
The Death Shift
Nurse Genene Jones and the Texas Baby Murders
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Narrated by:
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Lee Ann Howlett
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By:
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Peter Elkind
Updated with dramatic developments and new murder charges, filed in the coldest of cold cases, to keep a serial baby-killer behind bars. This tale is every parent's worst nightmare: the horrifying account of a Texas nurse who killed children under her care, and the hospital that covered it up.
It's 1980, and Genene Jones is working in the pediatric ICU at San Antonio's charity hospital, on what soon came to be known as "the Death Shift". From 3-11 PM, infants under her care begin experiencing unexpected emergencies - and dying - in alarming numbers, prompting rumors that there is a murderer among the staff. This chilling epidemic continued unabated for more than a year, before Jones was quietly sent off - with a good recommendation - to a small-town pediatric clinic. There, eight children under her care mysteriously stopped breathing in a single month - and a 15-month-old baby girl died.
In May 1983, Jones was finally arrested, leading to trials that revealed her strange attraction to medical emergencies and a desire to "play God" with the lives of the children under her care. More shocking still, as The Death Shift reveals, the hospital had volunteered nothing to law-enforcement authorities about Jones' horrific deeds, allowing her spree to continue and prompting grieving parents to ask: Why? Elkind chronicles Jones chilling rampage, while also turning his piercing gaze onto those responsible for its cover-up.
This updated edition is a tale with fresh relevance, revealing how prosecutors raced to keep Jones behind bars, despite her scheduled mandatory release from a Texas prison in early 2018, after one-third of a 99-year murder sentence; Jones' cryptic secret prison confessions - followed by giddy exultations to a band of evangelical allies about her expected release; and how prosecutors finally won a guilty plea from Jones on the eve of a new murder trial.
©1983, 1989, 2021 Peter Elkind (P)2021 Peter ElkindListeners also enjoyed...




















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Note: I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
Thorough and updated
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Chilling
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Listener received this title free
I wish she had stayed a hair stylist. The worst place to have someone like her employed is a hospital! People are compromised, and infants in particular are defenseless, also access to drugs, etc. Thinking about someone with her psychopathy in a health care setting is downright scary.
The tale unfolded well in the first few chapters. The author painted a clear picture of Genene Jones from a young girl on up to her adulthood. But the middle got bogged down with a lot of medical jargon and bureaucratic details. I understand it being an RN but others may not be interested in that part of the puzzle. While it's i certainly a big part of any medical story, I think it was long-winded.
Narration was excellent.
I was given this book at no charge for my honest review, which I have done. Thank you!
All in all, a good listen.
Some people have no moral compass
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The swath of misery cut by this deranged woman is painful to contemplate. Her coldblooded murder of helpless babies, followed in quick order by an ostentatious outpouring of grief over their death is both horrible and peculiar. She is beyond comprehension, her motivations an unknowable mystery.
Narration is good, except for the odd stumble in pronunciation, e.g. fêted (not "fate-ed"), minutiae (not min-oosh'-ee), accede (not a-seed'). "Frequent", when used as a verb, is pronounced fre-quent', with the accent on the second syllable. Howlett also needs to check out the difference between "imminent" and "eminent". However, she does a good job overall.
Hard to Believe
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Riveting!!!!
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Heartbreaking and Detailed
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