Michael Joseph Swango
(born October 21, 1954) is an American serial killer and licensed physician who
is estimated to have been involved in as many as 60 fatal poisonings of
patients and colleagues, although he admitted to only causing four deaths. He
was sentenced in 2000 to three consecutive life terms without the possibility
of parole and is serving his sentence at ADX Florence at his own request.
Early life
Michael Swango was born in Tacoma, Washington and raised in
Quincy, Illinois, the middle child of Muriel and John Virgil Swango. Swango's
father was a career United States Army officer who served in the Vietnam War,
was listed in Who's Who in Government 1972–1973, and became an alcoholic. Upon
his return from Vietnam, John Swango became depressed and he and his wife
Muriel divorced. Growing up, Swango saw little of his father and as a result
was closer to his mother. He was valedictorian of his 1972 Quincy Catholic Boys
High School class. During high school, he played clarinet in the band.
Swango served in the Marine Corps, graduating from recruit
training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego. He received an honorable
discharge in 1980. He saw no action overseas during his service, but his
training in the Marines left him with a commitment to physical exercise. When
not studying, he was frequently seen jogging or performing calisthenics on the
Quincy University campus and he was known to perform pushups as a form of
self-punishment when criticized by instructors. Swango graduated from Quincy
summa cum laude and was given the American Chemical Society Award. Following
his graduation, Swango went to medical school at Southern Illinois University School
of Medicine (SIU).
Swango displayed troubling behavior during his time at SIU.
Although he was a brilliant student, he preferred to work as an ambulance
attendant rather than concentrate on his studies. A fascination with dying
patients was observed during this time. Barely noticed at the time, many of
Swango's assigned patients ended up "coding",
or suffering life-threatening emergencies, with at least five of them
dying.
Swango's lackadaisical approach to his studies caught up
with him a month before he was due to graduate, when it was discovered that he
had faked checkups during his OB/GYN rotation. Some of his fellow students had
suspected he had been faking checkups as early as his second year, but this was
the first time he had been caught. He was nearly expelled, but was allowed to
remain when one member of the committee voted to give him a second chance. At
the time, a unanimous vote was required for a student to be dismissed. Even
earlier, several students and faculty members had raised concerns about
Swango's competence to practice medicine. Eventually, the school allowed him to
graduate one year after his entering classmates, on condition that he repeat
the OB/GYN rotation and complete several assignments in other specialties.
Murders
Despite a very poor evaluation in his dean's letter from
SIU, Swango gained a surgical internship at Ohio State University Medical
Center in 1983, to be followed by a residency in neurosurgery. While he worked
in Rhodes Hall at OSU, nurses noticed that apparently healthy patients began
dying mysteriously with alarming frequency. Each time, Swango had been the
floor intern. One nurse caught him injecting some "medicine" into a patient who later became strangely ill.
The nurses reported their concerns to administrators but
were met with accusations of paranoia. Swango was cleared by a cursory
investigation in 1984. However, his work had been so slovenly that OSU pulled
its residency offer after his internship ended in June. Later, it emerged that
OSU officials feared that Swango would sue if he were fired without cause, and
resolved to quietly push him out of the hospital as soon as possible after his
internship ended.
In July 1984, Swango returned to Quincy and began working as
an emergency medical technician with the Adams County Ambulance Corps even
though he had been fired from an ambulance service in Springfield for making a
heart patient drive to the hospital. Soon, many of the paramedics on staff
began noticing that whenever Swango prepared the coffee or brought any food in,
several of them usually became violently ill, with no apparent cause. In
October of that year, Swango was arrested by the Quincy Police Department after
arsenic and other poisons were found in his possession. On August 23, 1985,
Swango was convicted of aggravated battery for poisoning co-workers. He was
sentenced to five years' imprisonment.
Swango's conviction led to recriminations at OSU. A scathing
review by law school dean James Meeks concluded that the hospital should have
called in the police, and also revealed several glaring shortcomings in its initial
investigation of Swango. Nonetheless, it was another decade before OSU formally
conceded it should have called in outside investigators. Prosecutors in
Franklin County, Ohio (where Columbus is located) also considered bringing
charges of murder and attempted murder against Swango, but they decided against
it for lack of physical evidence.
In 1989, Swango was released from prison. He worked as a
counselor at the state career development center in Newport News, Virginia.
However, he was forced out after being caught working on a scrapbook of
disasters on work time. Swango then worked as a laboratory technician in
Newport News for ATICoal (which later became Vanguard Energy, a division of
CITA Logistics). During his time there, several employees sought medical
attention with complaints of persistent and increasing stomach pains. Around this
time, Swango met Kristin Lynn Kinney, a nurse at Riverside Hospital. The couple
fell in love and planned to marry. He was employed until 1991, when he resigned
his position to seek out a new position as a doctor.
