Casefile True Crime - Case 06: Roger Dean
Episode Date: February 13, 2016"You won't believe it, but it was like, satan saying to me that it's the right thing to do." In the early hours of the 18th of November 2011 a fire was deliberately lit at the Quakers Hill Nursing H...ome. The nursing home housed 89 residents, a lot of whom were highly dependent patients who were immobile, suffering dementia and Alzheimer's disease. For all credits and sources please visit casefilepodcast.com/case-06-roger-dean
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In the early hours of the 18th of November 2011, a fire was deliberately lit at the Quakershill
nursing home in Sydney's northwest. The nursing home housed 89 residents, a lot were
high dependent patients who were immobile, suffering from Alzheimer's and dementia.
The fire killed 11 residents. A further eight residents were seriously injured from burns
and smoke inhalation but survived. The case is one of Australia's worst ever mass murders,
committed by a registered nurse, Roger Dean, the person who was in charge of the nursing home
that night, the person who was supposed to be caring for the residents.
But he didn't care about anyone but himself. He was trying to cover up another crime that he had
committed.
Quakershill nursing home is an aged care facility caring for up to 100 residents that require a
high need of care and full assistance with daily living activities. The home has 35 separate rooms
each containing a number of beds. The nursing home is built into a large H shape and is divided
into four wings. Wing A1, Wing A2, Wing B1 and Wing B2. Wing A1 contained eight rooms, Wing A2
had eight rooms and two double rooms, Wing B1 contained six rooms, Wing B2 had six rooms with
one double room and each room contained four beds. The external doors including the main
entrance to the nursing home were kept locked. Entry required a pin number on a keypad. There
was a different code for day and night. The day code was available to staff and to some relatives
but at 8 p.m. each night the code changed and that night time code was only available to staff members.
The nursing home contained 16 CCTV cameras in total. Cameras were located both internally
and externally. The cameras were motion activated and each time the camera was activated the time
was recorded. There were 89 residents living in the nursing home at the time of the fire.
Many of the residents were bedridden and suffered from dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
Many needed assistance with day-to-day living.
In early September 2011 a new nurse commenced employment at the Quakers Hill nursing home
to work the night shift on Wednesday and Thursday nights. That nurse was Roger Dean.
Roger Dean was 35 years old. He was born in Vietnam and arrived in Australia as an infant
with his mother and three other siblings. They arrived to Australia as refugees.
Their father died whilst trying to flee Vietnam at a later date.
Roger was homosexual and he recognised and identified with his sexual orientation from an
early age. This resulted in him being socially isolated at school and the victim of excessive
bullying. In his mid teens he was actually physically and sexually assaulted by two adult men.
He had an open homosexual relationship by the age of 18 and this ignited a rift between Roger and
his family. He had little to no contact with his siblings throughout his adult life and his
relationship with his mother has been strained. They did not approve of Roger's homosexual lifestyle.
Roger graduated from the University of Sydney with a Bachelor of Nursing degree in 1996.
He worked as a nurse at both the St George Hospital south of Sydney and the St John of God Hospital
in Burwood which is in Sydney's west. In 2004 he started a law degree at Macquarie University
while still working as a nurse. This had an adverse effect on his in-work relationships
and resulted in numerous arguments with fellow staff members. The law degree combined with
his employment and shift work was having an adverse effect on his sleeping patterns.
Not long after this Roger was diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome and was prescribed
benzodiazepines. This drug is like a tranquiliser which is prescribed for anxiety and sleeping
problems. By 2007 he was no longer using the drug for what it was prescribed for,
he was abusing it, using it for recreational purposes. In 2008 one of Roger's close friends
committed suicide which escalated his misuse of prescription drugs. Roger used to go doctor
shopping and stockpiled a list of prescription medications, not just benzos but also sleeping
tablets, painkillers, any depressants, any psychotic medication, antibiotics and penicillin,
nausea medication, high blood meds, asthma meds, the list went on and on. He used to store the
medications in his kitchen pantry in two separate Tupperware containers. At the time of his arrest
he had about 43 different prescription drugs at his home and he was taking about 15 tablets per day.
