A Birmingham nurse who carried on a secret affair murdered her husband by injecting him with a lethal dose of insulin after he removed her from his will, a detailed examination of the case reveals. Marie Whiston, originally from the Philippines, targeted Eric Lloyd at their home on Belchers Lane in Bordesley Green in June 1994. Eric, a car factory worker in poor health, initially appeared to have died from natural causes.
The Deception and Rising Suspicions
Whiston later claimed Eric had died by suicide through a drug overdose. However, her overly dramatic grief, insistence on a swift cremation, and the financial motives sparked doubts. The quick cremation push aimed to eliminate evidence, while compromised blood samples from a delayed post-mortem exam hindered early analysis.
Coroner’s officer Stephanie Stevens observed Whiston’s facade crumble during interactions. “She was trying to cry but there were no tears,” Stevens recalled. “She was looking out the corner of her eyes to see if I was looking. And I was looking and I could tell she was lying.” Stevens added, “She was just lying—I could tell she was lying the whole time. It was just her evil, evil behaviour that I knew she was guilty.”
Stevens grew so invested in uncovering the truth that Eric “almost became part of my family,” she said. “I was so convinced a wrong had been done and I needed to undo that wrong. She was such a wicked woman.”
Forensic Innovation Uncovers the Truth
In a pioneering move for UK forensics, investigators turned to urine testing when blood evidence proved unreliable. Since Eric was not diabetic, elevated insulin levels in his urine indicated deliberate injection. This breakthrough confirmed Whiston’s guilt after a three-year police investigation in the late 1990s.
Whiston, employed at Heartlands Hospital, faced arrest and conviction for murder. She received a 16-year sentence, later reduced to 14 years on appeal, and served as a model prisoner. An affidavit from her ex-husband during divorce proceedings proved pivotal, detailing how she had threatened to kill him with insulin, leveraging her nursing expertise.
Expert Insights into the Killer’s Motives
Criminologist Prof David Wilson of Birmingham City University analyzed the case, highlighting Stevens’ role as a “hero.” “She was not prepared to let that go and because of her determination to find out the truth, a calculated killer was brought to justice,” Wilson stated. He credited her with potentially preventing further crimes, noting Whiston’s plans to relocate to Canada with her lover.
Wilson described Whiston’s relationships as transactional, lacking genuine emotion. “Her use of serial monogamy to be a survival strategy is fascinating. She didn’t love. She was in a transactional relationship,” he explained. “When she no longer felt she was getting what she needed out of that transaction, she killed and moved again.”
He pointed to her performative grief and control issues: “I have no doubt that would have happened (killed again had she not been stopped). All credit to Stephanie Stevens. She first drew attention to Marie Whiston’s mask slipping and how the grief wasn’t real. It was performative.” Wilson also noted her rush for cremation to destroy evidence.
The case flips typical gender dynamics in domestic murders, where women victims outnumber men. “More women are murdered in a domestic setting than men in a domestic setting, so I didn’t mind flipping the gender of the victim because I felt it showed us something new,” Wilson said. He observed that killers like Whiston grow overconfident, appearing suspicious despite believing they will evade detection.
Investigative psychologist Prof Donna Youngs emphasized the will’s role in triggering Whiston’s actions. Eric had added and then removed her as beneficiary for unknown reasons, which “sealed his fate.” “Marie’s survival instinct would have been utterly kicked in by this,” Youngs stated. “To someone like Marie, to exclude her from his will would have activated this survival instinct. Having excluded her from his will, he sealed his own fate. Marie now had both the method and the motive in her hands.”
Youngs viewed the murder as a calculated step: “It suggests Eric’s murder was a calculated transaction to finalise the past and fund the future.”
Whiston’s enjoyment of control extended to structuring their home life, and the killing provided psychological gains through feigned widowhood sympathy. Once the relationship’s benefits waned, she sought richer prospects elsewhere, culminating in the ultimate act of dominance.

