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Old 24-09-21, 17:15   #1
 
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Movies Dr DEATH -Devils' ANGEL-Killed 215 >300 Women

Dr Harold Shipman -ANGEL of DEATH -Killed 215 >300 Elderly Women

From 1975 to 1998, ‘Dr. Death’ is thought to have killed over 265 patients in Britain.


Murders & Mysteries 24 SEP 2021









Dr. Harold Shipman | Photo Credits: BBC


Imagine being hale and hearty at a ripe old age just to have that taken away from you by a psychopath with a god complex, that too when the psychopath turns out to be your doctor!


A Seemingly Respectable Doctor


With his grey beard and spectacles, and over twenty years of medical experience at the small suburban town of Hyde, Dr. Harold Shipman enjoyed a long prestigious career before finally getting caught. Nobody could’ve guessed that this unassuming man was, in fact, a psychopath, insidiously overdosing hundreds of patients with morphine, often merely because he considered them annoying.

The exact motive behind his crimes remains unknown to this day.

By the time he was caught, he had over 3000 registered patients with such solid belief in his reputation that most of them could not believe that he was a murderer. Such strong was his ability to trap his victims.

According to the Shipman inquiry chairperson, Dame Janet Smith,

“Many people described Shipman as having a wonderful bedside manner, especially with the elderly. He would make much of them and sometimes tease them gently. They liked it. He made them feel that he was a real friend as well as their doctor- yet, he would kill them.”


Early Life and Addiction




Harold Shipman during his tenure at Abraham Ormerod Medical Center | Photo Credits: The Scottish Sun



Born on January 14, 1946, Harold Fredrick Shipman was the middle child of a working-class family. As a kid, he was his mother’s favorite child, and her domineering personality instilled within him a superiority complex that tainted most of his relationships. Many described him as a bright but lonely individual.

Soon after his 17th birthday in the year 1963, his mother died of lung cancer; her suffering and death affected him deeply. Throughout her treatment, he was the one who’d diligently cared for her. During this period, he was utterly fascinated by the effect morphine had on her, a discovery that tainted the rest his life.

Devastated by his mother’s death, he decided to get admission into Leads University Medical School. It was here he met his first wife, Primrose May Oxtoby when she was 17, and he was 19.

He graduated in 1970, and by the year 1974, he had a thriving medical practice as a general practitioner at the Abraham Ormerod Medical Centre in Todmorden. He was a devoted doctor, excellent at his skill till he became addicted to pethidine, a potent pain killer. He started forging prescriptions and horde narcotics till he was caught and sacked in 1976.

He received an official warning but wasn’t penalized. Hence, his later employers were never briefed about his addiction.

After a brief period of rehabilitation, he successfully found work again as a general practitioner in the small town of Hyde near Manchester, the town where the majority of his murders took place.


Beginning of the Onslaught




Site of Harold Shipman’s private practice | Photo Credits: ati


In 1992, he established an independent practice; the lack of supervision afforded him ample opportunity to target innumerable patients. Alongside his flourishing practice, he made abundant house calls, injecting patients with diamorphine, a pharmaceutical preparation of heroin, inside their own homes. According to forensic experts, he’d already killed over 70 people by this point. His victims were mostly elderly patients, particularly wealthy women who lived alone and enjoyed good health. Most of these unfortunate patients visited him only for mild ailments before ending up dead.

Out of his victims, 171 were women, and 44 were men. His youngest victim was a 41-year-old man, though we have reasons to believe that some of his victims might even have been children as young as four years old.

His method of murder matched his personality: calm, secretive, and even friendly. He’d ask his patients to roll up their sleeves while chatting away with them and then kill them with a lethal injection. Four hundred and fifty-nine people died under his care from 1971 to 1998, but it’s uncertain how many of them were actual murder victims.


The List Goes On




Just some of the serial killer's many elderly victims.....



Shipman was devious and blunt in dealing with the attendants of his patients. Once in 1998, Steven Dickson called Shipman to inquire after his father-in-law’s cancer progress. Shipman replied,

“I wouldn’t buy him any Easter eggs.”

Four days later, his patient dropped dead in his sleep.

