This Week on True Crime Daily The Podcast: The true story behind Netflix’s “The Good Nurse,” how one nurse risked everything to stop one of America’s most prolific serial killers.

Amy Loughren joins host Ana Garcia.

Check out “The Good Nurse” here: https://www.netflix.com/title/81260083

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Ana Garcia
https://www.instagram.com/anagnews/
http://www.anagarciatv.com/

Amy Loughren
https://www.instagram.com/amythegoodnurse/

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40 thoughts on “The real ‘Good Nurse’: How a whistleblower stopped one of America’s most prolific serial killers”
  1. That message about compassion was just beyond my right mind. God Bless this nurse! She really did handle the situation with wisdom. Evil is uncalled for, but compassion brings healing and light to the darkest of places.

  2. She was still being in denial several years into his prison sentence?? Ok! I've heard enough. So many stupid women being fascinated by killers its just obscene.

  3. All you have to do to understand this nurse's case is to read the pkg insert for her antidepressant where you should find "homicidal ideation" lidted as a side effect which is a compulsion to kill. I have worked as an expert for 30 years in these cases & I remain in total disbelief that Pharma has brainwashed society enough to completely overlook that side effect!

  4. It's a bad movie that twists the truth, why wasn't the murder of Father Florian Gall mentioned since it was his murder that got the ball rolling on catching this fiend? Why are the families of other victims removed from the movie when they had been trying to get to the truth for years and the nurses who also suspected Cullen for years not mentioned? Why weren't all the nurses of Sacred Heart Hospital, in Allentown not mentioned who in 2001 threatened they would all quit if Cullen was not dismissed when he had just been hired and he was dismissed because of what they did? Why are the two detectives who were relentless in catching him not more in this movie? The movie is bias in itself making out that only one person helped, while without her he might have never been caught but others and many of them should have also been included in this story.

  5. I am a retired nurse and please don’t feel guilty people like this man are very very clever other NURSES did not see either only those CEOs who are not nurses did

  6. Love Eddie Redmayn, greatj actor
    But as an SRN and nurse educater its hard to understand how a nurse can kill. Maybe nieve, but I'm of the older style of nurse in an era of matrons and sisters. Strict and nothing out of sinc.They knew the job.

  7. The hospitals let a mentally I’ll individual run amok murdering patients, and they turned a blind eye to protect their reputation and income. Management consist of even worse psychopaths! 😡

  8. I was an LPN in a children’s hospital for thirteen years. While I was in training we where constantly reminded that our role was to be a “patient advocate.” It became glaringly clear early on in my nursing career that my allegiance was to the hospital, not the patient, if I wanted to maintain my position.

  9. As a patient I can testify to the fact some nurses are evil on purpose. Screening of nurses and patient complaints should be investigated.

  10. I can't imagine how hard it would've been for her to see past him being such a good friend to her. He was really a great friend, or at least was portrayed to be. It would've been easy for her to have been blinded by that fact, even if the evidence points to him.

  11. This is as bad if not worse as the 2019 COVID pandemic locking elderly people up for weeks on end then when some of them did die their loved ones couldn't even pay their respects like even tell them goodbye they had to pass alone & were not giving compassion in their final hours. This is a entire show unto it's self hopefully one day somebody will have the resources to cover this nightmare untill then this show is phenomenal thank you dear kind compassionate "Good" Nurse may God bless you & follow you all your kind days❣️😇💖

  12. How on earth did this nurse get away with killing so many patients? I worked in ICU and it would be easy to connect the dots if you were watching your nurses and the patients.

  13. Ana, I love the podcast. It's horrific how the hospitals care more about money and their reputation than the lives of people they are stopping be taking care of.

  14. I have to say I agree and feel this, understand this deep need of compassion.. Thank you for your strength “Good Nurse”.. I wish I could remember your name. I also wish someone would have protected me as a child, a preteen, a teen a mother.. and Thank you to my higher power I have done all to help my children and grandchildren. Bless you

  15. Well if I HAD remained friends with him, it would have been over the minute he hit the table real hard when she sitting there in the restaurant with him and reaches out to touch his hand and he hits the table real hard! I'd have been "see ya!"

  16. This is so tragic on so many levels. Unfortunately, killers like this are in a position to so easily take advantage of their power and access to helpless victims and a plethora of such convenient weapons at their disposal. They feel insulated from the crime of poisoning under a veil of trust and "distance" from the victims who were randomly murdered. The victims would pass peacefully, but suspiciously at some later time from his laced saline bags, not ever having been in physical contact with their killer. Maybe this method of murder "from a distance" helps him to rationalize his innocence or absolve him of his own sick behavior in his mind, since he feels more removed from the actual crime. It was so easy for him to continue killing, while avoiding suspicion since he was likely not present at the times of death and the hospitals only cared about covering their own asses and passing on the hot potato to the next institution! It's despicable and the HR people at those hospitals should be made accountable for covering it all up and allowing him to continue killing elsewhere, as long as it was no longer at their institution!

  17. Money should never come before people. Doctors and nurses use to go to school to help people. Now it’s all about money and nothing else. Look at how many Doctors have been caught doing Medicare Fraud.

  18. They talk about the perpetrator as someone wirh mental illness. This is not mental illness- it is pure pdychopathy of the worst kind: machiavellianism, narcissism, and sadism.

  19. A great story of empathy- why its needed and how strong empaths can save the world. An illustration of how much power just one can have.

  20. I just saw a documentary about a respiratory therapist who killed 100 people in California. There have been 3 seasons of Dr. Death. Why is it that we're just now seeing the exposure of so many medical "professionals" who took SO many lives?

  21. Cannot imagine what it's like to have such a monster in your midst. Her demeanor is so calm and composed that it must have helped her immensely when she was wired and trying to get a confession from the killer. As it pertains to the medical establishment and big pharma for that matter, I hope I live long enough to see every doctor and nurse who conspired with the government mandating experimental COVID 19 vaccinations be held just as accountable some day. In the meantime, I've been reading up on the Nuremburg trials.

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