Harold Shipman: Doctor Death Who Killed 250 Patients (Crime Documentary) | Real Stories

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15 is underselling it a bit..

👍︎︎ 4 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ Jan 27 2019 🗫︎ replies
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[Music] he was kind thoughtful friendly pathological liar at the time when would have said an answer to prayer just what we needed access to death dealing drugs already well-managed and very apply perfect predator good company outside an extremely popular with everybody for whom trust of the victims it was a nice guy he was a good guy perfect killing machine [Music] [Music] his patients were mainly elderly women living alone and vulnerable they adored their doctor Harold Fred Shipman and even when their contemporaries began dying in unusually high numbers patients remained loyal the number of patients that dr. Shipman murdered is still unknown but his murderous roll call eclipses the toll of any other serial killer caught today did events in his life turn him to murder or more simply was Harold Shipman born to kill our Frederick Shipman is an interesting case to examine the very remarkable nature of his case is the fact that he was not remarkable we could say he can't be a killer because he's a bit like us Harold Shipman fitted in with society to a great degree and this was the very important feature which made it possible for him to go on and on to be one of the most prolific serial killers of all time for his victims death came in the afternoon but for Harold Frederick Shipman it came in the early hours of the morning at Wakefield prison on Tuesday the 13th of January 2004 prisoner CJ 8 199 the expert in death had timed his final act well he was beyond saving he had been alive at 5 a.m. when the last check was made on him and he knew the next check was not for another hour as a doctor he also knew that 4 minutes was the maximum time he needed what he is done is he's taken to his grave the reason and the motivation behind his killing when left everybody guessing in relation to Dutton sort of perplexed forevermore his suicide caused shockwaves through Hyde the town in Greater Manchester where most of his victims and their families lived Hyde was such a lovely town it was a proper old-fashioned traditional community where sons and daughter still lived on their the parent's doorsteps and they all live near each of the male understood each other it was a very close community with a warm heart so for shipment to be able to kill so many people in such a small safe community was doubly devastating over the years doctors funeral directors and even pharmacists had raised suspicions about dr. Shipman but such worries were swept under the carpet I found out that the police had actually investigated Shipman before in March 1998 and quite soon after breaking the story I spoke to dr. Linda Reynolds and she was the GP who courageously went to the local coroner John Pollard and told him that she was worried that Shipman had killed his patients on that basis I then instructed the police to make an investigation and that is what has now been referred to as the failed investigation because the police came back to me about a fortnight later and said they'd investigated and quite frankly they could find nothing wrong the fact is they came back to dr. Linda Reynolds and told us she was mistaken that Shipman was a a pillar of the community and you know she must be careful what she's saying about such people and Shipman went on to kill three more women after that dr. Shipman might have carried on killing for years if it had not been for the suspicious death of Kathleen Grundy on the 24th of June 1998 the last person to see her alive was dr. Harold Shipman when he'd gone to her home to take routine blood samples when Kathleen Grundy died she left her will that will was made out in favor of dr. Shipman but her daughter Angela Woodruff I got this copy of a will and she was absolutely astonished because if you look at the actual will is so amateur if you would have formed your will then you've got about 210 for forgery he simply wasn't very good Kathleen grandees daughter believed that the signature was not actually her mother's so consequently the document needed to be examined [Music] the officer who was given the case to handle started on to a couple of people he knew one of them being the local Undertaker Allen Massey who said well I've been really worried about the number of Commission certificates of mentioned to people who thought they'd taken no interest but there's so many of them there was the fact that Shipman's fingerprint appeared on the will when in actual fact in interview Shipman denied that he had ever seen the world the fact that shipment actually on the typewriter that the will had been typed on and that an interview he suggested that mrs. Grundy used to borrow the typewriter but he couldn't suggest to us who had returned it to him after the will have been prepared it was decided that Kathleen's body needed to be exhumed and forensic ly examined to discover the true cause of her death the investigation into cufflink Ramdas death was undertaken in the knowledge that there had been an earlier investigation into dr. Shipman's activities that had involved 19 deaths about a fortnight into the inquiry there was interest from a local newspaper my news desk that much TV news was tipped off about the death of Kathleen Grundy and the fact the police were investigating her GP I rang the police and they didn't want to comment any further the police decided that the families of the 19 people who died should become aware of the reinvestigation before the story broke I then went into Hyde to find out more about the case from people