Hi Simon can you please do a video Sir Nicholas George Winton MBE was named a British Hero of the Holocaust by the British Government. Winton was awarded the Order of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Fourth Class, by the Czech President Václav Havel in 1998. he was a British humanitarian who helped to rescue jewish children who were at risk from Nazi Germany just months before the start of World War II he saved 669 children all of them would’ve probably have been killed by the Nazis if he hadn’t got them out please do a video on this man thank you Paul.
A+ video! I am a nurse and worked in the nursing field for about a decade. Considering how broken the legal system is in the US, these things don't surprise me at all. People would be shocked if they saw first hand how these health care systems operate.
@@chrisbentleywalkingandrambling I am always curious what these systems are like in other countries. In the US, it is just incredible how short staffed facilities are.
@btetschner they had known about the staffing group approaching retirement for years. Nursing uptake at universities dropped. There is a massive shortage. The whole system is propped up by agency nurses who have come from other countries to just work as an agency nurse. Why be loyal to an employer if you can make double with an agency? Managers are having to take on more shop floor work to help shore this up, too. But even with managers helping and Agency Staff, short staffing is widespread.
Highly recommend the book "A Good Nurse" one of my clinical instructors recommended it to me while I was in Nursing school, as I liked true crime. A good telling of his story. Another blood boiling aspect of this was how much the hospitals refused to help police. Refused to hand over pyxis or omnicell transcripts, etc.
I listened to the book, I think a couple times. Geeze I can’t believe how long he was able to get away with his crap. There was certainly telltale signs. When people tend to die more around a certain shift and nurse, it’s time to investigate. I like to listen to the books 😁.
Covering up mistakes is standard operating procedure for Hospitals they even have huge amounts of money in their annual budgets set aside specifically for paying off staff to keep quiet. And any staff who do report things are the ones reprimanded and told that they are creating a hostile work environment. (I don't know if it is still decades away...but eventually things with Hospitals will finally go like things did with Ellen, former staff who know how bad Hospitals are haven't been able to speak up because they are attacked because it's such a trusted institution...and if past employees speak the truth we are told that we are hurting innocent patients because stopping them will reduce the care available to the patients....so hopefully one day either the medical field stops being so twisted or the truth comes out fully. Because those who speak up are bullied or paid into keeping quiet.....supposedly for the good of the patients.
How in the hell did he keep his nursing license, when he was in and out of a mental institution? In the states I’ve practiced in, that’s a question they ask.
The work environment in hospitals does easily allow for these things to happen without being discovered. If a coworker points out that a fellow nurse made a mistake, they are reprimanded, they are told that informing another nurse quietly that they gave patient A's pill to patient B by accident somehow creates a hostile environment. Tell me how? Tell me how when I was a student still in nursing school that my noticing and quietly (so patients didn't overhear) letting her know what happened makes me the bad guy??? Yeah that and the other things I "kept getting in trouble for" made it so that I mentally couldn't cut it in the nursing field. My most common crime was being too honest, yes I regularly got talked to for telling the truth too much. So I am never surprised when medical professionals who are kills have crazy high body counts......the environment is literally built to protect them.
Having "seen behind the curtain" at how hospitals are run.... I am not surprised by this happening or how long they get away with it... what surprises me is how few are caught
The scary thing is, I think there are lots of other people out there who are doing this, who will never get caught because they have the sense to only target people who are highly likely to die, anyway. You'd be amazed how many psychopathic vultures that you never even knew existed, come out of the woodwork when someone gets cancer.
@@jessicajarsak7812 When and where was that? I've heard of one in England and one in China. Are you talking about either one of those, or a different one?
You are more right than you realize.....the system is practically built to hide these types. Coworkers are afraid to speak up because the one who points out any concerns or errors is the one labeled a problem and they are told that they are creating a hostile working environment. Also, remember that Tennessee nurse who went to trial awhile back.....did you notice how long it took from the date of it happening till it was officially reported? And if I remember correctly she was the one who made sure it came out. Hospitals have built into their budgets huge amounts of money set aside specifically for paying employees to keep quiet about things that happen (and since nurses aren't paid that well, offering them 5 figures to pretend nothing happened is insanely common) it is literally built into their annual budgets.
