A nurse and a healthcare worker have been found guilty of unlawfully drugging patients – amid allegations they did so for their own amusement and an easy life.
Catherine Hudson, 54, and Charlotte Wilmot, 48, ill-treated those in their care on a stroke unit at Blackpool Victoria Hospital in Lancashire between February 2017 and November 2018, Preston Crown Court heard.
Hudson was found guilty of ill-treating two patients. Both women were found guilty of conspiracy to ill-treat a patient by administering sedatives.
Image: Catherine Hudson. Pic: Lancashire Police
They faced a total of nine counts concerning five patients, with Hudson found not guilty of three counts.
Wilmot was also found guilty of encouraging Hudson to sedate a patient, while Hudson was found guilty of theft of the drug Mebeverine – used to treat irritable bowel syndrome.
She pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to conspiring with other colleagues to steal other drugs including Zopilcone and also a further offence of perverting the course of justice. Wilmot had also pleaded guilty to conspiring to steal medication from the hospital.
Image: The pair pleaded guilty to conspiring to steal drugs. Pic: Lancashire Police
A police investigation was launched after a student nurse on a work placement told authorities she saw Hudson give unprescribed Zopiclone, a sleeping pill said to be potentially life-threatening if given inappropriately, to a patient in November 2018.
The student nurse also said Hudson commented: “Well she’s got a DNAR (do not attempt resuscitation) in place so she wouldn’t be opened up if she died or like if it came to any harm.”
Prosecutors said messages exchanged between Hudson, an experienced Band 5 registered nurse, and Wilmot, a Band 4 assistant practitioner, revealed a “culture of abuse”.
The women will be sentenced on 13 and 14 December. Hudson was remanded into custody, while Wilmot is set to be granted bail.
The verdicts were reached after nearly 14 hours of deliberation.
Image: Aileen Scott was one of the patients who was unlawfully sedated. Pic: Lancashire Police
Brian Scott, the son of Aileen Scott, one of the patients Hudson was found guilty of ill-treating, said some of the women’s actions were “absolute pure evil”.
“My mum had a haemorrhagic stroke and was paralysed. She was no nuisance to nurses in that hospital. She couldn’t do anything and she relied on them for their care and support,” he said.
“It’s been a long five years. I know some families didn’t see the outcome they were hoping for today and my thoughts are with all of them. However, justice has been done and I hope this is a message to the NHS that substandard treatment of patients is unacceptable. And to all the nurses who do a fantastic job, I do applaud you and I thank you.
“My mum’s still not well at this time, but she’s delighted to hear that justice has been done – it’s a great outcome.
“These nurses have left my mum fearful of going into hospital and it’s had a major impact on her.”
Mr Scott said “nothing could ever prepare you” for hearing the text messages sent between the nurses.
“Hearing how they have spoken about patients who are people and it’s not in jest, it’s absolute pure evil and each and every one of them involved in this will hopefully hang their heads in shame – that they’ll reflect on the impact that they’ve had on vulnerable people who needed their care the most.”
Image: Charlotte Wilmot (left) and Catherine Hudson
Jill Johnston, detective chief inspector at Lancashire Police, thanked the student nurse who reported Hudson and Wilmot to authorities, saying that she was “so brave in coming forward and supporting this lengthy investigation”.
“Both of them were experienced healthcare professionals. Both of them knew the risks. The risks of giving non-prescribed and inappropriate sedatives to elderly and poorly patients who had suffered a stroke.
“They knew the risks but they simply didn’t care. Catherine Hudson said if any of the patients come to any harm, not to worry, because there’ll be no post-mortem, no investigation and in essence nobody would ever know. She and others joked about taking these secrets with them to the grave.”
Prosecutor Peter Wright told the jury the healthcare workers treated patients with “contempt” rather than “care and compassion”.
“They considered them, or some of them, to be an imposition, an irritation,” he said.
“Patients were ill-treated. They were sedated either for the amusement of these defendants or simply to keep them quiet and to make their life easier, and their work less onerous or arduous.
“The risks to the patients were obvious, but we say they didn’t care.
“They thought it was amusing. It was something which they would brag about or share as a joke on social media and with other members of staff who shared their particular brand of humour.”
He said WhatsApp messages sent between the pair were uncovered after a probe was launched into alleged misconduct at the hospital.
