Mind of a Serial Killer - SERIAL KILLER: "Doctor Death" Pt. 2
Episode Date: July 3, 2025Michael Swango faked his medical credentials, charmed his way into hospitals, and left a trail of bodies in his wake. In Part 2, we expose his years-long killing spree, the fiancée whose death raised... suspicions—and the global manhunt that finally stopped him. This is how one of America’s most prolific serial killers finally got caught. 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.
We've all heard the phrase, fake it till you make it.
The idea is if you just act confident, you'll eventually be confident.
It's pretty good advice for overcoming fears or learning new skills.
But some people take
this advice way too literally.
Michael Swango was one of these people.
In the late 1980s and early 90s, Michael faked his medical knowledge, he lied about his credentials
so he could keep treating patients, and dole out deadly poisons.
Thankfully, federal investigators eventually caught on to his act,
but even with the authorities on his tail, Michael kept going.
He was willing to travel to the farthest reaches of the globe to fulfill his
twisted desires, and nobody was going to stop him.
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 Engels.
Every Monday and Thursday, we uncover the darkest minds
in history, analyzing what makes a killer.
Crime House is made possible by you.
Please rate, review, and follow Killer Minds to enhance your listening experience makes a killer.
Before we get started, be advised this episode contains descriptions of violence and murder. Today, we're concluding our deep dive on Michael Swango,
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 things like Michael's growing coldness
and fearlessness as a killer, odd breaks in his behavior,
and clues that his personal relationships provide
about his methods and motives.
And as always, we'll be asking the question,
what makes a killer?
What makes a killer?
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For his entire life, Michael Swango had a grim fascination with death.
That fascination quickly grew into an urge to kill, and he realized that the perfect
cover was to become a doctor.
In the spring of 1984, 29-year-old Michael completed his neurosurgery internship at Ohio
State University.
But he wasn't invited back for a residency because the medical staff believed he was
responsible for at least five patient deaths.
However, they thought it was due to incompetence, not malice, so Michael was free to continue
his deadly mission elsewhere.
After leaving OSU, Michael returned to his hometown of Quincy, Illinois. He got his own
apartment and found work as a paramedic. Within a few months at his new job, his co-workers
noticed his obsession with violence and death. They quickly got fed up with his disturbing behavior and in September
1984, they told him to stop talking about it. This wasn't the first time Michael's
peers rejected him. Usually he brushed it off and moved on. But this time, something
inside him snapped. That evening, Michael left work and went to the grocery store. He bought a dozen donuts and a box of ant poison.
When he got home, Michael scraped the icing off the donuts.
He put it in a bowl, mixed in the ant poison, and put the deadly concoction back on the
pastries.
The next morning, he brought the donuts to work and offered them to his co-workers.
This is a deviation from his usual methods in many ways.
Firstly, it doesn't involve patients and it's not directly related to practicing medicine.
And secondly, it involves colleagues.
So why this deviation?
Well, he was once again rejected.
Similar to his reaction to previous rejections, he's possibly experiencing another narcissistic
injury.
The fact that he was mocked and isolated wounded his ego, but it was compounded by the set
back of losing his residency and having to deviate back to being an EMT.
That alone was a rejection, especially because it interfered with his access to victims.
So now he has to actively find new ones and he set his sights on his coworkers.
This was about control, revenge, and a desire to punish that rejection.
The decision to poison indicates that he wants total power without the risk,
which isn't uncommon from his previous murders.
Those were done with minimal risk in the sense
that he chose methods that could be explained
by incompetence, accident, or a misunderstanding.
This is also a method that allows
for him to watch as his colleagues grew sicker.
So he still derives satisfaction and pleasure from it.
And once again, as Michael is escalating,
so too is his confidence. He's
becoming bolder, he's testing more boundaries, and he's no longer content with passive complicity
like he was by refusing to render aid during a medical crisis. He reminds me of the teacup
poisoner Graham Young when we did those two episodes on him. Well, Michael's co-workers
weren't sure
what to make of the donuts.
He never brought in food to share before,
but he said he'd bought them fresh that morning.
It seemed like he was genuinely trying to make amends.
Four of his colleagues took him up on it
and grabbed a donut.
Within half an hour, they were all flushed,
dizzy, and vomiting.
