
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The ancient and oft quoted Hippocratic oath exhorts all doctors “to do no harm.” Technically the exact words are: “I will abstain from all intentional wrongdoing and harm.” It also states that “Neither will I administer poison to anybody.” One Victorian gentleman in England, who did not get the memo, was Dr. William Palmer, who, in the mid-19th century, although tried for only one murder, is purported to have poisoned several individuals. Among his alleged victims: his wife, his mother-in-law, his brother, and four of his own children and anyone he managed to take out a life insurance policy on with himself as the beneficiary.
Journalist and author Stephen Bates wrote a book on the man Queen Victoria called “a black leg” in her diary, entitled THE POISONER and he joins us on Murder Most Foul.
4.3
1010 ratings
The ancient and oft quoted Hippocratic oath exhorts all doctors “to do no harm.” Technically the exact words are: “I will abstain from all intentional wrongdoing and harm.” It also states that “Neither will I administer poison to anybody.” One Victorian gentleman in England, who did not get the memo, was Dr. William Palmer, who, in the mid-19th century, although tried for only one murder, is purported to have poisoned several individuals. Among his alleged victims: his wife, his mother-in-law, his brother, and four of his own children and anyone he managed to take out a life insurance policy on with himself as the beneficiary.
Journalist and author Stephen Bates wrote a book on the man Queen Victoria called “a black leg” in her diary, entitled THE POISONER and he joins us on Murder Most Foul.
90,779 Listeners
10,807 Listeners
11,507 Listeners
86,348 Listeners
8,678 Listeners
364,663 Listeners
25,286 Listeners
47,831 Listeners
607 Listeners
19,867 Listeners
2,976 Listeners
11,146 Listeners
671 Listeners
405 Listeners
609 Listeners