Shipman is a great example of that. His victims were mostly old women who he convinced the families to cremate so that there wasn't a body. He may never have been caught if he hadn't sloppily rewritten one of his patients' wills. Her daughter was a lawyer and smelled a rat immediately which finally took him down
@@violet7773 Was he that doctor in England? I think it should be illegal to cremate a body if there's any doubt whatsoever that there might've been foul play or anything suspicious going on. And if you have cancer or a family member does and they're doing everything medically possible to survive, even if it's stage 4, you need to be especially careful. There are way to many people out there who think it's perfectly acceptable for a so-called terminal cancer patient to just give up and die. And that mentality is a big help to all the vultures out there who are more than happy to swoop in and take everything you have. Don't ask me how I know about this.
Will this case be a future CasCrim episode?🕵️ Stories about murderous nurses hold a special fascination for me because my Mom was a nurse for over thirty years. Mom was caring, compassionate and kind when she performed her nursing duties. Poor patient care was her pet peeve.🧑⚕️
My Aunt was a nurse. My Sister in law was a nurse. I cannot conceive of either of them doing this or putting up with it. Both have horrible stories about admin/manglement and the crappy policies that they had to put up with.
Everybody who works in healthcare in this region is aware of this case, and implications on employment. There is now a form called the “Cullen form” which must be filled out by an employer for anyone that has worked for them. It includes details about their termination or resignation from that facility. It is legally mandated, so there are no repercussions. This will help avoid somebody, jumping from place to place while either being incompetent, or at the worst, murderous.
1:30 - Chapter 1 - Early years 3:25 - Mid roll ads 4:40 - Chapter 2 - The killing starts 9:25 - Chapter 3 - From hospital to hospital 12:55 - Chapter 4 - Poisonning pennsylvania 16:05 - Chapter 5 - The good nurse PS: Another rogue for the Cash Podcast ?
He actually worked at the hospital I was born in. I'm grateful nothing happened, given after my birth my mom had to be in the ICU for a bit. Scary to think I may have potentially grown up without a mom because of this monster walking around there...
I constantly forgot I was watching a Biographics episode, not a Casual Criminalist episode. This is some extremely eerie and rather sad stuff. I wonder how it is someone like that, who could be good at what they do, could go so far off the rails.
The same way they live with being part of a system that only let's you live if you've got the cash to pay up. Like a baby (or at least a baby that wasn't poor and sick), just like any psychopathic mass murderer.
They don't care at all....they ONLY want to protect their pensions ...and their comfortable LAZY azzes... My ex husband and his best friend started killing pts in medical school... I had INCREDIBLE trouble trying to get them investigated... I was almost murdered by MOB cops they engaged to shut me up...They got away with everything... They kill more carefully now.. An INTENTIONALLY missed diagnosis A missed spot on an xray Wrong meds Missed follow up People have found out..some EVEN have posted online BUT NEVER SUED..I CANNOT UNDERSTAND IT!!!
Okay, this hits a little close. Being from Allentown and him working at the hospitals I use, it feels unfortunate he wasn't stopped here . I feel sympathy for all this families that have ended up victim of this distorted dangerous man .
I was thinking if you would do one on this guy. He was very careless but unfortunately got to terrorize hospitals because of a variety of reasons. That ending part of him being eligible for parole in 2388 is one of the times I feel they got the sentencing very right.
Have read about other Angel of Death stories. Same pattern: Hospital is suspicious, but they don't investigate. They fire them, and they move on to another hospital. Anyone find that disturbing? More disturbing than the criminal's acts? I do.
My biggest thing is this man was admitted to the hospital plenty of times, had therapists and EVERY TOOL TO GET HELP. But still, went on to do awful things. It really doesn’t make sense to me why he wouldn’t just get help for himself if that’s what he really wanted (obviously it wasn’t)
18:33 EXACTLY THIS. This is exactly what happens within EVERY private run hospital, they are for profit institutions not be altruistic...they only look put for themselves, and often cover up TONS
I know this is Biographics and not the Casual Criminalist, but I wonder how many more Nurse, Doctors will be found killing patients during the COVID time. It’s like a perfect coverup. Kinda eerie to think about… 💜
Even though a lot of deaths were incorrectly attributed to covid I'd guess a lot fewer than we'd think, mainly because most people aren't evil or at the very least don't have the balls/labia to do stuff like this.
