A former nurse has pleaded guilty to killing seven people at a hospital in the United States

A hospital in West Virginia has received a sixth lawsuit involving the sudden death of patients at the hospital after a former nursing assistant admitted deliberately killing seven people with a lethal dose of insulin. < / P > < p > according to ABC, Lewis Johnson Medical Center in Clarksburg was charged on the 19th, and Russell R. Posey died in July 2018. Lawyer Tony odel filed the lawsuit on behalf of Posey’s son and daughter, who are co executors of his estate. Posey served as chief NCO of the U.S. Navy during World War II. < / P > < p > the lawsuit is the latest to accuse the hospital of widespread dereliction of duty. Prior to the death of five people in the hospital, military family members have filed similar lawsuits in January, March, April and June of 2018 respectively. In the lawsuit, odel said Posey suffered from severe and unexplained hypoglycemia, similar to what happened to other patients. < / P > < p > the U.S. Department of affairs is the second largest department of the government, responsible for the management of 9 million. On July 14, reta mays, a dismissed hospital nursing assistant, admitted that he had deliberately killed seven patients by injecting excessive doses of insulin, and that the 46 year old faced life imprisonment for seven counts of second degree murder, and the date of his sentence has not yet been set. Mays admitted at a plea hearing that between 2017 and 2018, when she was working night shift at a hospital in northern West Virginia, she deliberately killed them and injected them with over-the-counter insulin, and her motive was unclear. It is not clear whether mace is related to Posey’s death. (overseas website / Li Fang internship compiler / Dong Yiwen)