Serial Homicide Module 3 - CHAP 6 Flashcards
This offender was known as a reclusive individual who seldom spoke to his neighbors. His co-workers knew him as a man with a quick temper who sometimes threw medical charts and slammed his fist on counters or walls when summoned by patients. Patients were known to refuse meds because of their aversion to him.
a. Wayne Bleyle
b. John Riems
c. Harold Shipman
d. Donald Harvey
b. John Riems
Which of the following IS NOT true regarding euthanasia?
a. It is still a crime in most states.
b. It originated in Asia.
c. It involves a medical provider trying to ease the suffering of a patient.
d. It involves a medical provider believing that letting a person die or assisting them in dying demonstrates mercy for the patient.
b. It originated in Asia.
Yorker, et al., identified some typical scenarios in serial murder of patients by healthcare providers. Which is not typical?
a. the presence of a common injectable substance in post mortem
b. deaths that cluster on the night shift
c. epidemiologic studies linking presence of a specific care provider to increased likelihood of death
d. the sexual assault of the patient
d. the sexual assault of the patient
- According to Yorker, et al., what is the most common way to kill?
a. injections
b. pills
c. inhalants
d. suppositories
a. injections
- According to Yorker, et al., where do most healthcare-related murders occur?
a. in hospital settings
b. in patients’ homes
c. in local clinics
d. in ambulances
a. in hospital settings
- In their study of 90 cases of serial murder, Yorker, et al., found that 86 percent of their cases involved nursing personnel and that women were involved in ____ percent of the cases.
a. 82
b. Less than 30
c. 55
d. 49
c. 55
- What was Heinrich Gross also known as?
a. Dr. Grotesque
b. Dr. Death
c. Dr. Golem
d. Dr. Vomit
d. Dr. Vomit
- Which of the following is not true regarding Harold Shipman?
a. He came from a wealthy aristocratic background.
b. His father was a lorry driver.
c. His family lived in a small house in Nottingham.
d. His mother died sitting in her armchair.
a. He came from a wealthy aristocratic background.
- Harold Shipman was convicted of killing how many victims?
a. Between 200 and 300.
b. 23
c. 15
d. Less than 10
b. 23
- What are healthcare providers who murder often diagnosed with?
a. bipolar disorder
b. major depressive disorder
c. body dysmorphic disorder
d. Munchausen syndrome
d. Munchausen syndrome
- What sorts of murders are trademarks of place-specific killers?
a. dutiful, regular, and methodical
b. violent and gory
c. feature well-hidden corpses
d. have victims who are the same sex
a. dutiful, regular, and methodical
- How did the Third Reich refer to children with defective genes?
a. useless citizens
b. white inferiority
c. white liars
d. useless eaters
d. useless eaters
- This killer managed to avoid punishment and was even awarded prestigious honors for his research. He became an expert on the pathology of mental illness and, after the war, lectured and became an expert court witness in thousands of criminal cases.
a. Charles Cullen
b. Wayne Bleyle
c. Efren Saldivar
d. Heinrich Gross
d. Heinrich Gross
- The Yorker study found that most healthcare providers who committed murders came from which states?
a. Illinois, Kentucky, and Florida
b. California, Hawaii, Florida, and Georgia
c. New York, Alabama, California, and Illinois
d. California, Texas, Michigan, and Florida
d. California, Texas, Michigan, and Florida
- What is one area that geographic profiling is not designed to address?
a. gender-specific murder
b. place-specific murder
c. disorder-specific murder
d. character-specific murder
b. place-specific murder