In one exchange about an elderly male patient, Hudson wrote: “I’m going to kill bed 5 xxx.”
Image: WhatsApp messages uncovered during a probe
Wilmot replied: “Pmsl [p***ing myself laughing] well tonight sedate him to high heaven lol xxx.”
Hudson said: “Already in my head to give him double !!”
The next evening Hudson messaged Wilmot: “If bed 5 starts he will b getting sedated to hell pmsfl. I’ll get u the abx [anti-biotic] xxx”.
Jurors were told Hudson also bragged about sedating another female patient, who was profoundly brain damaged, to a healthcare assistant when she wrote: “I sedated on(e) of them to within an inch of her life lol. Bet she’s flat for a week haha xxx.”
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DCI Jill Johnston: ‘Both nurses knew the risk’
On the following day she asked Wilmot about the same patient, writing: “What’s bed 29 been doing today pmsfl. Not a f***ing lot I bet!! Seeing as I sedated her on sat and sun lol lol xxx.”
Wilmot replied: “Yeahhhh I knew it, everything you gave her has started working today!!!! made for a nice day though, it ain’t been bad lol. Xxx.”
Hudson responded: “She was driving me mad , so it was pxd [prescribed] and had to b done lol . She needed the rest xxx.”
Mother-of-three Hudson denied inappropriately giving any drugs and said the text conversations were “just banter” to relieve the stresses of the job.
She told jurors the unit was understaffed to a “completely dangerous level” for years and that medication was “scattered around” and freely available.
Hudson said the “whole ward was corrupt” and that “95% of the staff” would take medication from the unit. Some would use them on duty and “regrettably” she eventually stole drugs, she said.
Wilmot, who was dismissed by her employers in 2020, said she had not been qualified to administer medications, had never given sleeping tablets to patients for an “easy life” or witnessed anyone else doing so.
The NHS trust the women worked for apologised to the patients, their families and other colleagues after the verdict.
Trish Armstrong-Child, chief executive of Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, said: “It is very clear from the evidence heard by the jury that inappropriate and unacceptable conduct and practices were taking place at the time.
“It’s important now to reassure local people that Blackpool Teaching Hospitals has made significant improvements across a range of issues including staffing, managing medicine and creating a more respectful culture.”
Image: Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich. Pic: AP
Bezalel Smotrich is Israel’s far-right finance minister, a Jewish settler and someone who has denied the existence of Palestinians as a people.
He has most recently said “not a grain of wheat” should be allowed to enter Gaza, saying it will be “entirely destroyed” and its people should be encouraged to leave in great numbers to go to other countries.
Image: Mr Smotrich. File pic
Itamar Ben-Gvir, the country’s far-right national security minister, was once convicted of supporting a Jewish terrorist organisation and advocated the expulsion of Palestinians from their lands.
Image: Mr Ben Gvir. File pic: AP
Their critics will say their sanctioning has been a long time coming, is largely symbolic, and will achieve little.
The British government singles out Israel’s conduct in the West Bank as grounds for its action against the two men.
Extremist Jewish settlers have run rampant across the occupied territories under Benjamin Netanyahu‘s government, with 1,900 recorded acts of violence against Palestinians since January last year.
Image: Benjamin Netanyahu. File pic: The Yomiuri Shimbun/AP
The Netanyahu government has approved a record number of new Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Under international law, all settlements on occupied land are illegal.
Israel described the sanctions as unacceptable and outrageous.
However, critics will wonder why the Israeli prime minister is not sanctioned himself for keeping two such deeply controversial figures in his government.
There is, though, a good reason for keeping them.
Without them, his fragile coalition would almost certainly fall from power. The price for that though is only increasing.
Police have released video footage of the alleged killer of a 14-year-old boy unboxing a samurai sword and calling the weapon “freaking sexy”.
Marcus Monzo, 37, denies murdering teenager Daniel Anjorin and attempting to kill four others during a 20-minute rampage in Hainault, east London, on 30 April last year.
Jurors at the Old Bailey have been shown a four-minute video clip from 4 April, which was recovered from his iPhone after his arrest.
The Spanish-Brazilian national, from Newham in east London, appears to be reviewing a sword he says was “handmade in Japan” and “took more than a month to reach me”.
Image: Monzo says sword is ‘freaking sexy’. Pic: Metropolitan Police/PA
Dressed in a yellow hoodie, black shorts, toe socks and flipflops, and wearing headphones, he is standing on black mats next to a ginger cat he calls the “Wizard”.
