Police investigator Arne Schmidt called the killings "unique in the history of the German republic."
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Initially convicted of attempted murder in hospitals in Oldenburg and the nearby city of Delmenhorst, Högel's subsequent statements to a psychologist over 30 killings prompted authorities to exhume scores of bodies buried between 1999 and 2005 and test them for the killer's drug cocktails.
Högel was first sentenced in 2008 to seven and a half years for attempted murder, before being handed a life sentence in 2015 over six counts of murder.
In the course of the investigation, police found that hospital authorities failed to report the disturbing increase in fatalities when Högel was working.
"If the people responsible at the time, particularly at the Oldenburg clinic but also later in Delmenhorst, hadn't hesitated to alert authorities — for example police prosecutors — Högel could have been apprehended sooner," Oldenburg Police Chief Johann Kühme said.
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Two former physicians in Delmenhorst are also facing charges in connection with patient deaths.
This article originally appeared on Deutsche Welle. Its content was created separately to USA TODAY.
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