RaDonda Vaught Found Guilty In Medical Death

RaDonda Vaught

Former nurse RaDonda Vaught has been found guilty of criminally negligent homicide and gross neglect of an impaired adult in the death of Charlene Murphey. According to court documents RaDonda Vaught was suppose to give Charlene Murphey a sedative Versed before she went for an MRI however Vaught would give her vecuronium which is a powerful paralyzer that caused Charlene to stop breathing and left her brain dead before medical personnel realized the mistake. RaDonda Vaught who has admitted since the beginning that she made a mistake will be sentenced in May 2022

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RaDonda Vaught, a former nurse criminally prosecuted for a fatal drug error in 2017, was convicted of gross neglect of an impaired adult and negligent homicide on Friday after a three-day trial in Nashville, Tenn., that gripped nurses across the country.

RaDonda Vaught faces three to six years in prison for neglect and one to two years for negligent homicide as a defendant with no prior convictions, according to sentencing guidelines provided by the Nashville district attorney’s office. Vaught is scheduled to be sentenced May 13, and her sentences are likely to run concurrently, said the district attorney’s spokesperson, Steve Hayslip.

RaDonda Vaught was acquitted of reckless homicide. Criminally negligent homicide was a lesser charge included under reckless homicide.

Vaught’s trial has been closely watched by nurses and medical professionals across the U.S., many of whom worry it could set a precedent of criminalizing medical mistakes. Medical errors are generally handled by professional licensing boards or civil courts, and criminal prosecutions like Vaught’s case are exceedingly rare.

Janie Harvey Garner, the founder of Show Me Your Stethoscope, a nursing group on Facebook with more than 600,000 members, worries the conviction will have a chilling effect on nurses disclosing their own errors or near errors, which could have a detrimental effect on the quality of patient care.

“Health care just changed forever,” she said after the verdict. “You can no longer trust people to tell the truth because they will be incriminating themselves.”

In the wake of the verdict, the American Nurses Association issued a statement expressing similar concerns about Vaught’s conviction, saying it sets a “dangerous precedent” of “criminalizing the honest reporting of mistakes.” Some medical errors are “inevitable,” the statement said, and there are more “effective and just mechanisms” to address them than criminal prosecution.

“The nursing profession is already extremely short-staffed, strained and facing immense pressure — an unfortunate multi-year trend that was further exacerbated by the effects of the pandemic,” the statement said. “This ruling will have a long-lasting negative impact on the profession.”

RaDonda Vaught, 38, of Bethpage, Tenn., was arrested in 2019 and charged with reckless homicide and gross neglect of an impaired adult in connection with the killing of Charlene Murphey, who died at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in late December 2017. The neglect charge stemmed from allegations that Vaught did not properly monitor Murphey after she was injected with the wrong drug.

Murphey, 75, of Gallatin, Tenn., was admitted to Vanderbilt for a brain injury. At the time of the error, her condition was improving, and she was being prepared for discharge from the hospital, according to courtroom testimony and a federal investigation report. Murphey was prescribed a sedative, Versed, to calm her before being scanned in a large MRI-like machine.

RaDonda Vaught was tasked to retrieve Versed from a computerized medication cabinet but instead grabbed a powerful paralyzer, vecuronium. According to an investigation report filed in her court case, the nurse overlooked several warning signs as she withdrew the wrong drug — including that Versed is a liquid but vecuronium is a powder — and then injected Murphey and left her to be scanned. By the time the error was discovered, Murphey was brain-dead.

During the trial, prosecutors painted Vaught as an irresponsible and uncaring nurse who ignored her training and abandoned her patient. Assistant District Attorney Chad Jackson likened Vaught to a drunk driver who killed a bystander but said the nurse was “worse” because it was as if she were “driving with [her] eyes closed.”

“The immutable fact of this case is that Charlene Murphey is dead because RaDonda Vaught could not bother to pay attention to what she was doing,” Jackson said.

Vaught’s attorney, Peter Strianse, argued that his client made an honest mistake that did not constitute a crime and became a “scapegoat” for systemic problems related to medication cabinets at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 2017.

