Living In Hospital Basement, Man’s Insane Robbery Ends As Police Find Last 1 In His Backpack

Living In Hospital Basement, Man’s Insane Robbery Ends As Police Find Last 1 In His Backpack
 35-year-old Brian Leroy Nichols II stars in a three hour movie

35-year-old Brian Leroy Nichols II stars in a three hour movie


A worker at the Central Campus of Abrazo Hospital in Phoenix, Arizona noticed something strange on the security camera. 35-year-old Brian Leroy Nichols II stars in a three hour movie that shows him “wandering around the basement of the hospital, going through classrooms and changing his appearance.” The video shows him plundering classroom computers, which even more amazingly, he stashed under a stairway that he had been calling home. He had a cozy little bachelor nook under the stairs, with a bed made from the mattress off one of the hospital’s rolling gurneys.


After leaving the hospital to sell the booty, Leroy was able to cash in two of the machines before police caught up with him. A hospital laptop was in his backpack when he was placed under arrest. The hospital had also noticed some televisions had gone missing from rooms on more than one floor of the facility. Nichols admitted to heisting five different TVs, two of which had 55 inch screens. Police were impressed by his ability to smuggle them out. He used one of the gurneys he said. By covering them up with sheets and acting casual, he was able to roll them right out the front door to a waiting associate with a truck. He even was nice enough to bring the gurney back.


Nichols has a habit to support and told police the money he got for the stolen goods paid for with food and drugs. He made himself right at home in the hospital, where he stayed for several nights. He raided closed rooms for food and other small items he could sell. With a long list of prior crimes to his credit, Nichols was charged with burglary. Estimates are the items he stole were valued at $36,000. A spokesman for the hospital says, “We are reviewing campus security footage of this incident to assist the Phoenix Police Department with its investigation. We are also conducting a thorough review of our campus security measures.”


Abrazo is not the only Phoenix hospital reviewing their security this week. A few miles away at Banner’s Estrella Hospital, Raquel Sotelo also was making rounds. She looked like a nurse. Not only was she wearing familiar hospital “scrubs,” she actually was a nurse. She just didn’t work at that hospital. Apparently she knew what she was after and where to find it because she brought along very specialized tools for the job.


Raquel Sotelo was a nurse. She just didn't work at that hospital.

Raquel Sotelo was a nurse. She just didn’t work at that hospital.


Using an invalid hospital ID card, which earned her a charge of impersonating a registered nurse, even though she is a registered nurse, Sotelo managed to make her way to a secure treatment room. She was prepared with two small wrenches which she used to break into a locked “sharps” container where hospital staff throw hazardous waste like needles after they have been used. Her experience as a nurse had taught her that needles were not all that gets thrown in those bins.


After making short work of the bolts securing the container, Raquel was rewarded with two partially used vials of the opioid drug fentanyl, which held 2 milliliters when full. Fentanyl is 100 times stronger than morphine. It has been in the news a lot lately after being linked to skyrocketing numbers of overdoses. Commonly mixed with heroin, the fentanyl makes the potency so strong that addicts are dropping like flies all across the country.


The state of Ohio has been hit particularly hard by the heroin epidemic. So many people are overdosing in the state that officials are seriously considering withholding the antidote Narcan and just letting the addiction problem solve itself. After finding five overdose victims in one house, and two more overdose calls in the same block, officials were convinced the local batch had been stepped on with the elephant tranquilizer fentanyl.


All he did was brush it off with his hand and collapsed a few minutes later.

All he did was brush it off with his hand and collapsed a few minutes later.


The substance is so potent, another Ohio officer almost died after encountering just a trace. After a traffic stop, Officer Chris Green had a spot of white powder residue on the collar of his uniform shirt. All he did was brush it off with his hand and collapsed a few minutes later. “I started talking weird I slowly felt my body shutting down. I could hear them talking, but I couldn’t respond. I was in total shock.”


Green’s supervisor, Chief John Lane, points out it could have been even worse. “Nobody sees that on his shirt. He leaves and goes home, takes off that shirt, throws it in the wash. His mom, his wife, his girlfriend goes in the laundry, touches the shirt — boom. They drop. He goes home to his kid. ‘Daddy! Daddy!’ They hug him — Boom. They drop. His dog sniffs his shirt, it kills his dog. This could never end.”


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