The sick medics went to the emergency room, but the doctor thought it was food poisoning,
and he seemed to be right because the sick medics all got better within a few days.
But over the next two weeks, Michael's co-workers kept getting sick.
Coincidentally, it happened every time he offered them something to drink, usually something
sweet like a soda, a few of them caught on to the suspicious pattern and even reported
it to their boss.
He waved off their fears and apparently said Michael would never do something like that.
Just like in medical school, Michael knew how important it was to charm the authority
figures in his life, leaving him free to continue his deadly
experiment.
On October 12, about a month after the donut incident, two medics brewed some unsweetened
tea, poured themselves each a cup, then darted off on a call before they could drink it.
While they were gone, Michael snuck into the room and poured poison into their cups.
When the medics got back, they went back to their mugs and each took a sip.
They were surprised that the tea tasted sweet.
They hadn't put any sugar in it.
There was no denying it any longer.
Someone was putting something in their drinks, and they were certain that Michael was behind
it.
Later that day, when Michael was out on a call, the medics unzipped his duffel bag and
looked through it.
They found a shopping bag from a nearby garden supply store with two boxes of ant poison
inside it.
The medics read the label and saw that the main ingredient was arsenic, formulated with
sucrose, a sugar.
The symptoms of arsenic poisoning
mirrored their symptoms to a T,
severe headaches, stomach cramps, and violent vomiting.
It had all started the day Michael brought those donuts.
Because this is ongoing,
and it doesn't seem that he's giving them
a lethal dose in one,
it does make you wonder if he was actively trying
to kill them or if it was just a sick game.
And I think the answer is that it's likely both
because when we conceptualize Michael,
he loved to watch suffering
and there was pleasure in extending this
as long as he could.
He was engaging in premeditated harm with the risk of death
and he was okay with either of the outcomes.
So it was a sick game, but with very real stakes.
And Michael thrived off of that because he lacks empathy, he's emotionally detached, he's calloused and sadistic.
Well, now that Michael's coworkers were certain that he was behind their illnesses,
they knew they had to stop him.
But to prove he was poisoning them, they had to catch Michael in the act.
About a week later, on October 19, 1984, the two medics whose tea Michael had poisoned
made another batch.
They did the same thing as before and left their cups out while they responded to a call.
When they came back, they each took a small taste and found that it was suddenly sweet.
They poured the tea into a plastic container, then brought it to the Illinois Bureau of
Investigation.
The authorities performed a heavy metals analysis and confirmed that there was arsenic in the
tea.
The Bureau alerted the Adams County Sheriff's Office, and on October 26th, they arrested
Michael and brought him into the station.
Michael wouldn't make a statement without a lawyer present, although he gave the officers
permission to search his apartment.
They went there right away, and what they found was shocking. Inside the apartment,
Michael had been operating a makeshift secret laboratory and its contents were incredibly
disturbing.
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In October 1984, police officers in Quincy, Illinois went to search 30-year-old Michael
Swango's apartment. When they entered the home, they immediately noticed a collection
of disturbing items spread out on the living room table. The first thing that
caught their eye was a large book with a skull and crossbones on the cover. It was
titled The Poor Man's James Bond. One of the officers flipped through the pages
and discovered that the book was filled with do-it-yourself guides to lethal poisoning.
The book had instructions on how to get certain chemicals from the grocery store,
and many of those chemicals were also in labeled bottles and syringes on Michael's table,
like nicotine, botulin, and cyanide, plus boxes of ant poison containing arsenic.
Michael had left handwritten poison recipes scattered everywhere, plus boxes of ant poison containing arsenic.
Michael had left handwritten poison recipes scattered everywhere, as well as his scrapbooks
of deadly disasters.
And as the officers searched through the mess, they uncovered something even stranger.
Michael owned a collection of books on the occult.
They explored dark topics like ceremonial magic, witchcraft, and necromancy. Within
the pages, Michael had stashed his own handwritten spells and incantations.
This just speaks more to his need to control. When someone like Michael consents to a police
search, knowing full well that incriminating materials will be found, it often reflects a psychological blend of arrogance,
control, and detachment.
We're not looking at someone
who's simply careless or naive.
We're looking at someone who believes
that they're either untouchable
or playing a game that they can still win.
And that has been the standard, the latter part.
He's won every time so far.
