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‘Serial killer’ Texas healthcare worker, 48, accused of ‘smothering 24 elderly women to death and robbing them’ is being investigated for 1,000 deaths and attacks

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Suspected serial killer Billy Chemirmir, on Tuesday was indicted by a Texas grand jury on three additional counts of capital murders, bringing his total number of victims identified so far, to 24

Chemirmir, 48, is indicted on capital murder charges in the deaths of Joyce Abramowitz, 82; Doris Wasserman, 90, and Margaret White, 86

Healthcare worker, Chemirmir, is accused of ‘smothering the elderly women to death and robbing them

Chemirmir, a Kenyan national, is suspected of smothering to death and robbing elderly women living in nursing homes in North Texas between 2016-2018

The former healthcare worker, now faces a total of 17 capital murder charges and two attempted capital murder counts

He is still being investigated for nearly 1,000 unsolved deaths or attacks

He has maintained his innocence, but he remains in jail on $11.6million bail

Capital murder charges in the state of Texas carry the death penalty or life in prison with no chance of parole

Suspected serial killer Billy Chemirmir, [photo], 48, on Tuesday was indicted by a Texas grand jury on three additional counts of capital murders, bringing his total number of victims identified so far to 24

A suspected serial killer in the Texas area has been indicted on three additional counts of capital murder after previously being charged with smothering 14 elderly women to death and stealing their valuables.
Dallas County grand jury on Tuesday handed down three new capital murder indictments against Billy Chemirmir, the man accused of smothering elderly residents of North Texas senior living facilities and stealing their jewelry, cash and other precious items to sell at Dallas-area pawn shops.
The Grand Jury on Tuesday indicted healthcare worker Chemirmir, 48, on murder charges in the deaths of Joyce Abramowitz, 82; Doris Wasserman, 90, and Margaret White, 86, who were all killed at The Tradition-Prestonwood senior living community in Dallas between July 2016 and December 2017.

Chemirmir this week was indicted on murder charges in the deaths of (L to R) Joyce Abramowitz, 82; Margaret White, 86, and Doris Wasserman, 90. All three women were killed at The Tradition-Prestonwood senior living community in Dallas between July 2016 and December 2017

Chemirmir has now been charged with 17 counts of capital murder and two counts of attempted capital murder in Dallas and Collin counties. He has also been linked through medical examiner reports and civil case filings in seven other deaths, bringing the total to 24 deaths in North Texas.
Chemirmir, a Kenyan national living in the US illegally, now faces a total of 24 capital murder charges and two counts of attempted capital murder stemming from similar attacks.
Medical examiner reports and civil lawsuits have also linked Chemirmir to seven other deaths in North Texas, but so far he has not been formally charged in those. 
Many of the deaths now attributed to Chemirmir were first listed as deaths by natural causes as no foul play was suspected.

The three latest victims identified were all killed at The Tradition-Prestonwood senior living community [photo], in Dallas, between July 2016 and December 2017

However, once he was identified as a suspect in March 2018, detectives began reviewing hundreds of natural death cases to attempt to identify other potential victims.
He is still being investigated for nearly 1,000 unsolved deaths or attacks mostly targeting elderly women in nursing homes. 
Chemirmir remains in jail on $11.6million bail. He has maintained his innocence. 
If convicted of capital murder, Chemirmir could face the death penalty.
The suspect’s defense attorney, Phillip Hayes, told The Dallas Morning News that the evidence against his client is circumstantial, and that prosecutors have been eager to pin every unexplained death that has occurred in the region on Chemirmir. 
‘If you look at all of it, it doesn’t stand up,’ Hayes said of the allegations.   
The trio of deaths that sparked the latest round of indictments against Chemirmir first came to light in civil complaints that had been filed against the retirement community where the victims lived.

Leah Corken, 83 [left], and Juanita Prudy, 82 [right], were allegedly smothered to death by Chemirmir within weeks of each other in the summer of 2016

Joyce Abramowitz died in July 2016, three months after she went to the police to report that someone had stolen jewelry from her while she was on vacation.
After her death her son reported that a safe was missing from her room.
Two other victims – Leah Corken, 83, and Juanita Prudy, 82 – were allegedly smothered to death by Chemirmir within weeks of each other in the summer of 2016.
Chemirmir was initially charged in 2018 with the murder of 81-year-old Lu Thi Harris.
In 2019, Chemirmir was indicted on six more murder charges, including the murder of Doris Gleason, 92, on October 29, 2016

Chemirmir was initially charged in 2018 with the murder of 81-year-old Lu Thi Harris [left]. but in 2019, he was indicted in the deaths of on six more women, including 92-year-old Doris Gleason [right], on Oct 29, 2016

Just a month later, Margaret White was found dead at The Tradition Prestonwood complex. As in other cases her apartment was found to have been stripped of her jewelry.
A day before Christmas in 2017, Doris Wasserman was found dead on her bed, just hours after spending time with her family.
Officials in Dallas County are also investigating Chemirmir’s possible involvement in the death of Catherine Probst Sinclair at the Edgemere senor living facility in North Dallas in April 2016.
Her niece told the paper the family always believed her aunt had been killed, but she said police did not take their suspicions seriously.
The niece said there was blood on Sinclair’s pillow and a safe was missing from her apartment.
The suspected serial killer has been in custody since March 2018 for the killing of 81-year-old Lu Thi Harris.
Police in Plano were investigating Chemirmir in connection with suspicious death and suspicious person calls at a senior apartment complex in that Dallas suburb and found evidence linking him to Harris’ death in Dallas, authorities said. 

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Catherine-Probst-Sinclair-2.jpg
Chemirmir is being investigated in connection to the death of Catherine Probst Sinclair [photo], at the Edgemere senor living facility in North Dallas in April 2016

The break in the case came when Chemirmir forced his way into the Plano apartment of a 91-year-old woman that March, telling her to ‘go to bed. Don’t fight me,’ according to an arrest affidavit filed in Collin County. 
The woman was smothered with a pillow into unconsciousness and robbed. However, paramedics revived her and she told investigators that her attacker had stolen a box containing her jewelry.
Police identified Chemirmir from a license plate number and were able to find and tail him days later, when they watched him throw a jewelry box into a trash bin.
Police traced the box to Harris, according to the affidavit.
Plano police Chief Gregory Rushin said at the time that Chemirmir used his experience as a home healthcare aide ‘to his advantage in targeting and exploiting seniors, some of the most vulnerable people in our community.’

Chemirmir was previously charged with the murder of Phyllis Payne (left), 91, on May 14, 2016, and Norma French (right), 85, who was killed October 8, 2016

In May 2019, he was charged with 11 other murders by smothering.
This past February, the Dallas County Grand Jury indicted Chemirmir on capital murder charges in the deaths of Leah Corken, 83, and Juanita Purdy, 82.
The two women also lived in The Tradition-Prestonwood and died suddenly in the summer of 2016.
Court documents alleged that Chemirmir smothered both women to death with a pillow.
In July 2019, the families of Purdy and Corken filed a lawsuit against The Tradition-Prestonwood, accusing the facility of failing to provide adequate security and repeatedly allowing an allegedly serial killer masquerading as a maintenance worker onto the premises. 

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