who knew Kathleen Grundy almost immediately I bumped into two old ladies and they said oh you mean dr. death there and I said I beg your pardon and they said well they say is a good doctor but you don't last lots of our ladies have died with dr. Shipman family members then told us very similar stories to the story that we had already uncovered in relation to Kathleen Grande's that is when I started to realize that this was much bigger than one death that dr. Shipman had been involved in [Music] we carried out the exhumation and a pathologist actually performed a post-mortem shipment of course had certified the death at the times had occurred to be an old age he could not confirm the cause of death that shipment of pot and consequently we sent samples off for analysis there were levels of morphine in the body of the deceased which were sufficient to have led to her death of course mrs. Grande had not been suffering from any serious illnesses that require to be administered diamorphine at that stage I was totally convinced that they were on to someone here who had committed many heinous crimes the community were absolutely wholeheartedly behind dot Shipman at this point he'd he'd groomed that community so that they truly believed in him and thought that he was looking after them when in fact he was killing them by the hundred what we call the category of less than dead in other words the kind of people that if they passed away you don't actually notice so well they're not the kind of people are going to cause a big fuss because almost it's expected and in fact concert of most serial killers he's one of the few people who could probably get the relatives or the council to take away the body for him the way in which the victims were found was in itself quite disturbing many of them were found fully clothed in the middle of the data I'm often sitting upright in a chair or on a sofa some of those cases Shipman had actually certified on the cremation form that he'd carried out a full external examination of the body and yet the victim was still sitting there fully clothed shoes on you notice the sleeves buttoned down to the wrist dresses that button to the neck well how you can carry out a full external investigation in those circumstances I just don't understand [Music] often in the medical notes which he'd made up suggesting that these people had had hot conditions for example when they haven't really and then saying well they must have had a heart attack of course somebody having a heart attack doesn't just simply fall asleep sitting in a chair looking very relaxed life just isn't like that police investigated Shipman's book of death certificates they made a list of 15 deaths that they decided should be investigated as a priority of the victims on this list nine had been buried and six cremated more excavations were ordered police also learned that dr. Shipman had often encouraged the relatives of his victims towards cremation in each of the exhumations that took place tests were carried out and in most of those morphine was discovered in the body and that led to a prosecution in relation to that death the police inquiry would also reveal Shipman's modus operandi he would often kill his victims most of whom were elderly with an injection of morphine and then returned to his office to falsify their medical records on his computer to exaggerate their poor health in the case of Kathleen Grundy he had back dated several entries to suggest she had become addicted to morphine the thought of an 8 2 year old former Lady Mayoress of the town of Hyde scoring bags of heroin in the back streets of Manchester seems to meet ludicrous and ridiculous and the gross insult to her memory quite frankly being a GP placed how Shipman in a position where in public he can actually carry out the very activities in private he wished to carry out and actually project them in the community and wander around the community and Nikki quite clear to people that you know I am a great doctor on the 7th of September 1998 Shipman was arrested on suspicion of murder who was the real dr. Shipman what made him a monster in order to actually find out about this actual behavior and how it developed we have to look back in time very closely at his childhood even beyond in September 1998 Harold Shipman was convicted for 15 murders the Shipman inquiry now documents that he killed 284 people over a period of 30 years before he aroused suspicion however no one really knows the true number of his victims the shipment case is unusual there was no highly publicized trail of bodies no madman on the loose until Shipman was arrested in connection with the Kathleen Grundy case no one could have known just how many murders had taken place if we wish to find out where the Harold Shipman was in fact born to kill we need to examine early childhood looking for patterns of behavior which would indicate that they carry traits that their temperament is different with Harold we realized that on the surface he seems like a very ordinary childhood a very ordinary background but if we dig deeper we know that there are going to be clues as to why he ended up where he did Harold Frederick Shipman nicknamed Fred or Freddy was born into a working-class family On June the 14th 1946 in Nottingham he was a distant and slightly aloof child maintaining a distance between himself and his contemporaries mainly due to the influence of his mother Vera I think his mother certainly encouraged him to the but the path of righteousness but she thought fred was special she wanted him to be special and now he was the middle child the elder sister Pauline a left school of 15 was no great academic his brother Clive wasn't as bright a younger brother however Fred brought him in a decent and fairly new