But what of the actual killer of Margot Bamborough, nurse Janice Beattie? There are certainly plenty of killer nurses out there, (here’s a list of 18) but a surprisingly high number are male and, of the women, most seem to “specialize” in either infant or geriatric patients, rather than kill non-patients and family members, as Janice did.
However, I came across one female serial killer who seems to be a good match for Troubled Blood’s Janice. Meet Nannie Doss, AKA the “Giggling Granny.” Born in Alabama in 1906, she would eventually confess to killing four of her five husbands via arsenic poisoning, reportedly laughing merrily to the police as she described her crimes. In addition, she is thought to have been responsible for the sudden deaths of multiple family members, including two of her daughters, two grandchildren, a sister, a mother and a mother-in-law. Convicted in Oklahoma, she was originally sentenced to death, but later spared the death penalty after being judged insane. She died of natural causes, in jail, in 1965.
Unlike Janice, Nannie did not have medical training, nor did she use the many varied toxins that Janice employed to make the deaths look natural, instead sticking to arsenic. However, she certainly physically resembles the description of Janice:
The naturally upturned corners of the nurse’s mouth and the dimples in her full cheeks gave her a cheerful look even when she wasn’t smiling.
In addition, there are multiple other similarities:
- Both were raised by abusive fathers, but reportedly had kind mothers.
- Both suffered head injuries as children, which left them with recurrent headaches. Both attributed their later actions to the early brain damage.
- Janice collected and saved newspaper clippings and obituaries; Nannie was obsessed with romance magazines and lonely hearts columns.
- Both preyed on family members, killing or attempting to kill spouse (or equivalents), children and grandchildren.
- Nannie’s first husband left her after two daughters died of “food poisoning,” and he was warned, anonymously, not to eat anything she cooked. He was the only husband to survive. This is not unlike Margot warning Steve Douthwaite away from food Janice offered him. Like Mr. Beattie, Nannie’s claimed to fear for his life, but inexplicably left one of his children behind with her.
- Both used primarily poison, but occasionally killed through different means. Janice drowned Julie Wilkes; Nannie is believed to have stabbed one newborn grandchild with a hatpin, and smothered another.
- Both, when finally caught, were reportedly happy at the thought of going to jail.
- Both wound up with “Granny” in their criminal nicknames: “Giggling Granny” and “Poisoner Granny.”
Fact is often stranger than fiction. A final picture of Nannie Doss smiling her way through the police interview.
*AKA “that guy in America who made his wife call him on an intercom before he’d let her into the garage”
No comments:
Post a Comment