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Efren Saldivar

 
Wikipedia: Efren Saldivar
Efren Saldivar

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Background information
Birth name: Efren Saldivar
Born: September 30, 1969
Brownsville, Texas
Killings
Number of victims: six confirmed; confessed to fifty
Span of killings: 1988–1998
Country: U.S.
State(s): California

Efren Saldivar (born September 30, 1969) is an American serial killer who murdered patients while working as a respiratory therapist.

Contents

Early life

Efren Saldivar was born in Brownsville, Texas, and graduated from the College of Medical and Dental Careers in North Hollywood, California in 1988. He obtained work as a respiratory therapist employed by the Glendale Adventist Medical Center, working the night shift when there were fewer staff on duty.

Murders

He killed his patients by injecting a paralytic drug which led to respiratory and/or cardiac arrest. These drugs could have included Morphine and Suxamethonium chloride as they were found in his locker with fresh and used syringes.[1] Pancuronium (brand name Pavulon) definitely was used in six murders;[2] this drug is used to stop a patient's respiration when they are about to be put on a medical ventilator. He was careful in the selection of his victims, choosing those who were unconscious and close to death. This led to no easily detectable rise in the rate or distribution of patient deaths when he was on duty. This in turn hampered the investigation, as there were no easily discernible correlations between changes in the distribution or rate of deaths and his shift pattern (a commonly used tool in examining whether malpractice is taking place).

His medical employment was ended on March 13, 1998. Shortly afterward, he confessed to 50 murders (a confession he later retracted). In searching for evidence that would be strong enough to obtain a court conviction, the police exhumed the remains of patients who had died while Saldivar had been on duty and been buried (rather than cremated). The marker that was being sought was unusually high levels of Pancuronium in the cadaver, as this drug remains identifiable for many months (unlike succinylcholine chloride and morphine which are decomposed into innocuous compounds relatively rapidly).

After 20 exhumations, six cadavers had evidence of a lethal concentration of Pancuronium. On March 12, 2002 Saldivar pleaded guilty to those six counts of murder and received six consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole.

Number of victims

The former head of the respiratory care department at Loma Linda University, Tom Malinowski, led the internal investigation by Adventist Health.

References


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