council estate in Nottingham passes 11 plus they got into the local Grammar School have headman's which was extremely prestigious to do so he studied hard he didn't mix very much with local kids and his parents like my parents like lots and lots of other working-class parents would it would have been so proud our boys going to the grammar school Shipman's school days at high pavement were largely unspectacular like so many other grammar school entrance he went from being one of the bright kids at junior school to being run-of-the-mill among so many other clever boys fred was very serious I think it may be that he had to work harder than that the most I know he had a real respect for his family I think he thought that they'd made an effort his parents have made Russell sacrifice his mother really didn't want Fred to be as it were in this area have the same kind of career as other boys and having him focus exclusively on his studies meant that fred was not really integrated into the real world and he was allowed to build up fantasies fantasies of power and fantasies that perhaps might have had a sexual connotation because fred was not really allowed to develop socially and sexually normally vera decided who fred could play with and when she wanted to distinguish him from other boys she was more ambitious for Harold than her other children perhaps because he seemed more much mature he seemed that much older and when certain incidents that occurred at school which perhaps hadn't been anybody else you'd had a good laugh and he had a bed and pay for it with Freddy didn't one of the best examples of that is this I would become dancers that that we had he turned his sister and they used to dance together and there's strangely uncoordinated way totally different and I think she was taller than him as well we just respected him in strange the fact that Fred got respect from his friends is a little bit surprising because of his social alienation however by playing it by the rules by creating an act Fred just simply coexisted with these people and formed no real problem in relating to other people so he was able if it were as it were just to slot in he didn't really have any difficulty because he didn't create any difficulty on Friday the 21st of June 1960 when Fred was just 17 his mother Vera died of lung cancer an illness that he had kept strangely secret from his classmates the family GP visited the house regularly in the weeks before Vera's death giving her welcome injections of morphine in ever decreasing dosages he met schoolmate Michael Heath on his way to school the following Monday morning when he told him his tragic news most days Fred will be coming along along the road here from his house and we'll meet at the bottom of the road here and we'd stop here and just say a few words and then we'd walk walk on to the school he was on one of those there's morning's about Monday morning when I met him at the point just there and just asked him are we we can just have him he was then he said my mama died his mama died you know quite a shock right Fred never said anything to me other than once on a bus I seem to remember him saying my mum's not very well but that could have been that she got a cold from Thomas been terrible well what did you do how did you cope and he said to her my dear on went for a run and he ran pouring rain so he must be absolutely saturated he grieved in a very strange way he run for months and months all through the night in the school running shorts and t-shirts and it was quite an amazing thing he just seemed the same as he did any other day but he must have been going through hell for weeks months before Fred will be the one who sat with her and waited for the doctor to come round and he give her an injection of morphine he was at her bedside when she died and that was a moment that obviously impacted on him gravely here's a school gate mock what was the score there's 10 minutes on on that particular morning that he told me that it was not my diamond awkward to say the least and I must admit when when we arrived he was a bit of a relief trust again foreign separate ways it's interesting that he'd shown no interest in medicine or said he wanted to be a doctor until after his mother passed away many had drawn the comparison between Fred's experience of his mother dying under morphine and his later use of morphine to actually execute the old ladies now there has to be a connection and very few people have actually drawn why one leads to the other if you look back in Fred's history he constantly used exercise exercise generates what we call endorphins endorphins are extremely powerful opiates a hundred sometimes a thousand times more powerful than heroin now fred was a customer-service if you like when his mother passed away he experienced what many people experienced when a family member finally passes away after a grueling period he felt relief he felt a certain lift and this experience was then compounded because he went out for whatever reason and ran all night and that extra opiate running around his body will have given fred are you for it hi hence this situation was likely to be repeated and give him pleasure in the future fred failed to get the grades he needed to study medicine at leeds medical school common with many serial killers with lower self-esteem they always aspire to be better than they want to be up with their peers you know they they envy their peers Kenneth Bianchi the other side surrounded always wanted to be a cop everybody all his schoolmates are all succeeding around him with good grades he was a failure they're always grabbing to get out scrabbling to get somewhere after resetting his exams the following year he was eventually accepted into Leeds Medical School in 1965 did Shipman