In 1998, one of his colleagues, Dr. Linda Reynolds, expressed concerns over the high death rate of Shipman’s patients to John Pollard, the coroner of the South Manchester district. This was brought to her attention due to the numerous cremation forms for elderly women that he’d requested over the years. Inexperienced officers were assigned to the case, and a short but fruitless inquiry took place. Immediately following this investigation, Shipman killed three more patients.


Harold’s Final Error: Forged Will


His last victim was Kathleen Grundy, a former mayoress whom Shipman visited on June 24, 1998. On the morning of the visit, she was in good health but was later found dead in her apartment. Shipman was the last person by her side and declared the death a result of old age.

Besides the shock of her sudden death, her family was taken aback by the will that was later discovered. According to this document, Mrs. Grundy had allegedly bequeathed £386,000 estate to Shipman. The police later discovered that the said ‘will’ had been forged and was typed on a typewriter found at Dr. Shipman’s office. The signatures of both Mrs. Grundy and the witnesses had been forged. Her body was exhumed as part of the investigation and was found loaded with morphine.

At last, this ‘error’ led to his arrest on September 7, 1998.





Other Evidence: Taxi Driver’s Suspicions

A taxi driver, John Shaw, showed up and informed the police of the suspicion that Shipman had murdered twenty-one patients under his watch. Shaw had been routinely driving patients to and from Shipman’s clinic for many years. He had concluded by noticing that all of the elderly and considerably healthy patients he had driven to Shipman ended up dead soon after the visit.

He observed this pattern for three years before finally reaching out to the police. John Shaw later expressed profuse guilt over not reporting it sooner; he held back for too long because he thought he was acting crazy suspecting the doctor. He further added,

“The fact that Shipman was such a well-respected figure in the community who seemed to be popular and well-liked by his patients made it more difficult to express my concerns publicly. I couldn’t believe what my suspicions were. They were so fantastic that I couldn’t grasp what my mind was telling me.”

All past medical records of Harold Shipman were brought out, and a massive investigation took place. Statistical monitoring raised alarms as excessive deaths of females over the age of 60 were recorded in the Greater Manchester area. The contribution of Howard Shaw greatly aided the Shipman case and provided evidence for 15 confirmed counts of murders by lethal diamorphine injections.


End of the Killing Spree


In January 2000, Harold Shipman was at last convicted over the death of 15 patients and forging the will of one. He was sentenced to life in prison. A sentence that lasted briefly since he killed himself, four years later. He was discovered hanging from the window bars of his cell on the eve of his 58th birthday.


A man who killed hundreds in his watch died by committing suicide.

Some of the family members of his victims expressed remorse. They felt that they had been cheated by his suicide and could never gain the satisfaction of watching him suffer. He was termed ‘a cold coward,’ and the prison staff was condemned for allowing his suicide. Yet newspapers bore the title “Ship ship hurrah,” and celebrations erupted over his demise.

Once returned to his family, his body remained unburied for over a year out of fear that his grave might be attacked. He was eventually cremated in secrecy at a private ceremony.

In 2005, an official report under Dame Janet Smith gave an account of over 250 patients that he had killed and later signed a death certificate attributing the deaths to old age.

His wife, Primrose Shipman, blatantly maintained his innocence even after his conviction. And on occasion, even exonerated him.


Shipman’s Implications for General Practice


With his methods seeping through practice within the medical community, the question of doctors easing the final moments of their patients or helping them ‘slide through’ was raised.

“Shipman’s murders raised troubling questions about the powers and responsibilities of the medical community in Britain and about the adequacy of procedures for certifying sudden death.”

Questions regarding euthanasia and assisted suicide were raised and debated. Changes were made in the investigation and assertion of clinical death and its certification. The structure of General Medical Practice was questioned, transforming single-doctor general practices to multiple doctor general practices. Cremation forms in England and Wales had their questions altered as a direct result. An entire nation’s general healthcare system had to be reviewed!


Quest for Answers Continues


Whatever his malicious intents were, experts believe that all his life, Shipman replayed the death of his mother over and over again like a play where he was the puppet master. He was either profoundly relieved or deeply traumatized by the incident.

He might even be avenging the untimely death of his mother.

Either that or he was simply ‘addicted to killing,’ a serial killer who was coincidentally also a doctor.

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