.
And things continued to improve from there.
Despite his abject showing in the dissection project, Michael passed all his courses and
exams.
In the fall of 1980, the 25-year-old started his second year of med school, but it wasn't
long before things began to unravel.
Throughout that year, Michael prioritized his EMT shifts over his schoolwork.
Even when he did attend study sessions, his classmates noticed that he was jumpy, anxious,
and always darting off to his next shift.
That's because he was addicted to watching people die, and his coworkers at America Ambulance
had noticed his fascination with tragedy and violence.
It wasn't just his creepy obsession with ailing patients.
Michael had started bringing his scrapbooks to work, the ones where he saved articles about car crashes.
He cut out photos and news stories while he waited for ambulance calls, in full view of his stunned colleagues.
Eventually, one of Michael's
co-workers asked him why he saved the articles. Michael's response was
chilling. He reportedly told them that if he was ever accused of murder, he could
use the scrapbooks to prove he wasn't mentally competent. Well, unfortunately for
Michael, that's not quite how it works.
We also assess for malingering when we do assessments for competency, and this is precisely
why.
He's already planning a legal defense strategy, and he has not yet killed anyone, and that
right there indicates he has a highly manipulative mindset and a growing detachment from moral
and legal norms.
I have assessed many individuals who plan in advance to appear incompetent or insane
at the time of their crimes, even before committing it.
It's something that does happen.
Now bringing these scrapbooks and sharing his obsession with death and violence, he
is trying to normalize it among his peers, but more importantly, he is limit testing.
First with the cadaver, now this.
And the more he tests the limits of others,
the more pleasure he gets from their deep discomfort.
And in some ways, the more it emboldens him
when there are no consequences.
Also, this scrapbook that he has
is serving like a trophy of sorts.
I think he's likely using these images to relive first-hand experiences of similar accidents
that he might have witnessed or attended to as a paramedic.
And once again, there are a lot of emerging antisocial and psychopathic traits here, including
sadism, manipulation, lack of empathy, cunningness, callousness, grandiosity, and an inability to follow social norms or rules.
I think it's fair to say most serial killers
try to hide their violent impulses,
but Michael seems proud of them.
He's almost flaunting them.
What does that say about him?
Yeah, that's more evidence that Michael
shapes this into an identity that he thought
would be admired by others in the same way
He admired his father for similar things
He views this level of depravity as a badge of honor and this started in childhood with his father doing the same
I think it's also deeply tied to his military identity that he shared with his father
Because his father used his military experience to glorify control and power.
And that became a psychological framework for Michael, as I've already outlined.
Even if Michael meant what he said, nobody was taking him seriously at work
or at school when it was time for them to start interacting with patients.
Michael was useless, But instead of working
harder, he started falsifying patient write-ups. Michael's classmates knew he was cheating,
but nobody ratted him out. They probably figured he'd wash out soon enough.
But the professors never caught on to him, and in the fall of 1981, Michael moved on to his third
year with everyone else. which meant it was time
to choose a specialty.
To everyone's surprise, Michael went with neurosurgery, one of the most demanding fields.
They didn't know that Michael only wanted access to his patients' brains as a way to
wield power over them.
In his mind, neurosurgeons controlled the on-off switch to a person's life. And
over the course of Michael's third year, almost all of the patients he treated ended
up dead. His classmates came up with a nickname for him, Double O Swango, meaning he had a
license to kill. They only meant it as a joke no one actually thought Michael was responsible for the deaths after all he was just a med student
But things got even worse halfway through Michael's third year in
January 1982 his father died
Michael had barely seen Virgil since he'd shipped off to Vietnam almost 15 years earlier
But his
father's death seemed to hit him hard. After Michael came back from the funeral,
something had clearly changed. It was most noticeable at work where Michael
started having angry outbursts for no apparent reason. Once he kicked a cabinet
door so hard, he smashed it. In many cases where an abusive parent is also idealized, their loss can create an emotional
wound that intensifies all unresolved identity conflicts, guilt, and rage.
When Virgil died, Michael lost the living symbol of an identity he had been trying to
construct.
He may have begun to realize his father was flawed after all, or
Michael might have begun wondering who he is without his father alive. But also, given what
we know about Michael's personality traits, this reaction makes sense. He equates death with control,
and now his father died. That is a direct threat to his illusion of control. It undermined it
entirely, and that would absolutely cause someone like Michael to escalate.
Because to him, if he can't stop death from happening to people,
then he wants to be the one to deliver it and be in full control of it in another way.
In general, what happens in our brains when we experience trauma or grief?
Yeah, when we have acute trauma or grief,
the same thing happens.
The amygdala becomes hyperactive,
heightening our sense of danger and stress.
And this makes people hypervigilant, reactive,
or emotionally overwhelmed, because that's the emotional
center of the brain.