For individuals with
psychopathic traits like Michael, there's often a deep-rooted need to feel superior
to authority. Agreeing to a search could be his way of silently asserting, I know what
you're doing and I'm still one step ahead. In his mind, it wasn't necessarily about
getting away with it, it was about staging control over the situation,
even as it unraveled.
And there's also the possibility that he wanted
to be caught on some level, not out of guilt,
but out of a desire for recognition.
For someone like Michael, who built an identity
around their dark obsessions, the idea of being, quote,
discovered can be thrilling.
It validates their belief that they're extraordinary,
that they've done something shocking or brilliant,
no matter how horrific that something might have been.
Well, whatever Michael was thinking
when he agreed to that search, it didn't go well for him.
With all this evidence, the authorities
were able to charge him with seven counts
of aggravated
battery.
About seven months later, in May of 1985, he was found guilty on all but one.
As punishment, Michael was sentenced to five years in prison.
During his incarceration, he was on his best behavior, and in August 1987, 32-year-old Michael was released early
after only two years behind bars.
But as always, his contrition was just an act.
As soon as Michael re-entered society, he was ready to kill.
He still thought the best way to do that was through medicine, although he was no longer
licensed to practice in Illinois or
Ohio. So Michael packed up and moved to Virginia. But it wasn't that easy. When the state's licensing
committee found out about Michael's felony conviction, they denied his application. After
that, Michael spent the next few years working as a career counselor, helping students get into medical school.
And it wasn't long before he started poisoning
his coworkers again.
At some point while he was working at the career center,
three of Michael's colleagues came down
with severe headaches, cramps, and vomiting.
They quickly traced their illnesses back to Michael
and contacted the authorities.
When Michael learned he was being investigated, he quit his job, and although he never faced
charges, he knew it was time to get out of town.
Michael figured it was time to give medicine a try again.
So in May 1991, the 36-year-old applied for a residency program in West Virginia.
This time, he got in.
However, there was still no escaping his past.
The hospital did its due diligence, and it wasn't long before the chief of medicine,
Dr. Jeffrey Schultz, learned about Michael's criminal history.
But Michael wasn't about to give up.
He forged documents documents making it look
like his aggravated battery conviction was for a barroom brawl. There was even
a fake pardon to go along with it. Michael has told some pretty bold lies
in the past and this one is pretty extreme. The fact that he forged an
entire legal backstory complete with a fake pardon tells us that
he didn't just want to be believed, he wanted to manipulate reality itself.
And that's an indication of someone with strong narcissistic and psychopathic traits,
which we've already outlined are very prominent here with Michael.
There's a profound sense of entitlement, and these lies weren't subtle.
They were grandiose, which also signals
that this wasn't just about self-preservation.
It was about self-image.
Michael saw himself as someone too brilliant
or too exceptional to be stopped by bureaucracy or morality.
These were strategic manipulations
from someone with no remorse
and who truly believed he could distort outcomes
through deception. In your professional opinion, from someone with no remorse and who truly believed he could distort outcomes through
deception.
In your professional opinion, is this a sign of confidence or delusion or maybe both or
something else that I don't know about?
Well, in Michael's case, confidence and delusion are pretty, you know, tightly interwoven.
So it's certainly both, but it's also very significant for malignant narcissism.
I've never evaluated Michael,
so this is purely educational. I'm not doing a formal diagnosis by any means, but generally
speaking a person with a narcissistic pathology often convinces themselves that their lies
are justified or that they are still the victim, even when they are the one orchestrating the lie. So it's not delusional in a psychotic sense,
but rather a self-delusion that is secondary
to personality traits more than anything.
Well, as bold as this lie was, it didn't work.
Dr. Schultz showed the fake documents to the authorities in Illinois,
and they confirmed the papers were fake. Michael wasn't allowed to begin the residency program, but nobody took legal
action against him. So he kept trying the same strategy at other hospitals around
the country. And eventually a program at the University of South Dakota fell for
it. In the spring of 1992, 37-year-old Michael made his way to the city of Sioux Falls, and
he wasn't alone.
A few months before, Michael had met a 26-year-old intensive care nurse named Kristin Kinney.
At the time, Kristin was engaged to a doctor at her hospital, but Michael pursued her relentlessly
and convinced Kristen to
break off her engagement.
The relationship moved quickly from there.