Please do a video on Ben Barres. He was a neuroscientist that worked on glial cells and advocated for equality for female scientists after transitioning from female to male and seeing how differently he was treated.
I actually like that better than life without parole. It's crueler to tell the bastard, "Yeah, you'll be up for parole eventually. Just gotta live another 350 years to be eligible..."
they covered snipers already. Simo Häyhä, Lyudmyla Pavlychenko, Carlos Hathcock, Francis Pegahmagabow etc. Who cares about another one? Let me guess he hid, he scouted, and he engaged targets at long range. He probably learned how to shoot hunting at a young age or was a competition shooter before the war. The story has been told before.
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 and what? Just because you're not interested does it mean that other people aren't? I don't think so. Don't be so bitter and jumping on comments just because you don't think it's worth it!
@@philmerrifield1163 lots of videos about him. watch the WWII channels video on Zaitsev. He's a topic that has been beaten to death by history video makers because his story is relatively simple, without political controversy, and very dramatic. Other stories should be told.
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 maybe I have watched those other videos and what to see a different tale on it. Every one has a unique interpretation of an event. I collect multiple accounts and decide myself what happened. If you don't like it you don't have to watch it, now do you?
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 hopefully Simon signs off on a 40minute+ long video on just Vasili Zaitsev just out of spite to people like you that seem to think your lack of interest is shared by the majority. Just an fyi you're equivalent to Roger in that episode of American Dad where he describes himself as "the decider" but quickly finds out he's a discardable twat that is nearly useless.
Roy Rogers has the best BBQ sauce of any fast food chain, including McDonald's BBQ sauce, which happens to be my second favorite. Definitely worth checking out, and they make a heck of a burger and a chicken sandwich. Underrated restaurant.
I heard somewhere old names sometimes determined your family's profession, Cooper makes barrels, fisher fishes, shoemaker makes shoes......and Cullen Goin a Cullen
This got really real, way too quickly, when I saw my home hospital on the title card around 13:00. It got even worse when Simon said he was operating in Allentown (yes, the same as the Billy Joel song), the city next to the town I grew up in.
DUDE!!! How many youtube channels do you have?!?! Every time I look up something historical, or involving the military your face pops up. Don't overwork yourself my mans sheesh.
I've heard many horror stories about Hunterdon, even participated in a couple, so yeah I am completely unsuprised to hear that they had a literal murderer working there for a bit.
Check out Squarespace: squarespace.com/BIOGRAPHICS for 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
Hi Simon can you please do a video Sir Nicholas George Winton MBE was named a British Hero of the Holocaust by the British Government. Winton was awarded the Order of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Fourth Class, by the Czech President Václav Havel in 1998. he was a British humanitarian who helped to rescue jewish children who were at risk from Nazi Germany just months before the start of World War II he saved 669 children all of them would’ve probably have been killed by the Nazis if he hadn’t got them out please do a video on this man thank you Paul.
You should cover Kermit Gosnell. He’s the worst human being in American History.
@@m.d.e.845 not sure I’d go that far, but yeah he was bad
Love your content and videos
Please do Booker T. Washington next
This video really hit close to home. A beloved family member of mine was one of this monster’s victims.
I'm sorry for your loss.
RIP Ops fam.
That’s got to be so awful. I’m sorry.
My condolences.
A+ video!
I am a nurse and worked in the nursing field for about a decade.
Considering how broken the legal system is in the US, these things don't surprise me at all.
People would be shocked if they saw first hand how these health care systems operate.
We have had quite a few in the UK too unfortunately.
@@chrisbentleywalkingandrambling I am always curious what these systems are like in other countries. In the US, it is just incredible how short staffed facilities are.
2388? Huh. 👍
@btetschner they had known about the staffing group approaching retirement for years. Nursing uptake at universities dropped. There is a massive shortage. The whole system is propped up by agency nurses who have come from other countries to just work as an agency nurse. Why be loyal to an employer if you can make double with an agency? Managers are having to take on more shop floor work to help shore this up, too. But even with managers helping and Agency Staff, short staffing is widespread.
@@lorieunicorn what?
Highly recommend the book "A Good Nurse" one of my clinical instructors recommended it to me while I was in Nursing school, as I liked true crime. A good telling of his story.
Another blood boiling aspect of this was how much the hospitals refused to help police. Refused to hand over pyxis or omnicell transcripts, etc.