Roger resided in Walker Street Quakers Hill within walking distance to the nursing home.
He lived there with his former partner, a Mr. French. There's differing reports as to whether
or not they were still partners or they were ex-partners and now just flatmates but regardless
they live there together. Roger had a serious problem with prescription medication. In June
2011, only three months before commencing employment at Quakers Hill nursing home,
Roger was found drug affected whilst on duty at the St. John of God hospital. He couldn't
talk properly, could hardly walk, he was uncoordinated, he was spitting, couldn't understand basic
requests. He was sent home from work and immediately suspended. In the review over that
incident he claimed to suffer from bipolar and depression and he blamed the incident at work
on his GP who had recently changed his medication. He obtained a signed note from his GP confirming
he suffered bipolar and depression and recently had the medication change, explaining his behaviour.
The GP declared him fit and well to return to work. Shortly after this Roger Deane was informed
by a supervisor at St. John of God hospital that he was to be taken off night shifts and placed on
day shifts so he could be properly supervised. They didn't trust him. They also believed he
had a poor ability to communicate and to manage relationships with others which aren't good
qualities for a registered nurse. Roger resigned from St. John of God hospital in September
and as he only lived nearby to Quakers Hill nursing home he walked down there and asked if
they had any work going and they said they did. They needed a registered nurse to cover Wednesday
and Thursday night shifts. Roger gave them his resume but he never made mention of his employment
at St. John of God hospital. He said his last employment as a nurse was at St. George Hospital
in 2007 and since that time he had worked in a cheesecake shop. He also produced the no recent
references but it didn't really matter anyway because no one at Quakers Hill nursing home
contacted any of his references or previous employers. He was hired based on his resume
which was misleading and a quick interview so they had no idea about his poor recent history
at St. John of God hospital and the fact that they didn't trust him there.
So he got his start at Quakers Hill nursing home in early September 2011 to work Wednesday and
Thursday nights when if there were better systems in place he should never have been given the job.
He should never have been allowed anywhere near the residence of the Quakers Hill nursing home
or anywhere else for that matter. On the 6th of September 2011 only days after
commencing employment a local fire station officer delivered a training course at the
nursing home titled fire safety in healthcare facilities. Roger attended that course.
The course included a walk around the nursing home indicating the location of all installed
firefighting equipment and the location of the fire and smoke doors as well as the differences
between them and how they function. The fire doors were designed to automatically close upon
activation of the fire alarm to contain a fire within the wing that it had started. The fire
officer also explained the purpose of the fire indicator panel and the emergency warning system.
As well as doctor shopping Roger Dean developed another method of obtaining prescription medication
by stealing it from the nursing home. All of the Schedulate drugs were stored and dispensed under
strict protocols. There were regular audits to ensure all were accounted for. Schedulate drugs
are prescription based drugs that have a recognized therapeutic need but also a higher risk of misuse,
abuse and dependence. So we're talking about things like oxy, endone, codeine, methadone
and a lot more. Basically a lot of the stuff Roger Dean was addicted to.
The Schedulate drugs were stored in a treatment room in the central part of B wing between section
B1 and section B2. Despite being a treatment room it was never used to treat patients,
it was just the drug room. The drugs were stored in a lock cupboard within that room and the door
to the room itself was always kept locked. The door to the treatment room could only be opened
by a key on a blue lanyard and the locked cupboard that housed the Schedulate drugs inside could
only be opened by a key on a red lanyard. The night shift registered nurse was always in possession
of both lanyards and whenever he was at work Roger Dean was the night shift registered nurse
meaning he had both lanyards and both keys. But the nursing home had a strict protocol
that required both the registered nurse and an assistant nurse to be present in order to access
the drugs. So each time a Schedulate drug was dispensed there was a drug register that had
to be filled out. This included the patient's name, the date and time, the type of drug and how much,
then both the registered nurse and the assistant nurse would sign the register.