But Vanderbilt officials countered on the stand. Terry Bosen, Vanderbilt’s pharmacy medication safety officer, testified that the hospital had some technical problems with medication cabinets in 2017 but that they were resolved weeks before Vaught pulled the wrong drug for Murphey.

In his closing argument, Strianse targeted the reckless homicide charge, arguing that his client could not have “recklessly” disregarded warning signs if she earnestly believed she had the right drug and saying there was “considerable debate” over whether vecuronium actually killed Murphey.

During the trial, Eli Zimmerman, a Vanderbilt neurologist, testified it was “in the realm of possibility” that Murphey’s death was caused entirely by her brain injury. Additionally, Davidson County Chief Medical Examiner Feng Li testified that although he determined Murphey died from vecuronium, he couldn’t verify how much of the drug she actually received. Li said a small dose may not have been lethal.

“I don’t mean to be facetious,” Strianse said of the medical examiner’s testimony, “but it sort of sounded like some amateur CSI episode — only without the science.”

RaDonda Vaught did not testify. On the second day of the trial, prosecutors played an audio recording of Vaught’s interview with law enforcement officials in which she admitted to the drug error and said she “probably just killed a patient.”

During a separate proceeding before the Tennessee Board of Nursing last year, Vaught testified that she allowed herself to become “complacent” and “distracted” while using the medication cabinet and did not double-check which drug she had withdrawn despite multiple opportunities.

“I know the reason this patient is no longer here is because of me,” Vaught told the nursing board, starting to cry. “There won’t ever be a day that goes by that I don’t think about what I did.”

https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/03/25/1088902487/former-nurse-found-guilty-in-accidental-injection-death-of-75-year-old-patient

Benjamin Poirier Gets Life In Prison

Benjamin Poirier

Benjamin Poirier was sentenced to life in prison for the fatal shooting of an eleven year old boy. According to court documents Benjamin Poirier would walk into a trailer park and start firing at a mobile home and struck and killed eleven year old boy. Benjamin Poirier, who was yelling about the end of the world, would attempt to drive away however he would crash into another trailer and be arrested. Benjamin Poirier who was facing the death penalty ultimately agreed to plead guilty and was sentenced to life in prison.

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An Idaho man who shot and killed an 11-year-old boy will spend his life in prison.

An Ada County District judge sentenced Benjamin Poirier, 46, to life in prison after he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder as part of a plea agreement in October.

In March 2020, the Emmett man was arrested after he walked into a Horseshoe Bend trailer park and began shooting at a trailer, hitting and killing the 11-year-old boy. Police previously said Poirier was heard yelling about the end of the world before opening fire. He later tried to drive away, but he drove into the trailer and was arrested by a Boise County sheriff’s deputy nearby.

In return for his plea, Boise County prosecutors withdrew their intent to seek the death penalty. Initially, prosecutors sought capital punishment and argued that the killing was “especially heinous, atrocious or cruel, manifesting exceptional depravity.”

Poirier will have to pay $5,000 in restitution plus $245 in court fees, according to court records. He is currently in custody, as of Friday, at the Ada County Jail and will likely be transferred to an Idaho Department of Correction facility soon.

Jon Dufresne, who owned the mobile home park at the time of the shooting, previously told the Idaho Statesman the boy’s family had lived there for about three years. He described the family as “one of the best tenants in the entire park” and the boy as “one of the best kids in the entire school.”

“Nothing like this has ever happened in Horseshoe Bend,” Dufresne previously said. “I thought I was doing everything in my power to protect the children here, and then the worst possible thing happened

Benjamin Boirer Sentenced To Life

Troy Driver Charged In Naomi Irion Missing Case

Troy Driver Naomi Irion

Troy Driver has been charged in the missing person case of Naomi Irion. According to police reports Troy Driver has been arrested in the case of Naomi Irion who was reported missing two weeks ago in Nevada. Surveillence cameras from the area show Naomi Irion get into her vehicle when allegedly Troy Driver forced his way into the driver side of Irion vehicle. Three days later Naomi Irion vehicle was found abandoned. Troy Driver has been arrested in connection to the missing person case. Troy Driver is a convicted violent felon

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A 41-year-old Fallon man was taken into custody Friday evening for the kidnapping of 18-year-old Naomi Irion.