Not only did Kristen agree to move to South Dakota with Michael, they got engaged.
Although she'd heard rumors about his dark past, Kristen didn't know all the details,
and Michael wasn't sharing them with her. In fact, he seemed like a completely new person, one who was friendly, sociable, and kind.
When they arrived in Sioux Falls, Kristen got a job in the ICU at the same hospital
where Michael was completing his residency.
She quickly befriended her new coworkers, and they all loved Michael.
They thought he was nicer and more knowledgeable
than the other residents. Plus, he never shied away from an emergency. He always came running
when a code was called. Michael eventually left the ICU for his other rotations, and everywhere he
went, his colleagues seemed to like him. It is very significant that he suddenly has a fiancé that he relentlessly pursued after
experiencing rejection after rejection in his residency.
He was once again attempting to change his persona to one that others would admire or
one that would serve a purpose for personal gain.
Kristen was a social pawn intended to help him put on the mask of sanity and help him appear more, quote,
normal than he had in his other rotations.
This is not uncommon for serial killers. I mean, think about Ted Bundy.
He was successful, he was in law school, and he had a long-time girlfriend.
Serial killers often do have a family, or they attempt to have a family, and of course there are exceptions,
but the reason that they do this is so that they can hide in plain sight.
Their families, their partners are strictly part of their cover.
Is it at all possible that being in a healthy relationship could stabilize someone like
Michael?
No, not in a meaningful way.
Someone like Michael doesn't form relationships the way that most people do.
There's no true empathy, no emotional reciprocity.
And for Michael, relationships, even a romantic one,
is just about control, utility, and image.
The structure of this relationship was actually shielding him even more
from accountability or suspicion.
He got into this relationship to help him maintain
his new crafted image and therefore maintain
his position as a doctor.
He is hoping it will make him appear more trustworthy
and dependable to others.
Whatever was motivating Michael's attitude change,
it seems like he really thought he was in the clear.
While he was in South Dakota, Michael applied to join the American Medical Association,
the largest professional organization
for advancing medical research.
Joining the AMA is a huge resume booster for any doctor.
Michael was looking forward to the added credential,
but he'd gotten too comfortable
because unlike the University of South Dakota, the
AMA looked into Michael's past.
Not only did they learn about his convictions from the poisonings in Illinois, but they
also found out about the internal investigation at Ohio State after he was suspected of killing
patients.
Needless to say, Michael's application to join the AMA was denied.
And once the organization alerted Michael's hospital in Sioux Falls, his residency was
suspended in late November 1992.
Over the next couple of weeks, the University of South Dakota reviewed all of Michael's
patient files.
They didn't find anything suspicious, but they were still able to
dismiss him from the program due to the forged documents he'd used in his application. Michael
was officially kicked out on December 4, 1992, but he stayed in town since his fiancée, Kristen,
was still working at the hospital. She seemingly believed Michael when he said it was all a big
misunderstanding,
especially after the university found no evidence that he'd hurt anyone.
But now, Michael's uncertain future was putting a strain on their relationship.
He became angry and withdrawn. Nothing like the kind, pleasant man she'd fallen in love with.
Not only that, but he didn't look for another job, so Kristin was responsible for financially
supporting them.
Then, one day in January 1993, things got even more troubling.
Kristin was cleaning up around the house when she found recipes for making homemade poisons.
When she asked Michael about it, he said the recipes had belonged to his
father. Despite her better judgment, Kristen believed him. She had no idea what he was
really planning. And no one was safe. Not even her. Hi, I'm Carina Biemisterfer, host of Morning Cup of Murder, your daily true crime podcast.
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In the winter of 1993, 39-year-old Michael Suongo was dismissed from his residency program
at the University of South Dakota after they learned about his past convictions for poisoning
his coworkers.
And although Michael insisted he'd changed his ways, his fiance, 27-year-old Kristin
Kinney, found a recipe for homemade poisons in their home.
Michael told Kristin the recipes had belonged to his dad.
She believed him.
But before long, Kristin started experiencing intense headaches.
And within a couple of
weeks, things got worse.
Kristen also started feeling nauseous and dizzy.
Once her symptoms got so bad, she fainted.
Nothing like this had ever happened to her before, and she couldn't help but think back
to that recipe she'd found.