I think that was made into a netflix flim
I listened to the book, I think a couple times. Geeze I can’t believe how long he was able to get away with his crap. There was certainly telltale signs. When people tend to die more around a certain shift and nurse, it’s time to investigate. I like to listen to the books 😁.
Covering up mistakes is standard operating procedure for Hospitals they even have huge amounts of money in their annual budgets set aside specifically for paying off staff to keep quiet. And any staff who do report things are the ones reprimanded and told that they are creating a hostile work environment. (I don't know if it is still decades away...but eventually things with Hospitals will finally go like things did with Ellen, former staff who know how bad Hospitals are haven't been able to speak up because they are attacked because it's such a trusted institution...and if past employees speak the truth we are told that we are hurting innocent patients because stopping them will reduce the care available to the patients....so hopefully one day either the medical field stops being so twisted or the truth comes out fully. Because those who speak up are bullied or paid into keeping quiet.....supposedly for the good of the patients.
I remember getting out of highschool getting on the bus to go to work and just watching biographics. 5 years later still going strong
How in the hell did he keep his nursing license, when he was in and out of a mental institution? In the states I’ve practiced in, that’s a question they ask.
That's a very good question. You'd imagine that might come up on a background check. Or at least that they might inquire on it through the grapevine.
National shortage of nurses
@@LadyVader33 that’s a terrifying thought.
Well for starters, it was new jersey
@@chuckiefinster544 can you elaborate? I've never lived there
Would love to see you do a series on Medieval Kings and Popes
Squarespace can help with that.
That would be great
Popegraphics 😂
He’s done a fair few. You could go through all the videos and make your own playlist?
Love to see James VI and I
The work environment in hospitals does easily allow for these things to happen without being discovered. If a coworker points out that a fellow nurse made a mistake, they are reprimanded, they are told that informing another nurse quietly that they gave patient A's pill to patient B by accident somehow creates a hostile environment. Tell me how? Tell me how when I was a student still in nursing school that my noticing and quietly (so patients didn't overhear) letting her know what happened makes me the bad guy??? Yeah that and the other things I "kept getting in trouble for" made it so that I mentally couldn't cut it in the nursing field. My most common crime was being too honest, yes I regularly got talked to for telling the truth too much.
So I am never surprised when medical professionals who are kills have crazy high body counts......the environment is literally built to protect them.
Having "seen behind the curtain" at how hospitals are run.... I am not surprised by this happening or how long they get away with it... what surprises me is how few are caught
The scary thing is, I think there are lots of other people out there who are doing this, who will never get caught because they have the sense to only target people who are highly likely to die, anyway. You'd be amazed how many psychopathic vultures that you never even knew existed, come out of the woodwork when someone gets cancer.
There’s a female nurse that was killing babies. How sick is that?!
@@jessicajarsak7812 When and where was that? I've heard of one in England and one in China. Are you talking about either one of those, or a different one?
You are more right than you realize.....the system is practically built to hide these types. Coworkers are afraid to speak up because the one who points out any concerns or errors is the one labeled a problem and they are told that they are creating a hostile working environment. Also, remember that Tennessee nurse who went to trial awhile back.....did you notice how long it took from the date of it happening till it was officially reported? And if I remember correctly she was the one who made sure it came out. Hospitals have built into their budgets huge amounts of money set aside specifically for paying employees to keep quiet about things that happen (and since nurses aren't paid that well, offering them 5 figures to pretend nothing happened is insanely common) it is literally built into their annual budgets.
Shipman is a great example of that. His victims were mostly old women who he convinced the families to cremate so that there wasn't a body. He may never have been caught if he hadn't sloppily rewritten one of his patients' wills. Her daughter was a lawyer and smelled a rat immediately which finally took him down
@@violet7773 Was he that doctor in England? I think it should be illegal to cremate a body if there's any doubt whatsoever that there might've been foul play or anything suspicious going on. And if you have cancer or a family member does and they're doing everything medically possible to survive, even if it's stage 4, you need to be especially careful. There are way to many people out there who think it's perfectly acceptable for a so-called terminal cancer patient to just give up and die. And that mentality is a big help to all the vultures out there who are more than happy to swoop in and take everything you have. Don't ask me how I know about this.
