Editing Colin Norris
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Norris was found guilty of four counts of murder and once count of attempted murder by a majority verdict of 11 - 1 on 3 March 2008. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and ordered to serve at least 30 years at HMP Frankland. Norris appealed his conviction in 2009 arguing that the judge at his trial had misdirected the jury and that the deaths could have been coincidental or caused by another nurse, but the Court of Appeal upheld his conviction. He continues to claim his innocence and insulin poisoning expert Vincent Marks has supported Norris, arguing that 1 in 10 of all hypoglycaemic episodes in elderly patients occur naturally and that all five victims were at high risk of suffering natural hypoglycaemic attacks. However, the insulin in the bodies of Hall and Bourke did not contain c-peptides, which is contained in all naturally-produced insulin, and for five non-diabetic elderly people to suffer hypoglycaemic attacks in the same two hospitals within a few months is considered statistically unlikely. The 2011 documentary ''A Jury in the Dark'' also supported Norris and suggested that the victims had died from auto-immune syndrome, a claim conclusively discounted by medical experts during the investigation. The Criminal Case Review Commission investigated Norris' claims of innocence in February 2021 and concluded that, while it was possible for most of the victims to have experienced natural hypoglycaemic episodes, "there is no dispute that [Ethel Hall] was murdered by injection of insulin". Norris remains imprisoned at HMP Frankland. | Norris was found guilty of four counts of murder and once count of attempted murder by a majority verdict of 11 - 1 on 3 March 2008. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and ordered to serve at least 30 years at HMP Frankland. Norris appealed his conviction in 2009 arguing that the judge at his trial had misdirected the jury and that the deaths could have been coincidental or caused by another nurse, but the Court of Appeal upheld his conviction. He continues to claim his innocence and insulin poisoning expert Vincent Marks has supported Norris, arguing that 1 in 10 of all hypoglycaemic episodes in elderly patients occur naturally and that all five victims were at high risk of suffering natural hypoglycaemic attacks. However, the insulin in the bodies of Hall and Bourke did not contain c-peptides, which is contained in all naturally-produced insulin, and for five non-diabetic elderly people to suffer hypoglycaemic attacks in the same two hospitals within a few months is considered statistically unlikely. The 2011 documentary ''A Jury in the Dark'' also supported Norris and suggested that the victims had died from auto-immune syndrome, a claim conclusively discounted by medical experts during the investigation. The Criminal Case Review Commission investigated Norris' claims of innocence in February 2021 and concluded that, while it was possible for most of the victims to have experienced natural hypoglycaemic episodes, "there is no dispute that [Ethel Hall] was murdered by injection of insulin". Norris remains imprisoned at HMP Frankland. | ||
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