Michael Swango
Authorities suspect Michael Swango, 43, may have poisoned and
killed as many as 60 patients under his care over the past 10 years when he
worked in Ohio, Quincy, Massachusetts, Virginia, South Dakota, New York and
Zimbabwe. In all these places the affable doctor had been suspected in a number
of deaths and sudden illnesses. Although he was never charged in connection with
any, he was either fired or left his respective jobs while under a cloud of
suspicion.
Authorities became aware of alleged career as a "Angel of Death" in 1984 when he
worked in Quincy, Illinois, as a paramedic. As with others in his line of
mayhem, many of his co-workers complained that they became ill every time he
brought them food or drinks such as doughnuts, cool drinks or iced tea. When one
of his colleagues found ant poison mixed with sugar among Swango's belongings,
police went to search his home.
There they found "how-to" books on homemade weapons and mass destruction as well
as books on the occult, several guns, bottles with different concentrations of
ant poison, a range of insecticides and rodent killers; and castor beans, from
which the almost untraceable poison, ricin, can be obtained. He was tried,
convicted and sentenced to five-years' jail for aggravated battery because none
of his colleagues had died from the poisonings. "I don't think he intended to
kill them," said Judge Dennis Cashman. "I think he wanted to take them to the
edge of death. They were like a lab experiment."
While he was serving his sentence, investigators combed the Ohio State
University Hospital in Columbus, where Swango had been a medical intern. Nurses
told investigators that they had become suspicious because he was seen in
several patients' rooms right before they died unexpectedly. "I do not think the
evidence was clear one way or the other. I am glad he is not here," said Ohio
State University's Larry Carey.
Swango was paroled in 1987 after serving two-and-a-half years of his five-year
sentence. Curiously, after leaving prison he continued his career in the health
care business with increasingly lethal results. He hopped from job to job and
was fired at least three times after he was suspected of wrongdoing or someone
learned about his past.
In the early 1990s Swango landed a job at a State University of New York
hospital. There, Federal of Bureau Investigation agents investigated 147
patients Swango treated and died. Autopsies were performed on several former
patients, but the results were inconclusive. By 1993 -- as police started
piecing together his poisenous path -- he dissapeared to re-emerge in Zimbabwe.
There he worked at a rural hospital where he was suspended after five patients
under his care died in suspicious circumstances.
After his suspension he travelled to South Africa, the modern mecca for serial
killings, where he contacted Saudi Arabian health authorities, who offered him a
job. Finally in July, 1997, Swango was arrested when he re-entered the United
States to pick up a visa en route to his job as a physician in Saudi Arabia.
Though he has been arrested for relatively minor fraud charges and illegally
prescribing narcotics to patients, authorities hope to uncover enough evidence
to expose him as a vicous serial killer.