An audit was conducted every day by the two registered nurses that worked the afternoon shift.
So at 8 p.m. on the 16th of November 2011 an audit of the Schedulate drugs was carried out by
the afternoon registered nurses and all were accounted for. Later that night at 10 30 p.m.
the 16th of November Roger Dean commenced his shift. Being the registered nurse on night shift
means Roger was basically in charge of the place. Roger finished his shift at 7 a.m. on the 17th of
November and during that time he stole 237 endone tablets and one cappernold tablet from the treatment
room. Although there is no CCTV footage inside the treatment room there is a camera that shows
entry to it and Roger Dean was captured on that footage entering and leaving the room many times.
He would spend a considerable amount of time inside the room removing the endone tablets from
their blister packs. He tried to cover this up by placing sticky tape around the blister packs
but that fooled nobody. At 7 30 p.m. the 17th of November the afternoon shift registered nurses
completed an audit of the Schedulate drugs as per their daily protocol. They noticed the 237
endone tablets missing and the one cappernold tablet missing. They immediately contacted the
clinical manager Leneda Matteo who wasn't on duty at the time but she immediately travelled to
the nursing home to double check the order. This was a pretty serious thing. Leneda Matteo
confirmed the drugs were missing and at 10 p.m. she contacted Quakers Hill police to make a report.
Roger Dean arrived at work at 10 23 p.m. that night. He conducted a changeover with the afternoon
shift staff and they informed him about the missing drugs and that the police were on their way to
take a report. Roger starts to panic. Not only is his nursing career in jeopardy but the law degree
he is studying and nearly finished will be worthless if he gets a criminal conviction
so he is on edge. Police arrived just after midnight. They'll met at the door by Roger who
allowed them inside. The police started to take a report and ask a few questions of Roger and Leneda
Matteo. However after 17 minutes of being on scene they received an urgent call and they had to leave.
They said they'll be back as soon as they could.
Whilst writing for the police to return Leneda Matteo started reviewing the CCTV footage covering
the treatment room and that's when she saw the only person coming and going was Roger.
At 3.43 a.m. Leneda left the nursing home. The police still hadn't arrived back and she was
unable to wait any longer. Leneda had compiled all the evidence of the test together. She had the
audit documents and computer records, the CCTV footage and the empty blister packs for finger
printing. She kept them in her office and locked the door. There were only two keys available to
her office. She had one and the facility manager had the other. The manager's office wouldn't
be opened again until after the fire when it was opened by police. Once Leneda had left
Roger had come up with his plan to avoid getting in trouble for the drug theft.
At 4.35 a.m. Roger Deane requested two assistant nurses in B-Wing who were near the treatment
room to take a break. They declined stating they had already had their break.
So Roger Deane then approached two other assistant nurses over in A-Wing and told them to take a
break, which they did and this left Roger alone on the ward. At 4.51 a.m. Roger entered Wing A2
where there were no CCTV cameras. About 4.53 a.m. Roger set fire to a bed in Room 19 of Wing A2.
He used a cigarette lighter that had been left in the kitchen by another staff member.
This is how he describes it. I took the lighter for the purpose of
lighting. I didn't expect to light a bed. I just wanted to light something.
I just wanted to
set a light to something.
It just so happens that there was an empty bed and I just did it to that.
The fire sensors detected the fire almost immediately and the fire alarm activated.
The alarm caused the loud siren to activate and this sent an automatic message to the fire brigade.
All the fire doors throughout the nursing home closed and the fire alarm panel in the
fire was activated. Of course Roger was well aware of all this because he had recently attended
the fire safety and healthcare facilities course. As the fire door closed Roger walked from Wing A2
towards Wing A1. Roger then lit a second fire on the sheet of an unoccupied bed in Room 3 of
Wing A1. He used the same cigarette lighter which he then threw into a sanitary bin in the
Wing A1 bathroom. This is how he describes it. It started just as a small flame and
I thought that that's okay. Like that's
containable. I didn't expect it to be
so big.