The prefrontal cortex, the area that
controls logic, decision making, and reasoning,
as well as the hippocampus, which is the area where memory consolidation occurs, those either
shut down or become disrupted.
So essentially, when we grieve or experience trauma in acute ways like this, the brain
shifts into survival mode.
Emotions will surge, logic will fade, memories distort, and our inner sense of safety collapses.
Most people heal in time, but for some, especially those who already are vulnerable, like Michael,
this disruption, this kind of grief and life disruption, can become a defining psychological
moment. Michael's behavior was so erratic, his supervisors at his EMT job had to step in.
They banned him from treating anybody one-on-one.
From then on, he was only allowed to assist other medics.
But Michael kept moving forward.
Shortly after his father's funeral, he got into a prestigious internship program at the
University of Iowa.
Even though Michael's medical school classmates didn't
think much of him, he'd fooled his professors. And they'd given him glowing recommendations.
As long as he could graduate, he could still make it as a doctor.
But in order to do that, he had to finish a process called rotations, which meant he had
to basically try out all the different specialties. During the final stretch of his third and final year,
Michael started his OB-GYN rotation under Dr. Kathleen O'Connor.
Dr. O'Connor quickly noticed that Michael wasn't around much,
and yet he seemed to be remarkably skilled.
One day, Michael performed a history and physical, also known as an H&P,
on a patient scheduled
for a C-section.
He was only with her for a few minutes, but he wrote a thorough report.
Dr. O'Connor thought it seemed too good to be true, so she checked on the patient.
Not only had Michael barely spoken to her, he hadn't even performed a physical.
O'Connor realized that Michael had fabricated the H&P.
That was grounds for expulsion,
so she alerted the Student Progress Committee.
When Michael found out, he hired a lawyer,
which made the school worry that he would sue.
Dr. O'Connor knew she needed a paper trail,
so she tried to find Michael's fabricated H&P,
but when she searched through
the files, it was gone.
And it wasn't the only one.
A bunch of Michael's reports had apparently disappeared.
O'Connor told the committee about it, but no one could figure out where the files had
gone.
With no proof he'd fabricated any reports, Michael's lawyer was able to negotiate with the school.
They agreed to let Michael graduate a year late as long as he repeated his OB-GYN rotation and
made up missed assignments. It seemed like Michael was in the clear.
But then the University of Iowa withdrew its internship offer when they learned he wasn't graduating on time.
Michael was crushed. This was a huge setback. He could feel his sense of power slipping through
his fingers and he was willing to do whatever it took to get it back.
Did it occur to you that he'd charmed you in any way?
Yes, it did, but he was a charming man.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story, because this ties together
the Cold War with the new one.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos,
wherever you get your podcasts.
In the spring of 1982, Ohio State University
required 27-year-old Michael Swango
to redo his OB-GYN rotation
in order to graduate a year late.
It was a huge blow to his ego.
But he did everything that was asked of him, all while working as an EMT.
In the spring of 1983, one year after his original graduation date, Michael earned his
degree.
Not only that, he received an internship offer from Ohio State University's neurosurgery
program.
It seemed like his nefarious dream of using medicine as a cover to murder people was back
on track.
He was officially a doctor.
And he was ready to celebrate.
The summer before he left for Ohio, Michael kept working as an EMT for America Ambulance.
He was still on probation for his angry outburst though, so he wasn't supposed to treat anyone
directly.
But one day he got a call that a man was having a heart attack.
It seems like he was the only medic there at the time, so Michael hopped into the ambulance
and headed for the man's home.
When Michael arrived, the man was gasping for air and clearly in a lot of pain. This
was the opportunity he'd been waiting for. Instead of giving emergency treatment and
loading the man into the ambulance, Michael told the patient's family to take him to
the hospital in their own car. They were appalled, but Michael told them
there was nothing he could do.
He watched as the man struggled to get into the car,
clutching his chest as his family steadied him.
Michael's gaze was fixed on the man
as he anticipated his collapse and ultimately,
his final breath.
I have a feeling that because Michael was on probation
and restricted from providing direct patient care,
that he used that as a legal shield
to withhold care for his own gratification.
Except he would be wrong.
Even if Michael was on probation
and restricted from providing direct patient care,
he was still the only responder on the scene of an emergency.
He has a moral and ethical obligation as a paramedic
to provide care, even if it meant calling for backup
or notifying a supervisor.
The same is true for me as a mental health professional.
The pandemic was a great example.
Laws were loosened to allow mental health practitioners
to treat patients in states they were not licensed in
because there was a demand during a national emergency.
There are ethical exceptions for many instances, but particularly in ones where we are the
only available provider.
The first and most important ethical rule for any health professional is to do no harm.
And what Michael did was the opposite.