Troy Driver was taken into custody at a home off Alcorn Road by the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office just before 5 p.m. on March 25, 13 days after Irion disappeared from the Walmart parking lot in Fernley

Police also impounded a pickup truck they believed to be involved in the case. The truck is being searched for evidence.

As of Friday night, authorities continue to search for Irion. A second community search is still on for Saturday morning in Fernley, according to Irion’s family members.

Driver is being held on kidnapping charges. Police have not released any information about whether Driver knew Irion prior to the incident but her family members believe her kidnapping was planned.

https://mynews4.com/news/local/police-take-in-naomi-irion-kidnapping-suspect

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suspect in the kidnapping of a Fernley woman has been taken into custody by the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office and assisting agencies.

Troy Driver, 41, of Fallon was arrested Friday afternoon.

“We have also impounded a pickup truck that was possibly involved,” the sheriff’s office said in a Facebook post.

Authorities have been searching for Naomi Irion, 18, since she went missing on March 12. The sheriff’s office said Friday that they are still searching for her and will provide additional information as soon as possible.

Irion’s car was found but there was no social media or cellphone activity from her after a man entered her car in a Walmart parking lot where she planned to catch a bus to her job at a Reno-area Panasonic facility.

Surveillance video showed the man forcing his way into her car and driving away with her in the passenger seat.

https://elkodaily.com/news/state-and-regional/crime-and-courts/update-fallon-man-arrested-in-fernley-kidnapping/article_098fd2e1-fe4b-5581-927d-73d3c0c34b45.html

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The small town of Willits, Calif. was rocked in April of 1997 when several teenagers were implicated in the murder of a 19-year-old methamphetamine dealer.

According to the Ukiah Daily Journal, Paul Steven Rodriguez was killed after his 17-year-old girlfriend waited for him on a darkened road and shot him in the head with a shotgun.

According to reports, Alissa Marie Moore and two teenage boys staged a a vehicle breakdown on the road and waited for Rodriguez to appear. When he was looking under the hood of the vehicle, Moore came up behind him and shot him.

Carl Herbert Dulinksy, 19, and Troy Driver, 17, both of Willits, helped to dispose of the body in a nearby woods along with Rodriguez’s burned out vehicle. His remains were located two weeks later, and the three defendants were shortly taken into custody.

The murder of Rodriguez was one of several killings by youths that occurred in the area during the 90s, according to a Los Angeles Times article. Between 1993 and the murder of Rodriguez, six young people had been involved in slayings. Then, while the three teenagers were in custody awaiting trial, another two teenagers were arrested for killing a homeless man after throwing him off of a bridge.

In Aug. 1997, Driver pleaded guilty to being an accessory to murder after the fact, as well as three charges of second-degree robbery of a Ukiah Circle K convenience store and Chevron Service stations in Willits and Rohnert Park, Calif. He also pleaded guilty to second-degree burglary in connection with a break-in of a hardware store.

Driver was sentenced to 15 years in state prison for all of the crimes, and would have to serve 85 percent of his sentence, approximately 12 years.

Now, almost 25 years later, Troy Driver has been arrested again as a suspect in the abduction case of 18-year-old Naomi Irion in Fernley, Nevada.

Vine Link reported Driver’s full name as Troy Edward Driver, stating he was booked on Friday, March 25, 2022 at 8:28 p.m.

In a press release sent Friday, Lyon County Sheriff’s Office deputies stated that Troy Driver had been taken into custody and held on charges of kidnapping. The suspect truck had been impounded and taken into evidence, and law enforcement is still seeking Irion and information about her whereabouts.

Vinelink listed Troy Edward Driver as being 41, and a search of property records showed that he had addresses listed in Ukiah, Calif., Elko, NV and Fallon, NV. His first residence in Ukiah, Calif. was recorded in 2013, 15 years after he was sentenced to prison

https://www.carsonnow.org/story/03/26/2022/suspect-fernley-abduction-case-has-violent-criminal-history-california

Dionne Timms-Williams Teen Killer Murder Doctor

Dionne Timms-Williams

Dionne Timms-Williams was sixteen years old when she and two older men would beat to death Dr Gary Jenkins. According to court documents Dionne Timms-Williams, Jason Edwards, 26, and Lee Strickland, 36 would attack Dr. Gary Jenkins in a sickening attack where they accused the married father of 2 of being gay. The lethal trio would punch, kick and stomp on the doctor while screaming obscenities at him. According to police this teen killer and the two men purposely went to the park to rob gay men.