It was just something stupid and
something that I wish I'd never done.
At 4.59 a.m. the first fire brigade officers arrived. Other staff members directed them straight
to the first fire in Room 19 in Wing A2. They were able to extinguish that fire but they were
unaware of the second fire. There was no second alarm alerting them to the second fire. The alarm
had already gone off so as far as they were aware Room 19 was the only fire.
While this fire was being put out Roger Dean started to try and play hero. He grabbed a resident
Helen from Room 4 in Wing A1 the room next door to the second fire. He said come on darling we've
got to get out we've got to evacuate. He started to walk her out of the room up the hallway to the
front door. As they passed Room 3 Helen looked in and saw the second fire. By this stage the bed
was well alight. Helen broke free from Roger and ran into the room yelling we've got to get them
out we've got to get them out. What Roger had done was lit the second fire on an unoccupied bed
but there were two residents in that room on other beds Dorothy Sterling and Dorothy Wu.
Both suffered Alzheimer's disease amongst other health problems. Both were immobile and were
unable to move without assistance. Roger would have been well aware of this but he just left them to
die. He callously said don't worry Helen just leave them we've got to get out people are on
their way to get them. Roger grabbed Helen and forced her out of the room. Roger got Helen out and
then divided his time between Wing A and Wing B assisting some of the residents to get out
but at no time did he tell anyone about the second fire.
As far as the fire brigade officers and other staff members could tell there was
still only the one fire and that had been put out. At 5 0 4 a.m fire brigade officers made
their way into Wing A1 and it became clear to them at this point that there was actually a second
fire but at this stage the fire was out of control the heat was intense and there were excessive
amounts of black smoke everywhere. For this reason it was difficult for them to determine where the
fire was exactly they could hear a number of residents screaming out for help.
In the meantime Roger Dean was outside safe he helped move residents away from the building as
they made their way outside. At 5 15 a.m fire brigade officers found the second fire in room 3
by this stage the fire was reaching the roof it was well alight they got to work on putting it out.
They could still hear residents crying out for help the smoke and the heat were so intense they
had to crawl around on their hands and knees to try and find the residents they couldn't say anything
they were getting around more by way of touch than anything else it was a horrific scene.
The residents that could move by themselves were crawling on their hands and knees to get
out with the roof burning above them but then there were those residents who couldn't move
without help frail and vulnerable just lying there waiting for someone to come and save them
with the building burning down around them. It's hard to imagine anyone experiencing more terror
in some cases they were able to wheel patients out but in other cases they had to make do just
by dragging them along the floor they had to do whatever they could to get the residents out as
quickly as possible and once they got some residents to safety they ran straight back into danger to
get more fire brigade officers did their best to get everyone out but not everyone could be saved.
The fire resulted in three residents dying at the scene another eight residents died later in
hospital and another three died in the weeks and months after the fire. Outside was a horrible
horrible sight elderly vulnerable patients everywhere lying in beds lying on the ground
being attended to by ambulance officers beds were stacked up outside everywhere
there were police everywhere fire brigade everywhere onlookers everywhere it was estimated
there were about a hundred firefighters on scene a hundred ambulance officers on scene and about
75 police on scene when you add in all of the residents and all of the onlookers and the media
the place looked more like a war zone and in amongst it all was roger dean standing amongst
the chaos safely outside he remained outside for a while but between 5 30 a.m. and 6 10 a.m.