But Kristen didn't want to ask Michael about it directly because he'd
been so irritable lately. Instead, she told him she was getting worried about how sick
she was getting. Michael didn't seem to care. In fact, he got mad at her for complaining
when he was going through his own struggles. He even threatened to leave her. After that,
Kristen didn't bring it up again. Let's talk about the emotional manipulation occurring here because it's
a textbook tactic used by individuals with antisocial and narcissistic traits.
He's invalidating her pain, redirecting the attention to his own so-called
struggles, and then punishing her emotionally for even raising the issue.
He even threatens to abandon her,
knowing she's already feeling off balance and physically weak,
and essentially what he's doing is something called avoidance conditioning.
He is responding in severe ways in order to condition her
to avoid approaching him about this in the future,
if she doesn't want to experience that kind of severity of punishment and it works and the message he's sending is your
suffering doesn't matter your job is to comfort me and me only and over time
that kind of dynamic affects a person's sense of reality Kristen's instincts
were screaming that something was wrong but Michael's manipulation made her doubt herself and ultimately silenced her.
That's dangerous, especially in the hands of someone who has a history of harming others
and who apparently is harming her.
What does it say about Michael that he's willing to poison his own fiancé?
Well, Michael saw Kristen not as a partner partner but as an object. It's a
total detachment from humanity. Kristen existed in his life not because he cared
about her but because she served a function. And the moment she became
inconvenient he was willing to poison her like anyone else and all for his own
satisfaction and need for control. Well, even if Kristen believed Michael's lies,
she realized she couldn't be around him anymore.
In late March of 1993,
three months into Kristen's mysterious illness,
she went home to Virginia to see her parents, thank goodness.
While she was there, all of her symptoms started to improve,
and not just her physical ones,
Kristen's mood also brightened.
She decided to permanently move back and got her own place close to her parents.
When Michael found out, he panicked.
Not because he loved Kristin, but because he couldn't afford rent without her.
He tracked her down in Virginia and sweet-talked his way back into her life.
He told Kristen he was
reapplying to residency programs and was focused on getting his career back on track. In fact,
he'd been accepted at a residency program at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
Of course, he didn't mention that he'd used forged documents again and that he'd left his
stint in South Dakota off his resume.
So Kristen agreed to give Michael another chance, although she wouldn't move to New York with him.
It wasn't a very happy reunion. Once Michael was back in her life,
Kristen's health took a turn for the worse. Her parents believed that the financial and emotional strain of supporting Michael was wearing
Kristen down. In June 1993, he headed off to New York by himself, and Kristen's parents were glad
to see him go. Michael was also glad to leave. Back in South Dakota, he'd been on his best behavior,
but now he was ready to once again unleash hell on his patients.
Upon his arrival, Michael was assigned to a Veterans Affairs Hospital affiliated with
Stony Brook.
One of his first patients was a World War II veteran named Dominic Bufalino.
Dominic was admitted in late June for some minor lung congestion.
He was only there so doctors could
help prevent pneumonia. On July 1, Michael entered Dominic's room. Within hours, Dominic's health
took a serious turn for the worse. By the following morning, only one day after interacting with
Michael, he was dead. Surprisingly, no one at the hospital suspected Michael of foul play, even though Dominic
had been stable up until Michael saw him.
If anything, Michael's new colleagues were sympathetic toward him, not just because of
what happened to his patient, but because on July 14th, a few days after treating Dominic,
he got the news that Kristen had been found dead.
She had taken her own life.
In a series of notes she left behind, Kristen said she felt trapped and alone.
She told her parents how much she loved them, and that all of her money and belongings should
go to Michael.
Michael went to Virginia for the funeral.
While he was
there, he barely showed any emotion. He didn't really seem to care that Kristin
was dead. He simply demanded the money she had left him, about $200, then went
back to New York. Well, Michael's coldness is expected. I mean, we've already talked
about how Michael's wanting to control others through death, and
we covered how he had an interest in the occult and necromancy, which suggests he wants to
be able to control them even after death as well.
And with Kristin, he'd been previously poisoning her.
She moved back in with her parents, got better, and then took her own life.
And the fact that she did that means she
took that control from him. But that's only assuming that her taking her own life is true,
because it wouldn't surprise me if this was staged and he actually had killed her.
