Lust for killing-German doctor accused of killing 15 patients to satisfy murder urge

A Berlin-based doctor is facing charges for the murder of 15 palliative care patients in a chilling case prosecutors say was driven purely by a “lust for murder”, The Guardian reported. 

The 40-year-old, named as Johannes M. by German media, allegedly administered fatal doses of sedatives and muscle relaxants to patients aged between 25 and 94, causing rapid respiratory arrest.

The deaths occurred between September 2021 and July 2024. In several cases, prosecutors allege the doctor attempted to destroy evidence by setting fires in victims’ homes. One fire failed to ignite, and he reportedly called a relative, feigning concern.

On 8 July 2024, he is said to have killed two people just hours apart. In another incident, he called emergency services himself, falsely claiming he had tried to resuscitate the patient.

Initially arrested for manslaughter in four cases, the charges have since grown to 15 murders. “The accused appears to have had no motive... other than the act of killing itself,” said the prosecution.

Authorities are seeking a permanent medical ban and long-term preventative detention for the suspect. An investigation team is reviewing 395 additional cases, with 95 already under preliminary scrutiny.

Twelve bodies have been exhumed so far, five tied to the current charges. Another five exhumations are scheduled.

The case is drawing comparisons to a separate German trial where a nurse is accused of killing nine patients, allegedly to reduce workload and assert control.

Prosecutors have charged a Berlin palliative care doctor with the murder of 15 patients, alleging he acted out of a “lust” for killing.

The 40-year-old suspect is accused of killing 12 women and three men between September 2021 and July 2024 using a deadly cocktail of sedatives. German press reports identified the suspect as Johannes M, but prosecutors have not released a name.

The doctor allegedly “administered an anaesthetic and a muscle relaxant to his patients … without their knowledge or consent”, the Berlin prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

The relaxant “paralysed the respiratory muscles, leading to respiratory arrest and death within minutes”. The patients were between 25 and 94 years old.

On five occasions, prosecutors allege, the suspect “set fire to their apartments to cover up these killings”.

The suspect is accused of killing two patients on the same day. On the morning of 8 July 2024 he is alleged to have killed a 75-year-old man at his home in the central Berlin district of Kreuzberg. A few hours later he allegedly struck again, killing a 76-year-old woman in the neighbouring Neukölln district.

The suspect’s alleged attempt to incinerate the crime scene failed when the fire did not catch, prosecutors said. “When he noticed this, he reportedly informed a relative of the woman, claiming that he was standing in front of her apartment and that no one had responded to his ringing,” they said.

The list of accusations against the suspect has grown in length and severity since his initial arrest in August. The suspect was originally held on suspicion of manslaughter in relation to four deaths.

Prosecutors said in November they were treating the alleged killings as murder cases and added four more deaths to the list of accusations.

“The accused appears to have had no motive for killing the people other than the act of killing itself,” prosecutors said at the time. The suspect had nothing other than a “lust for murder”, they said.

The updated charge sheet, extended to cover 15 suspicious deaths, accuses the suspect of carrying out the murders with “malice aforethought”.

Prosecutors said they were seeking a lifelong professional ban and called for the suspect to be held in preventive detention.

A special team of investigators had identified a total of 395 suspicious cases that needed to be re-examined in light of the accusations against the doctor. In 95 cases, an initial suspicion had been confirmed and preliminary proceedings had been initiated. Another 75 were still being assessed.

In the course of the investigation, 12 exhumations have been carried out, five of which related to the victims listed in the charges. Another five exhumations are planned to go ahead shortly.

The allegations made against the doctor recall another case currently being tried in Germany, in which a nurse is accused of murdering nine patients in palliative care.

The nurse, whose trial opened in March, is alleged to have injected a total of 26 patients with large doses of sedatives or painkillers, resulting in the deaths of nine.

Prosecutors on the case, being heard in the western city of Aachen, said the suspect was motivated by a desire to reduce his workload on night shifts and had considered himself the “master of life and death”.

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The world’s most powerful man is using his office to punish journalistic organisations that won’t follow his orders or who report critically on his policies. Donald Trump’s actions against the press include bans, lawsuits and hand-picking his own pool of reporters. 

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Our job is to make sure we do not get overwhelmed as Trump floods the zone. We must focus on the stories that will make the biggest impact on people’s lives, while holding the powerful to account. We’ll also continue to focus on the ideas people need to create a better world: a reason for hope. 

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