he made three separate attempts to re-enter the nursing home through the front doors
he was blocked by police and fire officers the first two times but the third time he got lucky
he said to a firefighter i need to go inside to get the drug books i'll need to get in there
roger showed the firefighter the two lanyards with the keys for the Schedulate Drug Room and
the drug cupboard the firefighter allowed roger to enter but he also went with him
roger went with the firefighter towards the treatment room but roger stopped sure to
where the cctv cameras capture he handed the keys to the firefighter and told him the location of
the drug books inside the treatment room while he waited off camera but the firefighter couldn't
open the door so he called roger over roger didn't go at first he was reluctant he was trying to call
out the instructions but eventually he had no choice he had to walk on camera to unlock the room
he walked in the room unlocked the drug cabinet and removed the drug order registers
put them into his shoulder bag and then left the building
as he was leaving he said i need to go home i need to get ventalin i live close by and i really
need my ventalin but as roger left the nursing home he ran straight into the path of a tv
reporter and camera crew and he made time for a quick interview this is what he had to say
i'm roger i'm one of the nurses and just there was a fire and i just quickly just did what i can
get everyone out and the smoke is just overwhelming but you know we got a lot of people out so that's
the main thing he gave that interview whilst the drug registers were still in his bag the reason
he caused the whole tragedy afterwards roger walked home where he tore up the pages of the
drug order register he put the pages into a plastic shopping bag and then got his flatmate
mr french to drive him to a shop in douglas road quakers hill where he disposed of the bag in a
dumpster bin roger then got dropped off back at the nursing home he was looked over by ambulance
officers and was taken to mount droot hospital his condition was recorded as presented with
sooty residue on his face and clothes pale skin and generally distressed about 2 p.m he was released
from hospital and was taken to mount droot police station where he made a statement he made no
admissions in that statement he just accounted for his actions on the night minus the part about
lighting the fires shortly after making the statement he was told by police he was a suspect
it's hard to understand what roger was hoping to achieve by starting this fire we know it was
done to try and cover up the fact he stole the drugs but it covered up nothing lanetta the clinical
manager had already reviewed the cctv footage and had all the evidence stored in her locked office
roger was the only one with keys the night the drugs were stolen and he was the only one
entering the room on the cctv footage the footage was still intact it wasn't damaged by the fire
at all so not only did it show him stealing the drugs it also showed the far more serious
offence of him being responsible for lighting the fires the actual act themselves when captured
they were off camera but it wasn't hard to work out who was responsible he was the only one on
camera going to the locations of the fires police had their man pretty much straight away there was
no long drawn out investigation in fact when he was told by police he was a suspect they already
had his telephone tapped and he made a call straight away to mr french he told him what was
going on he then called two friends mr and mrs reid who attended the police station to speak
with him in private and while speaking to them he came clean and made full admissions to lighting
the fires roger dean was arrested at 7 50 p.m a lot of the residents killed were unable to move
independently a worse fate is difficult to imagine knowing a fire is raging and not being able to move
or do anything about it just lying there waiting to be either burnt alive or to be suffocated by
smoke all the victims were vulnerable and were under roger's direct care he was the registered
nurse in charge of the night shift he knew those patients in that room where he lit the second fire
were immobile and he refused to help them telling helen don't worry someone else is coming but he
knew no one else was coming because they didn't know about the second fire and he didn't tell anyone
about it despite this he claims that he never intended to hurt anybody he didn't think the
fires would get out of control he thought they would be contained but his actions tell a different
story there was premeditation and planning he asked the two assistant nurses to leave the wing
he had planned this with one main objective to deflect the tension away from the stolen drugs
it's been thought since that roger was mistreating patients before the fire doing
things like giving them no-days tablets or generic over-the-counter paracetamol tablets
instead of their prescribed pain medication which he would instead keep for himself
other staff members had already complained about roger dean's behavior at the nursing home
but nothing had been done roger tried to shift accountability away from himself by placing the
blame on prescription drugs and a psychiatric illness and even the devil you won't believe it