It was a chilling abuse of power and he used trust as a
weapon. He knew that this man and his family were desperate and were unlikely
going to question or argue with a health professional during a medical emergency
or crisis like this. Michael orchestrated the suffering of this man for his own
gratification. This kind of medical betrayal is truly an ethical atrocity. This is a person's most vulnerable
moments and he preyed on them without empathy, without remorse, and without a
second thought.
Where does Michael's behavior here lie on the scale of escalation?
Michael's, he's not killing someone yet, but he's willing to let someone die,
which seems pretty much like the same thing.
Is there a psychological difference there?
Yeah, so first, this and the cadaver and the scrapbooks
are all gateway behaviors.
It's an escalation arc where it starts with fantasizing,
then exposing himself, and then action,
or in this case, inaction.
His fantasies are slowly becoming a reality.
What makes it more disturbing as we already kind of covered is that he's
been planning actively for legal ramifications so that he can commit
these acts without consequence or with minimal consequences. And like I mentioned
I think that's what he did here. He thought there would have minimal
consequences because he was restricted from
giving care and he could shield himself as a result. But this just speaks to the level
of determination Michael has. What makes us different is that this was a form of passive
murder where he is experimenting with power and laying the groundwork for future active
murders.
Thankfully, the family made it to a hospital
and the man did survive.
Afterward, they called America Ambulance
and complained about Michael.
When his supervisors confronted him,
he didn't provide any explanation for his behavior.
So they fired him.
And I think he knew on some level
that this would be the extent of his consequences.
And given that he is in his third year of medical school,
he won't need this job for that exposure anymore anyway.
Being fired wasn't a loss for him,
because he was already getting what he needed from this
and moving on.
Michael didn't care.
As you said, Dr. Ingalls, he was leaving soon anyway.
So three months later, he began his internship at Ohio State.
But he hadn't gotten there
through honest means, and pretty soon, it became clear that Michael was out of his depth.
Once it was obvious that Michael had no idea what he was doing, his supervisors did some
digging.
They realized that they'd only looked at Michael's transcripts from Southern Illinois
University, but never read Michael's letter of recommendation.
In that letter, his old professors outlined every concern they had about Michael and explained why
he didn't graduate on time. The OSU faculty was concerned as well. They alerted the Residency
Review Committee and said they didn't think Michael should move up from intern to resident
the following year.
When Michael found out, he decided to fight back. But this time, instead of getting a
lawyer, he acted contrite. He promised the committee that he would devote himself to
improving.
So this is different from how he's reacted in the past. And I think that's because he
knew that appealing to the committee's empathetic side first
before taking a more aggressive approach would be the smartest way to go about this.
But this is also pretty classic manipulative behavior because he's feigning vulnerability,
exploiting empathy, and avoiding accountability for personal gain.
Given the depraved determination he has to become a doctor, it's not surprising he would
weaponize humility to preserve that.
He's become skilled at manipulation over the years,
which makes him dangerously adaptable.
He's also got an established pattern of deceit.
I mean, he falsified various types of records,
including a Purple Heart and medical records during his rotations.
He's charmed professors in the past as well as employers
despite his emerging sadistic and psychopathic traits and he's a great chameleon. He can
superficially mimic whatever is needed in the moment to serve his own agenda. This pivot was
designed to stall consequences and preserve the ultimate goal which is power over life and death
and he was definitely going to go about addressing this threat to his goals strategically, especially
when there was still a chance to salvage it.
Thanks to Michael's false promises, he was allowed to continue his internship and see
patients.
On January 17th, 1984, an elderly woman named Ruth Barak was admitted to the hospital.
She'd fallen and hit her head 10 days earlier and had bleeding in her brain.
It was serious, but she was expected to recover.
A couple weeks into Ruth's stay, on January 31st, a nurse named Deborah Kennedy gave Ruth
her breakfast and completed her morning checkup. Ruth was doing well.
She was sitting up in bed, alert and engaged in conversation.
At 9.45 that morning, Michael came into Ruth's room and told Deborah to leave.
Deborah was surprised.
Doctors usually did their rounds at 6.30 a.m. and rarely came back unless it was a problem.
Even then, it was the attending
physician, not an intern. But even though 29-year-old Michael was just an intern, he
was still a doctor and therefore above Deborah in the hospital's hierarchy. Despite her
misgivings, she obeyed his instructions and left. But about 20 minutes later, once the coast was clear, Deborah went back to
check on Ruth and it was bad.
Ruth was barely breathing and her skin was blue. Deborah called a code and doctors rushed
to help, including Michael. They treated Ruth for 45 minutes and managed to stabilize her.
Her breathing went back to normal, and a little
while later she was able to speak again. But she couldn't explain what happened,
and neither could the doctors. It seemed to be over though, so they continued the normal
treatment for her brain bleed. About a week later, on February 6th, a nurse named Anne
Ritchie was assigned to Ruth in the neurosurgery unit.