Will this case be a future CasCrim episode?🕵️
Stories about murderous nurses hold a special fascination for me because my Mom was a nurse for over thirty years. Mom was caring, compassionate and kind when she performed her nursing duties. Poor patient care was her pet peeve.🧑⚕️
My Aunt was a nurse.
My Sister in law was a nurse.
I cannot conceive of either of them doing this or putting up with it.
Both have horrible stories about admin/manglement and the crappy policies that they had to put up with.
Everybody who works in healthcare in this region is aware of this case, and implications on employment. There is now a form called the “Cullen form” which must be filled out by an employer for anyone that has worked for them. It includes details about their termination or resignation from that facility. It is legally mandated, so there are no repercussions. This will help avoid somebody, jumping from place to place while either being incompetent, or at the worst, murderous.
Excellent
1:30 - Chapter 1 - Early years
3:25 - Mid roll ads
4:40 - Chapter 2 - The killing starts
9:25 - Chapter 3 - From hospital to hospital
12:55 - Chapter 4 - Poisonning pennsylvania
16:05 - Chapter 5 - The good nurse
PS: Another rogue for the Cash Podcast ?
Would have thought this would have been a Casual Criminalist episode!
True crime daily the podcast did a deep dive with the nurse amy who helped bust him. Soooo good
I'm sure that'll happen eventually
Patience 👌
He actually worked at the hospital I was born in. I'm grateful nothing happened, given after my birth my mom had to be in the ICU for a bit. Scary to think I may have potentially grown up without a mom because of this monster walking around there...
I constantly forgot I was watching a Biographics episode, not a Casual Criminalist episode. This is some extremely eerie and rather sad stuff. I wonder how it is someone like that, who could be good at what they do, could go so far off the rails.
👍 True. It's depressing
Every single one of those hospital managers implicated themselves by staying quiet. I hope the money they saved comforts them when they burn in hell.
I wonder how those who didn't report him and helped him get different jobs are able to live with themselves.
The same way they live with being part of a system that only let's you live if you've got the cash to pay up. Like a baby (or at least a baby that wasn't poor and sick), just like any psychopathic mass murderer.
They probably sleep like a well-fed baby every night, at least those with similar mindsets.
Pretty easily tbh. When you're not the one doing the killing its easy to rationalize not having fault.
The medical industry, especially surgeons, attracts a large number of functional sociopaths. I doubt they think about it.
They don't care at all....they ONLY want to protect their pensions ...and their comfortable LAZY azzes...
My ex husband and his best friend started killing pts in medical school...
I had INCREDIBLE trouble trying to get them investigated...
I was almost murdered by MOB cops they engaged to shut me up...They got away with everything...
They kill more carefully now..
An INTENTIONALLY missed diagnosis
A missed spot on an xray
Wrong meds
Missed follow up
People have found out..some EVEN have posted online BUT NEVER SUED..I CANNOT UNDERSTAND IT!!!
Crazy to think these murders happened in my own backyard, and even at the hospital I was born. Scary stuff.
I was born there too, and my grandparents lived in Livingston for my whole life up until a few years ago.
There’s absolutely no way he should’ve been allowed to become a nurse. Those that allowed him to become a nurse failed his victims and patients.
Now to put him on the upcoming list for The Casual Criminalist channel
I was wondering why such a long story wouldn't be on Casual Criminalist. This would be a very long ( and my favourite type) video.
Doctors and nurses who kill are some of the most terrifying people imo.
Oh absolutely
Mary from Nikke whose shotgun is nicknamed Kindness be like:
Especially since they are people who we put absolute trust into.
You know for a guy who killed so many people you'd think he'd know how to unalive himself
Ikr
@@DahliaVonHellion💯👍
The netflix flim base on him was good 👍
Really good film and Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain were fantastic
Okay, this hits a little close. Being from Allentown and him working at the hospitals I use, it feels unfortunate he wasn't stopped here . I feel sympathy for all this families that have ended up victim of this distorted dangerous man .
That AD transition...chef's kiss
You should dona biography on dr christopher duntsch who is known as doctor death who botched 33 surgeries in a 2 year period
Very excited for this one.
Imagine being a former coworker and wanting today something and being silenced by the hospital’s lawyer.
Clearly the medical network in US is so disconnected that this guy can go from one state to another without backgroumd checks.