But ultimately, Kristen served her purpose. She wasn't coming to New York with him to help him
maintain a cover of a loving, charming, and dependable
partner, and therefore the only need that he had for her was a financial one, which
he came to collect.
And this is also suggestive of another psychopathic trait known as parasitic lifestyle, where
they exploit or use others financially.
And the fact that he's able to switch between charm and cruelty, that is also a hallmark
of high-functioning psychopathy.
And it's what makes individuals like Michael so dangerous.
Well, Michael definitely didn't seem to be grieving Kristen's death.
Once he got back to New York, he focused all his energy towards finding another victim. And on September 29, 1993, a man named Baron Harris came into the hospital for respiratory
issues.
Like Dominic Bufalino, Baron was initially stable, but over the next few days, it became
harder for him to stay awake.
On a few occasions, Baron's wife noticed Michael injecting something directly into
her husband's neck.
She asked Michael what it was, and he told her it was vitamins.
However, Barron soon stopped waking up at all.
He fell into a coma and died a few weeks later.
At first, nobody suspected Michael of any wrongdoing. But shortly after Barron's passing, one of Kristin's friends from South Dakota contacted
the hospital.
They couldn't shake the feeling that Michael was somehow involved with her death, and when
they heard he was in another residency program, they wrote to his supervisors in New York.
Their letter contained all the details of Michael's past, including the suspected
patient deaths in Ohio and his jail time in Illinois for poisoning his co-workers.
Michael's supervisors were horrified and immediately looked through his patient files.
They quickly realized that he was the common denominator between Dominic Bufalino and Baron Harris' mysterious deaths.
It was clear that Michael Suongo was no doctor.
He was a killer.
On October 25, 1993, a physician at Stony Brook called the Department of Veterans Affairs
and asked for the special agent in charge, Bruce Sackman. She explained everything, and Agent
Sackman immediately got in his car. By the time he made the 50-mile drive from his office in
Manhattan to the VA hospital, the local police were already holding Michael in a small study
room in the resident dormitory. Michael insisted it was all a misunderstanding and Sackman pretended to believe him, but
deep down he knew he was staring into the eyes of a madman.
For the moment though, there was nothing to hold him on, so Michael was free to go.
However, that didn't mean Sackman was done with him.
As soon as he got back to his office, he requested a court order to search Michael's dorm room.
He was sure it would be full of incriminating evidence.
But Michael was one step ahead of him.
By the time the search warrant was executed two days later, Michael had packed his things
and vanished without a trace.
Sackman joined forces with the FBI, and they filed federal fraud charges against Michael
for fabricating documents and illegally dispensing controlled substances, but they weren't able
to track him down.
They had no idea that Michael had left the country.
He was in Zimbabwe.
He'd forged more documents, this time medical credentials and travel papers,
to work with a company that assigned English-speaking doctors in foreign countries.
This is also another trait of psychopathy because he's very criminally versatile. All
of these forging of documents, we've got military, medical, and travel, that suggests high criminal versatility, and that is another
very dangerous trait.
For the time being, though, Agent Sackman and his team were more concerned with understanding
just how much damage Michael had caused throughout the years.
With cooperation from every hospital where he'd ever worked, Sackman's team poured through
147 patient records.
It was a long process that took about a year, and when they finished in 1995, they discovered
that Michael had likely killed dozens of people.
He primarily used injectable paralytics, including one known as succinylcholine, which is typically
used as a muscle relaxant during surgery,
but used as a murder weapon, it would cause a slow, painful death.
The choice to use injectable paralytics, especially in a medical setting, says a lot about Michael's psychological makeup.
Paralytics mimic natural medical decline, and most disturbingly, the victim is often fully conscious,
but unable to move or scream.
And that, once again, tells us Michael didn't just want
people to die, he wanted them to suffer silently
while he maintained complete control.
And that's critical, because with psychopathic personalities,
murder isn't always about rage.
It's often about domination and about power.
Paralytics gave Michael the ability to become Godlike
in those moments, the one who decided who lived,
who died, and how.
And because he was a doctor, someone trusted to heal,
he could do this in plain sight
under the cover of medical care.
What does Michael's choice in poison say about him versus other medical killers we've
seen, like Elizabeth Wetlaufer, insulin overdoses, or Graham Young, who used poisons?
