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  1. Oct 27, 2023 · Richard Angelo was held in Suffolk County Jail for over a year awaiting his trial. He was offered bail of $50,000 but declined to pay it, as he feared for his safety due to how high profile the case had become. The trial lasted 8 weeks, and on the 14th December , Angelo was found guilty of charges including second degree murder, second degree ...

    • Background and Early Life
    • First Hospital Job
    • Playing Hero
    • Something to Feel Better
    • Taped Confession
    • Multiple Personalities?
    • Sentenced to 61 Years

    Born on August 29, 1962, in West Islip, New York, Richard Angelo was the only child of Joseph and Alice Angelo. The Angelos worked in the educational sector - Joseph was a high school guidance counselor and Alice taught home economics. Richard's childhood years were unremarkable. Neighbors described him as a nice boy with nice parents. After gradua...

    Angelo's first job as a registered nurse was in the burn unit at the Nassau County Medical Center in East Meadow. He stayed there a year, then took a position at Brunswick Hospital in Amityville, Long Island. He left that position to move to Florida with his parents, but returned to Long Island alone, three months later, and began working at Good S...

    Richard Angelo quickly established himself as a highly competent and well-trained nurse. His calm demeanor was well fitted for the high stress of working the graveyard shift in an intensive care unit. He gained the trust of the doctors and other hospital personnel, but that wasn't enough for him. Unable to achieve the level of praise he desired in ...

    Angelo, apparently not swayed by his inability to keep his victims alive, continued injecting patients with a combination of the paralyzing drugs, Pavulon and Anectine, sometimes telling the patient that he was giving them something which would make them feel better. Soon after administering the deadly cocktail, the patients would begin to feel num...

    Angelo eventually confessed to authorities, telling them during a taped interview, "I wanted to create a situation where I would cause the patient to have some respiratory distress or some problem, and through my intervention or suggested intervention or whatever, come out looking like I knew what I was doing. I had no confidence in myself. I felt ...

    His lawyers fought to prove that Angelo suffered from dissociative identity disorder, which meant he was able to disassociate himself completely from the crimeshe committed and was unable to realize the risk of what he had done to the patients. In other words, he had multiple personalities which he could move in and out of, unaware of the actions o...

    Angelo was convicted of two counts of depraved indifference murder (second-degree murder), one count of second-degree manslaughter, one count of criminally negligent homicide and six counts of assault with respect to five of the patients and was sentenced to 61 years to life.

    • Charles Montaldo
  2. His mother was an economics teacher, and his father was a high school guidance counselor for the Lindenhurst school district on Long Island. He graduated from St. John the Baptist Diocesan High School in 1980 and then entered a two-year nursing program at Farmingdale State College , where he was a well-regarded honor student .

  3. Richard Angelo, a.k.a. "The Angel of Death", is a convicted Angel of Death-type serial killer who poisoned at least six people in 1987. Angelo was born on August 29, 1962. His parents were both working in the educational system, his mother being an economics teacher, his father a high-school guidance counselor. Suffering from Hero Syndrome, he became an Eagle Scout and later, after graduating ...

  4. Early life. Angelo was born on August 29, 1962, to parents who were both working in education. His mother was an economics teacher, and his father was a high school guidance counselor for the Lindenhurst school district on Long Island.

  5. Nov 26, 1989 · LEAD: Since Oct. 19, when Richard J. Angelo, a former nurse, went on trial on charges of murdering four patients and assaulting three others at Good Samaritan Hospital in West Islip two years ago ...

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  7. Mar 21, 2018 · Cunanan's father—whose real name was Modesto but went by "Pete" in America—returned to the U.S. from the Phillippines after his son committed suicide. (He had fled the country after being ...