"...unless he moonlighted as the Zodiac [killer]" - 🤣🤣🤣 well delivered sir
Great, now every time I get admitted to a hospital I’ll be having to interview and run background checks on my nurses.
Interesting video
This story has a Netflix drama right now, it’s good.
It would be really interesting if could make a video about Eleftherios Venizelos
Paying for youtube with no ads to still get ads is actually wild
I was thinking if you would do one on this guy. He was very careless but unfortunately got to terrorize hospitals because of a variety of reasons.
That ending part of him being eligible for parole in 2388 is one of the times I feel they got the sentencing very right.
Have read about other Angel of Death stories. Same pattern:
Hospital is suspicious, but they don't investigate. They fire them, and they move on to another hospital. Anyone find that disturbing? More disturbing than the criminal's acts?
I do.
Holy crap....I was born at Hunterdon Medical Center when this guy worked there. Talk about a small world.
🖐 Simon
The lack of responsibility and refusal to report him makes me think of what happened with Christopher Duntsch
My biggest thing is this man was admitted to the hospital plenty of times, had therapists and EVERY TOOL TO GET HELP. But still, went on to do awful things. It really doesn’t make sense to me why he wouldn’t just get help for himself if that’s what he really wanted (obviously it wasn’t)
Good video but Trenton is in NJ, not NY.
Why couldn't this have been on casual criminalists and 30 to 40 min longer? Lol thanks for the content anyway though Simon and Co. ☕🚬
True crime daily the podcast(on yt) covered this with the nurse amy as the guest. It was so interesting. Great deep dive!
18:33 EXACTLY THIS. This is exactly what happens within EVERY private run hospital, they are for profit institutions not be altruistic...they only look put for themselves, and often cover up TONS
Why didn't the hospitals hint that he had a poor work ethic to other hospitals? That was something they could prove.
They might have other prospective screw ups exposed
Legally you can't just badmouth ex employees to future potential employers. So lawsuits.
I know this is Biographics and not the Casual Criminalist, but I wonder how many more Nurse, Doctors will be found killing patients during the COVID time. It’s like a perfect coverup. Kinda eerie to think about… 💜
Covid=scamdemic
Even though a lot of deaths were incorrectly attributed to covid I'd guess a lot fewer than we'd think, mainly because most people aren't evil or at the very least don't have the balls/labia to do stuff like this.
I watched The Good Nurse (amazing film!).
One of the best films I have ever watched
@@chasehedges6775 I am surprised that it was not more of a hit with the public.
@@btetschner It was a good movie
Killing a priest finally proved Charles Cullen’s undoing.
Something needs to change in the medical and judicial system to catch these cases earlier. So many lives could be saved.
How did he fail suicide so many times if he was so good at killing other people. Really weird and messed up
I’d love an episode on srinivasa ramanujan! One of the greatest geniuses to of ever lived and still relatively unknown
A suggestion, the David Bain case in New Zealand. It's an ongoing argument that you may find interesting.
Wooah. I’m from NZ and haven’t heard that name in a while!
Just a minor correction, it is the New Jersey state prison in Trenton , not the New York state prison.
Please do a video on Ben Barres. He was a neuroscientist that worked on glial cells and advocated for equality for female scientists after transitioning from female to male and seeing how differently he was treated.
Eligible for Parole in 2388. Now that's a Sentence. It should be an automatic life/death sentence for a killer Nurse.
I actually like that better than life without parole. It's crueler to tell the bastard, "Yeah, you'll be up for parole eventually. Just gotta live another 350 years to be eligible..."
Would love to see a video on vasili zyetsev Simon, shocked that you haven't done it yet
they covered snipers already. Simo Häyhä, Lyudmyla Pavlychenko, Carlos Hathcock, Francis Pegahmagabow etc. Who cares about another one? Let me guess he hid, he scouted, and he engaged targets at long range. He probably learned how to shoot hunting at a young age or was a competition shooter before the war. The story has been told before.
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 and what? Just because you're not interested does it mean that other people aren't? I don't think so. Don't be so bitter and jumping on comments just because you don't think it's worth it!
@@philmerrifield1163
lots of videos about him. watch the WWII channels video on Zaitsev. He's a topic that has been beaten to death by history video makers because his story is relatively simple, without political controversy, and very dramatic. Other stories should be told.
