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Blind Eye: The Terrifying Story Of A Doctor Who Got Away With Murder (2000)

Blind Eye: The Terrifying Story Of A Doctor Who Got Away With Murder (2000)

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Rating
3.7 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0684865637 (ISBN13: 9780684865638)
Language
English
Publisher
simon & schuster

About book Blind Eye: The Terrifying Story Of A Doctor Who Got Away With Murder (2000)

Sometimes people placed in positions of public trust turn out to be the bad guys - rogue cops, pedophile teachers, baby-stealing nurses. When we hear stories about these individuals, perhaps we pause a minute in wonder or just pass it off as a failure somewhere in The System.What we don't often hear about is a doctors. Except for patient fondling by a few dentists and a handful of shrinks, doctors enjoy a pretty respected position high above other trusted figures. Maybe it's the commitment to so many grueling hours of school - who would risj all that? Or perhaps the bad ones wash out early and find other, easier professions.So when one hears about a doctor who not only kills patients, but kills them at random, and then hides behind his position of trust and service, it seems particularly evil.James B. Stewart, the Pulitzer Prize winner, hunted down enough dirt on Dr. Michael Swango to put together a complete and scary book. Blind Eye takes the reader through Swango's early years in high school through a career as a physician-serial killer. If H.H. Holmes (see Depraved by Harold Schechter) was America's first serial killer, Michael Swango could very well our most prolific. And both were physicians, curiously.Stewart's estimate that Swango killed 60 people. This beats out Donald "the Angel of Death" Harvey, the Cincinnati nurse's aid who admitted to killing 52 people over his 16-year career; Henry Lee Lucas, a hero of Swango's evidently, who claims as many as 600 murders (police deny this is possible); and even Ted Bundy, thought the count of 26 victims is considered very conservative.What makes Stewart's book so good, though, isn't the "ooh, isn't this gory" aspect, but rather his excellent research and tight writing that puts the reader there. You see "Dr. Mike" injecting lethal poison into the IV lines of his trusting patients. You see him denying involvement in tampering with food his co-workers later become violently ill from eating. The guy is scary.He describes what I'd call the White Wall of Silence. Like the Blue one the cops enjoy, it appears that doctors build an even higher, more impenetrable one. And it's this that allows Swango to go on practicing as a doctor in one state after another until he's finally brought down.Read this book. It's sobering and riveting.

About this guy who went to Med School and everything, apparently so that he'd have an excuse to kill people (usually poisoning by injecting stuff into their Ivs). An interesting thought experiment about how to balance catching those in the medical community who do this vs protecting hospitals etc from lawsuit. Except the author goes a little too far in his ex post facto about how everyone should have caught onto this guy. The really surprising thing is that even after he gets caught, he is still able to get jobs in the medical community. Poison seems to be particularly hard to prove beyond reasonable doubt. It goes on a little longer than seems necessary (which is not so much the author's fault as it is the fault of the various medical and law enforcement communities that let him go somewhere else). He's currently (as of the book's writing) in jail for fraud because nobody can actually prove murder. There's also a little too much about the psychology of a serial killer, which sounded awfully fuzzy. He could have done more talking about what's going on legally about this. He does some, but I don't have a good feel for it. (Which may be my fault because my listening was so segmented in time.)Really 3.5

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An interesting book about a terrible person. I'd like to think that a Swango wouldn't get nearly so far in today's system and feel reasonably confident that would be the case. I spend most of my time in hospitals, and I think that the wall described in the book between nurses and doctors isn't quite so high anymore. Amazed that was able to get three residencies, and how little communication between programs there was. Saddest part, I thought, was (view spoiler)[that his fiance killed herself. He obviously was not a healthy person to be around (physically or emotionally) and I found it tragic that her story ended the way it did. So sad. (hide spoiler)]
—Brad

Fascinating story about an oddball misfit who somehow got into medical school, remained weird and aloof, began killing patients in ways that allowed him to be there pronouncing time of death, but just keeps getting away with it. Most troubling and revealing was the way that the medical school stymied the investigative and reporting efforts of the few students who gradually became convinced "Dr. Death" (as they'd nicknamed him) was killing patients. What had tipped the students off was the man's complete lack of compassion or even interest in patients. All he seemed interested in was the dead and dying, even taking an extra job as an EMT because he got such a rush from arriving on the scene of horrible accidents or murders. His fellow EMTS likewise grew suspicious, but it was years before justice caught up with the man.The fact that this is a true story just makes it that much scarier. Besides the murdering, this is an excellent picture of a man who conned everyone and used people, somehow hiding his utter disregard for them on any level other than what they could do for him. Interesting indictment of the "thin white line" of the medical community and its tendency to protect its own.
—Steven

Bayangkanlah seorang dokter muda yang tampan tapi berpembawaan diam bekerja di rumah sakit tempat Anda dirawat atau bahkan bekerja. Bayangkan saja jika kemudian--entah hanya kebetulan ataukah ada kaitannya--, bersamaan dengan kedatangan dokter muda tampan ini, jumlah kematian mendadak di RS Anda itu melonjak. Bayangkan saja apa rasanya Anda akan pura-pura tidak khawatir, pura-pura tidak gelisah, atau malah paranoid? Bayangkan amarah yang mungkin bisa Anda rasakan ketika hari ini mendapati kerabat Anda dirawat di RS tersebut, sudah membaik dan nyaris sehat, tapi kemudian tiba-tiba meninggal. Bayangkan saja.Saya sendiri bisa membayangkan ketakutan yang mungkin akan saya rasakan jika berada di RS tersebut. Mungkin juga saya sudah membayangkan ini terlalu berlebihan untuk bisa jadi nyata, mengingat ini seperti film-film thriller Hollywood yang mengerikan. Tapi, lebih mengerikan lagi ternyata ketika tahu bahwa dokter tersebut adalah orang yang nyata dengan kegilaan yang juga nyata.James B. Stewart, penulis buku Blind Eye ini, adalah juga seorang jurnalis yang telah menginvestigasi kasus dokter pencabut nyawa yang saya katakan muda dan tampan tadi, yang aslinya bernama Michael Swango. Buku nonfiksi ini mengisahkan hidup Swango mulai dari ia masih menjadi mahasiswa kedokteran di Southern Illinois University, hingga tugas medisnya di beberapa rumah sakit di Zimbabwe, Afrika. Kengerian-kengerian selalu mengikuti ke mana pun Swango bertugas; di Ohio, Quincy, Columbus, dan lain-lain. Apa yang sebetulnya bisa Swango lakukan sampai-sampai ia mendapat julukan (lelucon) dengan Double-O-Swango alias "license to kill".Rasanya, Swango ini terlalu gila untuk bisa jadi manusia nyata. Korbannya sudah terlalu banyak. Ia bahkan disebut sebagai pembunuh berantai paling banyak memakan korban dalam sejarah Amerika. Ini setelah ia betul-betul terbukti bersalah.Blind Eye memenangkan Pulitzer Prize dan menjadi buku pilihan The New York Times Bestseller serta memenangkan The Edgar Award.
—Astri Apriyani

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