Elizabeth used insulin, and her killings were emotionally driven and even chaotic at times.
She was very emotionally unstable
and her killings were often in response to an emotion.
Graham, on the other hand, was obsessed with poisons.
He studied toxicology
and he was driven by intellectual obsession.
He was documenting as people suffered
almost in a scientific, intellectual way.
Poison allowed him to distance and detach. people suffered, almost in a scientific, intellectual way.
Poison allowed him to distance and detach.
It gave him time to watch the suffering unfold.
That voyeuristic quality, the desire to see pain without getting too close, defined him.
And that is very similar to Michael.
Except, Michael killed systematically and was driven by dominance.
He wasn't just hiding behind his role as a physician.
He was weaponizing his role as a physician.
And that level of precision and cold calculation
puts him in a category that is arguably
more dangerous than the others.
And that's because of the deliberate psychological control
he exercised over every element of the murders.
He was researching and
manufacturing poisons. Michael's case is truly one of the most disturbing
examples of medical homicide that I've ever heard.
Whatever Michael's reasoning was, learning his methods was a major
breakthrough. It wasn't enough to charge him with murder just yet, although
it was a promising start. But in order for Sackman and his team to hold Michael accountable,
they had to find him. And over three and a half years after Sackman first questioned
him, Michael finally resurfaced.
In Zimbabwe, Michael had continued to go after patients. Multiple nurses claimed they'd seen him inject sleeping patients with a mysterious substance.
Not long after, those patients died.
Government officials exhumed their bodies and realized that Michael had killed them.
He was charged with murder, but escaped to Saudi Arabia before they could arrest him. He got a new job
there, but in order to work, he had to get a Saudi visa, and to do that, he had to go back to the U.S.
On June 27, 1997, 42-year-old Michael flew into O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois.
When he stepped through the gate, he handed an airport employee
his passport for them to verify. It's possible he was using real documentation, or maybe
he didn't know the American authorities were still after him. Either way, when the
employee entered Michael's passport number, they saw he was wanted on federal fraud charges.
Michael was quickly arrested and informed of the charges he was facing.
The authorities said he had two choices.
He could be extradited to Zimbabwe, where he'd probably be sentenced to death for
his crimes there, or he could plead guilty to fraud and go to an American prison instead.
Michael chose the latter.
He was sentenced to three and a half years, which gave the U.S. authorities valuable time
to build a murder case against him, and Agent Sackman's team quickly got to work.
Out of the 60 people Michael was suspected of killing around the world, Sackman was focused
on three patients from the VA hospital, including Dominic Bufalino
and Baron Harris.
He thought their cases gave him the best chance of getting Michael convicted.
The process of exhuming those patients and testing their bodies took months.
But in the end, the team found traces of succinylcholine in each of them.
About three years later, in July of 2000, just days before Michael was supposed to be
released, he was charged with three counts of murder.
His trial began one month later.
Michael didn't try very hard to defend himself.
The evidence against him was overwhelming, and when prosecutors read an entry from his
diary, it was clear
that he was nothing short of a monster. The entry said quote, when I kill someone
it is because I want to. It's the only way I have of reminding myself that I am
still alive. This is an indication to me that even Michael knew that he knew there was a void where emotion
should be and that he turned to murder to feel something, anything at all, rather than
emotional deadness.
In the end, he was sentenced to life without parole.
As of this recording, he's still alive, incarcerated at the Florence Supermax prison in Colorado.
Although he was only convicted of those three murders, the FBI has linked him to as many
as 60 deaths, including his fiance, Kristin Kinney.
When Kristin died, her mother kept a lock of her hair.
Agent Sackman's team tested that lock of
hair and found high amounts of arsenic in it. This led them to believe that Michael
slowly poisoned Kristen, to the point of completely destroying her mental health and ultimately
causing her death.
As far as we know, she was the only person close to Michael that he was ever believed
to have killed, but we'll never fully understand why.
That secret is locked away with Michael, deep in a prison he'll never escape. making.
Thanks so much for listening.
Come back next time for a deep dive into the mind of another killer.
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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Killer Minds is hosted by me, Vanessa Richardson, and Dr. Tristan Engels,
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This episode was brought to life by the Killer Minds team. team, Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benedon, Laurie Marinelli, Natalie Pertsofsky, Sarah
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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.
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