Case File 3E-75: Ann Arbor, Michigan

Case Date: January 2012
EMS Paramedic Brian Sams is being accused of committing murder. During eight separate dispatch cases, he and his unit were tasked with providing assistance for basic medical care procedures. All of the cases were simple EMS dispatch situations. Breathing Intubation. Minor Suture Application. SVN Nebulizer Administration. Fractured Bone Stabilization. Adrenaline Injection. It was only later - in the EMS transport en route to the hospital - that the emergency patients actually died. Each of the deceased victims arrived at the hospital emergency rooms in a "code blue failure" state that CSI medical specialists believe was intentionally induced by the accused EMS technician.
G-Unit special investigator Nicholas Johnson is requested to assist with the case when the local FBI makes a grim discovery. Eight sealed, but empty, glass containers baring the victims' names are found in a secret wall compartment of Brian Sams' home. When interrogated by Johnson and the FBI, Brian Sams surprises everyone by boldly confessing to the murders. Despite the admission, the paramedic refuses to detail the means he used to end the victims' lives. Agent Johnson pushes the interrogation further - no longer focused on "the how?" - but now "the why?" of the murders. The EMS paramedic's response startles everyone. "They're not empty. They're temporary storage vessels for their souls. They're sacrificial offerings to the Gaborchend. They're seeds for the Beast."
Prosecutors are disappointed when Brian Sams' lawyers have him successfully committed to a psychiatric hospital. It's there that the paramedic murders once again and makes his final escape. Agent Johnson arrives at the crime scene finding four dead bodies. Three of the bodies are nurses whom worked in the mental hospital. The final body belonged to Brian Sams. On the table in Brian Sams' room were five more empty glass containers. Three of the glass jars were sealed and marked with the names of the three nurses. The final glass container was marked with Brian Sams' name, but was was unsealed. The controversial Church of the Leviathan had no response when later questioned about the case and their rumored support of the Gaborchend terrorist network.
EMS Paramedic Brian Sams is being accused of committing murder. During eight separate dispatch cases, he and his unit were tasked with providing assistance for basic medical care procedures. All of the cases were simple EMS dispatch situations. Breathing Intubation. Minor Suture Application. SVN Nebulizer Administration. Fractured Bone Stabilization. Adrenaline Injection. It was only later - in the EMS transport en route to the hospital - that the emergency patients actually died. Each of the deceased victims arrived at the hospital emergency rooms in a "code blue failure" state that CSI medical specialists believe was intentionally induced by the accused EMS technician.
G-Unit special investigator Nicholas Johnson is requested to assist with the case when the local FBI makes a grim discovery. Eight sealed, but empty, glass containers baring the victims' names are found in a secret wall compartment of Brian Sams' home. When interrogated by Johnson and the FBI, Brian Sams surprises everyone by boldly confessing to the murders. Despite the admission, the paramedic refuses to detail the means he used to end the victims' lives. Agent Johnson pushes the interrogation further - no longer focused on "the how?" - but now "the why?" of the murders. The EMS paramedic's response startles everyone. "They're not empty. They're temporary storage vessels for their souls. They're sacrificial offerings to the Gaborchend. They're seeds for the Beast."
Prosecutors are disappointed when Brian Sams' lawyers have him successfully committed to a psychiatric hospital. It's there that the paramedic murders once again and makes his final escape. Agent Johnson arrives at the crime scene finding four dead bodies. Three of the bodies are nurses whom worked in the mental hospital. The final body belonged to Brian Sams. On the table in Brian Sams' room were five more empty glass containers. Three of the glass jars were sealed and marked with the names of the three nurses. The final glass container was marked with Brian Sams' name, but was was unsealed. The controversial Church of the Leviathan had no response when later questioned about the case and their rumored support of the Gaborchend terrorist network.
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