Sanford USD Medical
Center
In 1991, Swango legally changed his name to Daniel J. Adams
and tried to apply for a residency program at Ohio Valley Medical Center in
Wheeling, West Virginia. In July 1992, he began working at Sanford USD Medical
Center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. In both cases, Swango forged several legal
documents that he used to reestablish himself as a physician and respected
member of society. He forged a fact sheet from the Illinois Department of
Corrections that falsified his criminal record, stating that he had been convicted
of a misdemeanor for getting into a fistfight with a co-worker and received six
months in prison, rather than the five years for felony poisoning that he
served.
Most states will not grant a medical license to a violent
felon, considering such a conviction to be evidence of unprofessional conduct.
He forged a Restoration of Civil Rights letter from Virginia Governor Gerald L.
Baliles, falsely stating that Baliles had decided to restore Swango's right to
vote and serve on a jury, based on "reports
from friends and colleagues" that he had committed no further crimes
after his "misdemeanor" and
was leading an "exemplary
lifestyle".
Swango established a sterling reputation at Sanford.
However, when he attempted to join the American Medical Association (AMA), it
conducted a more thorough background check than Sanford and found out about the
poisoning conviction. That Thanksgiving Day, the Discovery Channel aired an
episode of Justice Files that included a segment on Swango. Amid the AMA report
and calls from frightened colleagues, Sanford fired Swango. Kinney went back to
Virginia soon afterward after suffering from violent migraines. After she left
Swango, the headaches stopped.
Stony Brook
University in the 1990s
The AMA temporarily lost track of Swango, who managed to
find a place in the psychiatric residency program at the Stony Brook University
School of Medicine in New York. His first rotation was in the internal medicine
department at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Northport, New York. Once
again, his patients began dying for no explicable reason. Four months later,
Kinney died by suicide and arsenic was found in her body at the time of her
death.
Kinney's mother, Sharon Cooper, was horrified to find out
that a person with Swango's history could be allowed to practice medicine. She
contacted a friend of Kinney who was a nurse at Sanford, who in turn alerted
Sanford's dean, Robert Talley, to Swango's whereabouts. Talley telephoned
Jordan Cohen, the dean at Stony Brook. Under intense questioning from the head
of Stony Brook's psychiatry department, Alan Miller, Swango admitted he had
lied about his poisoning conviction in Illinois. He was immediately fired. The
public outcry resulted in Cohen and Miller being forced to resign before the
end of the year. Before he resigned, Cohen sent a warning about Swango to all
125 medical schools and all 1,000 teaching hospitals across the US, effectively
blacklisting Swango from getting a medical residency at any American
institution.
Since the latest Swango incident took place at a Veterans
Affairs facility, federal authorities got involved. Swango dropped out of sight
until mid-1994, when the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) found out he was
living in Atlanta and working as a chemist at a computer equipment company's
wastewater facility. Soon after the FBI alerted the company, Swango was fired
for lying on his job application. The FBI obtained a warrant charging Swango
with using fraudulent credentials to gain entry to a Veterans Affairs hospital.
By that time, Swango had fled the country. In November 1994,
he settled in Zimbabwe and used forged documents to obtain a job at Mnene
Lutheran Mission Hospital in the center of the country. Again, his patients
began dying mysteriously. As a result of suspicions of the medical director
there, Dr. Christopher Zishiri, Swango was suspended. Because of the failure to
perform adequate autopsies, no firm conclusions could be drawn.
During his suspension, Swango hired lawyer David Coltart to
enable him to return to clinical practice. He also appealed to the authorities
at Mpilo Hospital, Bulawayo, to allow him in the interim to continue working
voluntarily there; however, this was opposed by Abdollah Mesbah, a surgical
resident, who had often found him snooping around mysteriously in the wards and
in the intensive care unit (ICU) even when not on call. He had suspected that
sudden deaths of some patients were due to Swango, but had no proof at that
stage.
At this time, Swango rented a room in Bulawayo from a
widowed woman who subsequently became violently sick after a meal she had
prepared for herself and a friend. The woman consulted a local surgeon, Michael
Cotton, who suspected arsenic poisoning and persuaded her to send hair samples
for forensic analysis to Pretoria, South Africa. These clippings confirmed
toxic levels of arsenic in the hair. The lab reports were passed on by the
Zimbabwe Republic Police Criminal Investigation Department (CID) through
Interpol to the FBI, who subsequently visited Zimbabwe to interview Cotton and
the pathologist in Bulawayo, Stanford Mathe.