In the end the trio would be arrested and convicted. Dionne Timms-Williams was sentenced to life and has to serve 18 years before eligible for release and Jason Edwards and Lee Strickland were both sentenced to life and must serve 32 years before eligible for release

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Dressed in a black jacket and shorts with black socks pulled up to her knees Dionne Timms-Williams looked like just your regular teenager. Footage of her walking through a Cardiff street gave no suggestion she would go on to commit murder that night.

Having met with Jason Edwards and Lee Strickland in Queen Street the then 16-year-old made her way to Bute Park where she and her co-defendants were to target gay men to rob before setting their sights on Dr Gary Jenkins, 54. They proceeded to punch, kick, and stamp Dr Jenkins to death and left him – bloody, unconscious, and semi-naked – in the middle of the park before stealing his credit card and phone. They’ve now been locked up for a combined 84 years.

Dionne Timms-Williams and Edwards were seen kissing and embracing on CCTV moments after the attack in a sickening display of affection contrasting with the tortuous death Dr Jenkins had suffered at their hands. After leaving Edwards the teenager made her way to a garage to charge her phone and stayed the night with a friend.

Following her arrest she sought to pin the blame on Edwards and Strickland by claiming she was scared of them and was forced to take part in the savage beating of Dr Jenkins. But audio footage taken from a cafe from inside the park revealed the opposite.

Dionne Timms-Williams could be heard on the footage shouting at Dr Jenkins: “Money… now”. She also called him a “f****** pig, f****** d***” and was heard encouraging the others to hit the doctor as he lay defenceless on the floor. Following the attack she could be heard on the footage saying: “I needed that.” Before the attack took place she was heard saying: “If we’re staying in f****** Bute Park can we at least go and steal.”Dionne Timms-WilliamsTimms-Williams could be heard on the footage shouting at Dr Jenkins: “Money… now”. She also called him a “f****** pig, f****** d***” and was heard encouraging the others to hit the doctor as he lay defenceless on the floor. Following the attack she could be heard on the footage saying: “I needed that.” Before the attack took place she was heard saying: “If we’re staying in f****** Bute Park can we at least go and steal.”

Not much was known about Timms-Williams during the trial and she was granted anonymity by the court during the proceedings but upon her convictions of murder the reporting restriction was removed following representations by WalesOnline and other media outlets, which you can see more about here. The teenager was sentenced to life detention with a minimum of 18 years on Friday.

Timms-Williams, now 17, lived at Castle Close, Creigiau, with her mother at the time of the murder. The court heard she had been referred to adult mental health services when she was 14 years old for feelings of overwhelming anxiety and anger. She was also believed to have borderline personality disorder and had a history of self-harm.

n mitigation her barrister Caroline Rees QC said: “She was young but despite that there was a catalogue of difference in her background that has led to vulnerability. She experienced trauma that has led to alcohol and drug dependency and a liability to exploitation in certain respects.

“We submit there’s no evidence against her of homophobic intent. She herself had just emerged from a same-sex relationship and her conversation with [witness] Owain Hill about him being gay was not hostile or aggressive.”

The court was also told Timms-Williams had a caution in 2019 for possession of a bladed article. She will initially serve her sentence in a young offenders’ institute before being moved to an adult prison.

https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/smirking-teenage-killer-who-hurled-23506783

Kegan Kline Tied To The Delphi Murders

kegan kline delphi murders

The Delphi murders caught the Nation by storm and many are wondering when police in Indiana are going to arrest someone for the double murders and many are wondering if Kegan Kline is responsible. Kegan Kline is a twenty seven year old who was arrested in 2020 for over twenty felonies that include child exploitation, possession of child pornography, obstruction of justice and synthetic identity deception. Seems Kegan Kline was posing on Instagram using a fake name (Anthony Shots) and fake photos. In recently released interviews with Kegan Kline, which the Indiana Police swear on their little pinky they did not release, the predator would admit to talking to one of the girls Liberty German, who was 14 years old, the night before she was murdered.