A martial arts-style punching bag and another sword on a skateboard can be seen in the background.
“This just came through… Ninja stuff,” he says before opening a long box containing a sword. “So I’m sort of obliged to do some ninja stuff with the Wizard.”
Monzo also says “freaking sexy” and “ooh” as he lunges and makes different moves with the sheathed sword.
The court has previously heard Monzo was a “talented martial artist”.
Prosecutors said he “killed and skinned” his cat before driving his grey Ford Transit van at speed into pedestrian Donato Iwule.
Image: Daniel Anjorin was killed in attack. Pic: Metropolitan Police.
He then struck him in the neck with the same weapon used to kill Daniel, who suffered “essentially a near-decapitation”, the jury was earlier told.
PC Yasmin Mechem-Whitfield was also repeatedly struck with the 60cm blade, before Monzo entered a nearby house and attacked a couple inside, then struck another police officer, it is alleged.
Monzo has pleaded guilty to two counts of possessing an offensive weapon – a katana sword and a tanto katana sword.
He denies charges of murder, attempted murder, wounding with intent, aggravated burglary and possession of a bladed article.
A crime gang who made “assassination kits” containing handguns and silencers were busted after an extensive police investigation.
Four men are awaiting sentence after armed officers swooped on the operation and discovered tools and machinery for making viable firearms.
Ronald Knowles, of Milton Avenue in Alfreton, Derbyshire, acquired blank-firing handguns and ammunition, which he then altered so they could fire live bullets.
Image: Each ‘assassination kit’ contained a handgun, silencer, magazine and ammunition wrapped in latex gloves. Pic: Nottinghamshire Police
Police say he was part of a “well-established and far-reaching criminal enterprise”.
Gary Hardy, of The Birches, Ravenshead, Nottinghamshire, organised and controlled the supply of these “assassination kits”, police said.
Each kit was individually packaged containing a handgun, silencer, magazine and ammunition wrapped in latex gloves.
These were then sent to Steven Houston, of Breach Oak Lane, Corley, Warwickshire, who supplied these weapons to members of the criminal underworld.
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Image: Pic: Nottinghamshire Police
These included a known criminal, Jason Hill, of Derby Road, Risley, Derbyshire. Officers raided Hill’s house where they found two handguns, two silencers and ammunition in a safe hidden in the garden.
“They were creating, packaging, and distributing firearms that were designed to kill, there is no doubt about this,” Detective Chief Inspector Mark Adas, from Nottinghamshire Police, said, adding that evidence revealed at least 33 firearms had been manufactured in Knowles’ factory.
“Each handgun had been threaded to fit a silencer, which allowed the gun to be used discreetly at close quarters, meaning any potential targets would be lucky to escape with their lives.”
Each assassination kit included 10 rounds of converted ammunition and the seizure of more than 800 blank firing rounds and nearly 800 lead pellets indicated the group had the potential to supply up to 80 further firearms packages.
DCI Adas said the men had no idea police were “tracing their every step” to build a case against them.
“The full impact of this investigation will never be seen – that’s because we are unable to count the number of lives we may have saved,” he added.
Image: Ronald Knowles dropped a bag to his side containing an unconverted handgun, ammunition, and a throwing star, police say. Pic: Nottinghamshir
In August 2023, after lengthy investigation, police stopped a vehicle in Measham, Leicestershire. Inside, they found a white box containing four of the “assassination kits”.
Detectives linked the guns to both Hardy and Knowles and swooped on Knowles’ property, where they say he was found in his back garden setting fire to evidence.
Knowles, 64, pleaded guilty to conspiracy with others to sell or transfer a firearm, conspiracy to possess a firearm with intent to endanger life or enable another person to do so, and conspiracy with others to convert a thing into a firearm.
Hardy, 61, was found guilty of conspiracy with others to sell or transfer a firearm, conspiracy to possess a firearm with intent to endanger life or enable another person to do so, and conspiracy with others to convert a thing into a firearm.
Houston, 64, was found guilty of conspiracy with others to sell or transfer a firearm, conspiracy to possess a firearm with intent to endanger life or enable another person to do so, and conspiracy with others to convert a thing into a firearm.
Hill, 23, pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm with intent by means thereof to endanger life or to enable another person by means thereof to endanger life.