but it was like satan saying to me that it's the right thing to do the grounds of placing
blame on the prescription drug addiction a psych illness satan or whatever else were rejected
roger displayed no obvious impairment to his reasoning communication skills or physical
function during his television interview just after the incident or during his police interview
later that night doctors rejected any notion of a psychiatric illness after an evaluation roger
was determined to show narcissistic personality traits with an unusually strong desire to please
people he also was found to have a strong sense of entitlement an assumption of superiority
he disregarded the needs of others dismissed criticism and refused to take advice and instruction
the very fact he committed the crime to cover up the drug theft shows he was of sound mind
he had no impaired capacity from drugs or a psych illness and he didn't receive instructions from
satan the reason to light the fires was out of pure self-interest he knew his career in nursing
and any future career in law would be gone if he was convicted of stealing drugs
Roger initially elected to have the charges go to trial and he requested to have them at a
trial in front of a judge only no jury but this application was thrown out and as a result roger
elected not to go to trial instead on the 27th of May 2013 in the New South Wales Supreme Court
he played guilty to 11 counts of murder he also played guilty to eight counts of recklessly
cause grief spotterly harm he also played a guilty to stealing the Schedule 8 drugs
the 11 lives he took that night were Dorothy Sterling, Dorothy Woo, Alma Smith, Lola Bennett,
Ella Wood, Urbana Alepio, Cesar Gali, Doris Beck, Reginald William Green, Verna Webeck,
and Nils J. Valquet Roger was also responsible for the deaths of three other people
that he was never charged with murder for they couldn't exactly pin the deaths directly to him
they lost their lives a bit later on but I think you can say he was responsible
Esther Newman's death was deemed to be due to age and natural causes however she suffered
smoke inhalation that night and was in hospital Joan Joy's death was ruled due to age and natural
causes however she suffered stress as she had to be disconnected from her dialysis machine during
the evacuation Immanuel Katia died from an infection acquired in hospital after being admitted
as she was suffering from smoke inhalation it was found that the late guilty pleas were made
out of a realization on Roger's part that there was overwhelming and damning evidence of his guilt
and overwhelming and damning evidence he committed to crimes whilst in a lucid and rational state
he didn't plead guilty due to any remorse on the 1st of August 2013 in the New South Wales
Supreme Court Roger Dean was sentenced to life in prison for each murder charge he was also given
jail time for the eight counts of recklessly inflicted grievous bodily harm and for stealing
the drugs but by the time those sentences expire he was still being custody on the murder charges
he's never getting out
Roger shared no emotion at all when his life sentence was read out
he just stared blankly straight ahead before being taken away to spend the rest of his life
behind bars victims family members in the court yelled out and applauded at the sentence
it was fitting he was giving a life sentence not only did he take 11 lives he handed all
the family members a life sentence as well they thought they were doing the right thing
sending their family members to a nursing home it was supposed to be a safe place a place where
they'll be well cared for and well looked after not a place where they were supposed to be put
in danger by a complete psychopath the fact that so many residents required assistance with day-to-day
living and just moving around in general and the fact many suffered dementia and Alzheimer's
significantly complicated the rescue effort and was a factor in the scale of the disaster
no one knew just how vulnerable the residents were better than Roger Dean
whilst in jail Roger has suffered degrading and distressing behavior at the hands of other inmates
his reputation has required the need for him to be put into protective custody
Roger later appealed life sentences saying they were excessive and that he could not have foreseen
the extent of the damage and loss of life that occurred when he lit the fires
he also argued that his long-term addiction to prescription medication
and his alleged personality disorder slash psychiatric illness and the effect that those
had on his decision-making were not taken into account during the sentencing
thankfully this appeal was rejected the court of criminal appeal found that his actions were
deliberate for the purpose of covering up theft of the prescription drugs and that he had several
opportunities to alert firefighters as to where the second fire was but he didn't
instead electing to try and work out how to retrieve the drug order registers
Roger Dean will thankfully spend the rest of his life in jail
he never even really showed any remorse just trying to shift the blame on the devil and the evil thoughts
I love the residents very much and I have a really good rapport with them
so I feel extremely bad and I just feel evil that I'm just corrupted with evil thoughts
that have made me do that
you