Liberty German and her thirteen year old friend Abigail Williams would be brutally murdered on Valentines Day in 2017. Kegan Kline would try to explain that a number of people had access to the Anthony Shots Instagram account including his father. Kegan Kline has admitted to being a sexual predator as he purposely set up the Anthony Shots Instagram account to solicit nude photos from underage girls has always looked guilty when it comes to the murders of Abigal Williams and Liberty German however is he actually guilty is the question

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In August 2020, more than three years after Abigail Williams and Liberty German were found murdered in Delphi, Ind., Feb. 14, 2017, police questioned Kegan Kline about his conversations with one of the teenage girls the night before they were killed.

The interaction with Kline, believed by law enforcement to be associated with a fake social media profile “anthony_shots,” came while Liberty – called “Libby” –  was at a sleepover the night before the teenagers disappeared, according to Miami County court documents obtained by FOX59.

Kegan Kline, 27, remains in jail, facing 30 counts of child solicitation, child exploitation and possession of child porn. A court appearance is scheduled for April 14.

While Indiana State Police asked the public for any information regarding interactions with “anthony_shots,” Kline has not been charged in any crimes related to the murdered teens from Delphi

In the transcript, obtained by FOX59 from the podcast The Murder Sheet, police tell Kline they know he communicated with Libby and her friends at a sleepover the night before they disappeared. 

On Feb. 13, 2017, the Journal & Courier has reported, a man described as wearing blue jeans, a gray hoodie and blue coat forced the eighth-grade friends off the Monon High Bridge, east of Delphi.

A Shapchat video from Libby’s phone captured a man’s voice saying “Guys…down the hill.”  

The teenagers’ bodies were found Feb. 14, 2017, about a quarter mile from the bridge where they had crossed the murderer’s path

n August 2020, Indiana State Police questioned Kline about conversations he’d had with underage girls, including in the interrogation the name of Libby.

“Umm,” reads the transcript reported by FOX59, “you had told investigators umm and I know you say you don’t remember a girl that you ever talked to but I know you remember Liberty German?”

Kline’ response was “inaudible,” the transcript reads.

“Right and you know you talked to her and you admitted to talking to her? And …” the officer said.

“I don’t think I ever did though,” Kline reportedly states. “I think I talked to one of her friends like I told them.”

“You, you admitted you talked to her ..” Kline is asked.

HIs response is, again, “inaudible.”

” …for a few hours at a sleepover and then you blocked her because she was annoying You remember?”

“You’re right, yeah,” Kline states.

Later in the transcript, police question Kline about plans to meet Libby on the Monon High Bridge

“See I don’t remember ever saying to meet up with me though,” Kline said.

However, the officer questioning Kline referred to a message the defendant allegedly wrote to someone after he learned the girls had been murdered. On the fake account, “anthony_shots” writes, “Yeah, we were supposed to meet but she never showed up.”

Kline responded to that line of questioning with, “That’s a damn lie.” 

In the transcript, Kline is also questioned about why, after the teens were discovered murdered, that he’d searched on his phone media reports of the case. He says the searches are understandable since it’s one of the biggest murder cases in the state of Indiana.

In December 2021, detectives with the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office and Indiana State Police investigating the still unsolved murders reported they uncovered the online profile used to communicate with young girls. 

In the August 2020 transcript, police tell Kline they believe individuals other than Kline had access to “anthony_shots.” 

Kline told the police in the line of questioning he had given his password to that account to “a lot of people.” In another transcript given to FOX59 by The Murder Sheet, Kline tells Headline News on Dec. 9, 2021, that his father had access to the “anthony_shots” account.

In the HLN interview, FOX59 reported, Kline also said ISP reportedly told him “they knew it was my dad” that killed the teenagers

No one has been charged with their murders and police continue to seek clues.

If you have information on the Delphi murders, send your confidential tip to [email protected] or call 844-459-5786, 800-382-7537 or 765-564-2413.

https://www.indystar.com/story/news/local/lafayette/2022/03/25/delphi-murder-kegan-kline-interview-last-contact-liberty-german-tony-kline/7171377001/