In the meantime, Swango had sensed that authorities were
closing in on him. He crossed the border to Zambia and subsequently to Namibia,
where he found temporary medical work. He was charged in absentia with
poisonings. In March 1997, he applied for a job at the Royal Hospital in
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, using a false résumé.
Arrest and guilty
plea
While this was happening, Tom Valery, chief investigator for
the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA),
consulted with Charlene Thomesen, a forensic psychiatrist. Because of her
considerable clinical expertise, Thomesen was able to review documents and
evidence and give a criminal profile of Swango, along with her assessment of
why he had committed such crimes. Valery was called by the FBI to discuss
holding Swango. He called Richard Thomesen, who was stationed in the DEA's
Manhattan field office to discuss the case. Thomesen's conversation focused on
Swango lying on his government application to work at the VA, where he
prescribed narcotic medications. There was enough evidence for Immigration and
Naturalization Service agents to arrest Swango in June 1997, on a layover at
Chicago O'Hare International Airport on his way to Saudi Arabia.
Faced with hard evidence of his fraudulent activities and
the possibility of an extended inquiry into his time in Zimbabwe, Swango
pleaded guilty to defrauding the government in March 1998. In July 1998, he was
sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison. The sentencing judge ordered
that Swango not be allowed to prepare or deliver food, or have any involvement
in preparing or distributing drugs.
Although the FBI, the VA, and prosecutors for the Eastern
District of New York were convinced Swango was a serial killer, they knew it
would be difficult to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. They also knew that they
had a limited amount of time to amass that proof. Federal inmates must serve at
least 85 percent of their sentences before being eligible for time off with
good behavior, meaning that they likely had only three years to prove that
Swango was indeed a murderer. They feared that if they could not find enough
evidence to convict Swango, he would likely kill again. The government used
this time to amass a dossier of Swango's crimes. As part of that investigation,
prosecutors exhumed the bodies of three patients and found poisonous chemicals
in them. They also found evidence that Swango paralyzed patient Baron Harris
with an injection of what was supposedly a sedative. The sedative caused him to
lapse into a coma, and Harris died on November 9, 1993.
Additionally, prosecutors found evidence that Swango lied
about the death of Cynthia Ann McGee, a patient he treated during his
internship at OSU. Swango claimed she suffered heart failure; he had killed her
by giving her a potassium injection that stopped her heart. On July 11, 2000,
less than a week before he was due to be released from prison on the fraud
charge, federal prosecutors on Long Island, New York, filed a criminal
complaint charging Swango with three counts of murder and one count each of
assault, false statements, mail fraud, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud. At
the same time, Zimbabwean authorities charged him with poisoning seven patients,
five of whom died. A week before the indictment was handed up, FBI agents
interviewed Swango in prison. They told him that on the day he was due to be released;
he would be extradited to Zimbabwe to face charges of murder and attempted
murder. Knowing that he would likely face the death penalty for his crimes in
Zimbabwe, Swango began talks for a plea agreement. Eventually, prosecutors
agreed to not pursue the death penalty or extradition in return for Swango
accepting a sentence of life in prison without parole.
Swango was formally indicted on July 17, 2000, and pleaded
not guilty. On September 6, he pleaded guilty to the three murder counts, as
well as counts of wire fraud and mail fraud, before Judge Jacob Mishler. At his
sentencing hearing, Swango admitted to causing three murders, lying about his
role in causing a fourth death, and lying about his 1985 conviction.
Prosecutors read lurid passages from Swango's notebook,
describing the joy he felt during his crimes. Judge Mishler sentenced Swango to
three consecutive terms of life without parole. He is incarcerated at ADX
Florence. He was sent to ADX at his own request; he had been stabbed by another
inmate while serving time for lying to the VA, and feared he would be attacked
again if he were placed in general population. In his book Blind Eye, Quincy
native James B. Stewart estimated that counting the suspicious deaths at SIU,
circumstantial evidence links Swango to 35 suspicious deaths. The FBI believes
he may be responsible for as many as 60 deaths, which would make him one of the
most prolific serial killers in American history.
Modus operandi
Swango rarely changed his murder methods. With non-patients,
such as his coworkers at the emergency medical service, he used poisons,
usually arsenic, slipping them into foods and beverages. With patients, he
sometimes used poisons as well, but usually, he administered an overdose of
whichever drug the patient had been prescribed, or wrote unnecessary prescriptions
for dangerous drugs.
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