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 maybe I have watched those other videos and what to see a different tale on it. Every one has a unique interpretation of an event. I collect multiple accounts and decide myself what happened. If you don't like it you don't have to watch it, now do you?
@@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 hopefully Simon signs off on a 40minute+ long video on just Vasili Zaitsev just out of spite to people like you that seem to think your lack of interest is shared by the majority. Just an fyi you're equivalent to Roger in that episode of American Dad where he describes himself as "the decider" but quickly finds out he's a discardable twat that is nearly useless.
Simon, at the end you misspoke. You said New York State not New Jersey State Penitentiary
Roy Rogers has the best BBQ sauce of any fast food chain, including McDonald's BBQ sauce, which happens to be my second favorite. Definitely worth checking out, and they make a heck of a burger and a chicken sandwich. Underrated restaurant.
That's frightening.
Utterly terrifying
This kind of story would be a great episode for the Casual Criminalist.
Stay tuned. The Netflix movie is pretty awesome
I smell a another Casual Criminalist episode in the future
I heard somewhere old names sometimes determined your family's profession, Cooper makes barrels, fisher fishes, shoemaker makes shoes......and Cullen Goin a Cullen
I live in Easton which is right across the bridge from Phillipsburg and like a thirty minute drive from Allentown so this hit close to home 😬
Yipe
This got really real, way too quickly, when I saw my home hospital on the title card around 13:00. It got even worse when Simon said he was operating in Allentown (yes, the same as the Billy Joel song), the city next to the town I grew up in.
Oh good it got worse! My brother was born in Lehigh (long "e" Simon
Hey Simon! Knoxville dropping in.
I was born in St. Barnabas in Livingston, but in 1982. I missed what year he was working there.
DUDE!!!
How many youtube channels do you have?!?! Every time I look up something historical, or involving the military your face pops up.
Don't overwork yourself my mans sheesh.
Ironic that after all those suicide attempts he plead guilty to avoid getting the death penalty
Oh goodie square space
I remember Roy Rogers restaurants!
You should do one on Robert Smalls (a born slave who was the first Black to comand a Navy ship).
He's eligible for parole when the Starfleet Enterprise makes her maiden voyage
Suggestions: Abraham Lincoln and Jackie Robinson
The system failed those poor people. Horrible!!!🙏🏾
Afraid of lawsuits. The root cause of this madness going on for so long
There is a film about him- The Good Nurse, with Eddie Redmain and Jessica Chastain.
he had so many suicide attempts. how was he so good at killing other ppl yet so bad at killing himself 🫠
I love your accent.
If there's one thing I learned from serial killer stories is thst most get away with it for so long due to complacency from others.
Is it complacency? I feel it is more people not wanting to think their friend or colleague is a murderer
That and care in the US is directly related to money. Can't have it known a murderer is working for you
Definitely thought this was a Casual Criminalist video until I realized the format was different.
A lot of Hospitals liable for enabling murderer
Can you do one on Titus the roman emporer?
2388 is gonna be a wild year!
If you liked this True Crime Daily The Podcast(on yt) did an hr long video on this, with amy as the guest! Amy tells the story. Fascinating!!
Charles Culling
Good one.
It's like in schools where we keep passing kids on and on who have major discipline and scholastic problems
I’m from somerset county I’ve been to that hospital numerous times 90% of people in Somerset County do not know who this guy is it’s crazy
Oh crap... I grew up near to a lot of these places. I'm pretty sure I've been to a few of these hospitals to visit people.
Thats the new jersey state prison. Ive been to thar hospital many times. For myself and to visit friends and family.
One for the Casual Criminalist!
I love too see Michael Collins Irish leader 1920s
Are you ever going to cover Hideki Tojo you covered other axis leaders
That's still hotly contested among historians, as many adamantly blame Hirohito
I worked with Charles Cullen at St Lukes hospital in Bethlehem.
Yipe. And so many former colleagues betrayed and traumatized
This could be "Angel of Death number 17" over on Casual Criminalist
I've heard many horror stories about Hunterdon, even participated in a couple, so yeah I am completely unsuprised to hear that they had a literal murderer working there for a bit.
You should do a Bio or Casual Criminalist on the DC Snipers of the early 2000s
Do Kwame Nkrumah story
Where's our Casual Criminalist episode on this guy?
Had to check that this wasn’t CasCrim by the end!!!