Anne knew what had happened to Ruth the week before, so she was especially attentive to
Ruth's condition.
At 8 a.m., Anne gave Ruth a bath.
Ruth was alert and seemed fully recovered from the previous week.
However, Anne noticed the pressure in Ruth's central IV line was low.
That meant she wasn't getting her medication as effectively as she should.
Anne asked for a doctor to check it.
That doctor was Michael.
He entered the room and Anne left.
After a while, he still hadn't come out.
Anne was worried.
Fixing a central line didn't take that long.
She went back to see if Michael needed help, but the curtains were
drawn around Ruth's bed, blocking her from view. Anne peeked through and saw Michael hunched over
Ruth's chest. He'd stuck a syringe directly into Ruth's central line, and he had a second syringe
resting on his shoulder, like he was waiting to use it after the first one ran out. If Michael had been using the syringes to clear the line like he was supposed to,
there would have been blood in them. But there wasn't any. Ann knew something was off. Before
she could intervene, Michael noticed her. He told Ann to get out.
A few minutes later, Michael finally left the room. Anne felt a chill run down her spine when she noticed a disturbing grin on his face.
Anne quickly checked on Ruth, and she wasn't breathing.
Anne called for help and started mouth to mouth.
When she looked up, she saw Michael calmly watching from the back of the room.
But he wasn't there to help.
According to Anne, all he said was,
that is so disgusting.
This behavior is very similar to the incident when he worked as an EMT.
It's not just about an unwillingness to intervene during a medical crisis.
It was about deriving satisfaction from watching them suffer.
This kind of behavior is deeply psychopathic, and it is a combination of voyeurism and sadism.
And although typically voyeurs secretly observe people in sexual contexts,
he's observing them in what should be private moments nonetheless,
while simultaneously deriving pleasure from their suffering.
But what really stands out to me is what he said to Nurse Ant
while she started mouth to mouth.
That is so disgusting.
This is a psychological confession.
In this moment, he is conveying what he is repulsed by,
which is compassion.
And he is so deeply emotionally detached
that saving someone's life is more repulsive
than attempting to take one.
And once again, he is doing it in such a way that was discreet enough, it could be overlooked.
Which, that in itself likely brought him satisfaction.
He's watching everyone scramble to understand and rationalize what happened.
And it's another element of power and control for Michael.
Thankfully, other doctors came to Ruth's rescue and began chest compressions.
There wasn't time for them to pay any attention to Michael, so he stood back, watching the
scene play out.
And a few moments later, Ruth Berrick died.
Anne was certain that Michael was responsible for her death, but she didn't think he did
it on purpose.
She thought maybe he accidentally let an air bubble into Ruth's central line, causing
a fatal embolism.
However, as Anne talked about it with her fellow nurses, she became more suspicious.
A few of them also had stories of sudden deaths or near deaths Michael had been involved in,
all within the span of the last few days.
They had all witnessed his snarky remarks or sinister grin after handling a patient,
or whenever there was an emergency.
They knew something was very, very wrong, and they had to do something about it.
The nurses believed Michael had caused four additional deaths in the neurosurgery unit.
They raised their concerns up the chain.
After a multi-week investigation, the hospital came to a conclusion.
There wasn't enough evidence to kick Michael out of OSU.
He was allowed to finish his internship, although he wasn't invited back for a residency.
Once again, Michael hit a roadblock in his career.
In order to practice medicine independently, he had to finish a residency.
But he hadn't applied to any other programs.
So in the summer of 1984, the 29-year-old returned home to Quincy and got a job as an
EMT, this time for a different company.
By now, Michael didn't bother to hide his fascination with death and destruction.
He brought his twisted scrapbooks with him to work, openly clipping articles and gazing
at disturbing photos.
He also liked to put on the news to get updates on tragic stories.
Once he marveled at a story about a mass shooter and allegedly
said he wished he'd thought of it first. And Michael didn't stop there. He also reportedly
told people he was dating multiple women and described his violent sexual fantasies openly
at work.
That was the final straw for his coworkers.
They went from politely ignoring him to bluntly telling him to stop talking.
Yet again, Michael was rejected by his peers, and just like before, he vowed to make them
wish they'd taken him more seriously.
One day in September 1984, Michael left work and went to the grocery store.
He purchased two things, a dozen donuts, and a box of ant poison.
Thanks so much for listening.
Join us next time as we conclude our deep dive into Michael Swango.
Of the many sources we used when researching this episode, the one we found the most credible
and helpful was Blind Eye by James B. Stewart.
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Thank you for listening. Hey there, it's Nicole Lapin. For your next listen, check out Scams, Money, and Murder.
This week we dive into the true story of the Wolf of Wall Street himself.
And don't miss our recent episode with Jessica Pressler, that's the journalist who uncovered
the truth behind fake heiress, Anna Delphi.
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