decide to become a doctor to save people or to have the power to kill them Shipman first went to Leeds he regularly got a bus into Leeds every morning and done months and thus where there was a young girl called Primrose Knox to be who I Chapman married and rather our sphere of bringing she left school at 15 without any qualifications and she got on to an art and design course at ecology means and on that bus it was a very good looking at the time she had mana and they're headed off but very quickly after meeting after about six months she was pregnant Shipman was careless reckless for the first time in his life there's not married at a Register Office there isn't even a photograph in existence of their wedding Shipman qualified from Leeds Medical University and went on to Pontefract General Infirmary to train as a junior doctor after 12 months he was duly licensed to practice medicine according to the Shipman inquiry this was where his first recorded murder took place the Shipman inquiry found that he killed a four-year-old girl for example and and she was very very ill and and dying and her mother left the room saying please be kind to her and he thought that as his cue to kill her he might have pretended that that was euthanasia and that he was doing that child a favor but he wasn't because that child didn't die in her mother's arms her mother was having a cup of tea in the hospital cafe so I think even then he had a very cruel streak that wanted to end lives come what may it is absolutely uncertain exactly where Harold Shipman began to kill people it may have been the case of the four-year-old girl but we do know that as he approached that time Harold will have had some swelling and some strangely unexplicable pleasurable feelings that were probably associated with the event with his mother and he would suddenly start to feel he was in that powerful role that controller of life and death in a right way it harks back to that very moment when he thought he should be that GP by his mother's bedside by 1974 he was a father of two and had joined a medical practice in the Yorkshire town of Todmorden in this North English setting Fred seemed to change character he became an outgoing respected member of the community in the eyes of his fellow medics and patients below him into general practice as a junior partner was clearly very attractive and he went and worked at the air broom omerod practice in document where there was illness among the partners and dr. Michael grieve welcomed him with open arms he was extremely good almost manic in the way he carried out his duties and brought us all the latest techniques and kept us very much up to the mark he was really you know at the time when would have said an answer to prayer just what we needed the doctors did not choose their patients the patients chose the doctor that they liked and Fred had quite a devoted following who felt that he was the bee's knees and would do the best for them in all circumstances Harold Shipman underwent a metamorphosis he changed from being their very a social mummys boy who didn't really get on very well with people into a GP who would establish himself in this area and find that suddenly he could relate to people and grow if you like as a pillar of the community however Harold Shipman did have a different agenda but the staff in the medical offices where he worked saw a different side of the young practitioner he wouldn't delegate he wouldn't let the nurses give injections for him for instance he wouldn't let the pathology technicians when they came out once a week to take blood samples for patients now Fred would insist on doing all these himself nobody had any idea that he was guilty of any kind of malpractice although would emerge later in Todmorden that those innocence were three passions of his died in one day and for a long time one of them Eva Lyons was thought to be his very first victim [Music] but the village doctor wasn't as perfect as the fellow GPS thought it was discovered that he had a drug addiction [Music] one of the other doctors in the practice happened to be in the pharmacist and shield the bottom surgery collisional and there were scores of entries and he amassed huge amounts of better day cleanly not for patients but for himself where he said he was addicted to president because they were told you shouldn't give your patient anything that you haven't tried yourself and finding that it sustained him in his manic state he was quite mannequin what he would do he take on these enormous loads and get through them and perhaps the pethidine was not enabled him to do it and he was so sorry friend you have to go well he booted his medical bag across the surgery table and off he went he thought that I was the devil incarnate and I never spoke to him again [Music] at that point when a serial killer is confronted with the obvious they retreat either with the excuse societies fitted me up it's not my fault all they explode and that's what Shipman was basically doing how dare these little doctors these little people these these people that lower them he how dare they question me how dare they because he believes he's got this thing how dare these people are much lower than me my mother's always taught me this way how dare they interrogate me who are they Shipman was ultimately forced out of the practice and into a York drug rehabilitation centre in 1975 two years later his many convictions for drug offences prescription fraud and forgery cost him a surprisingly low fine of 600 pounds after about a year or so he saw an advert for a junior partner in a practice and hard and the apart for it and when he went there he was totally open about his previous drug habit since a look completely clean I was under enormous stress the General Medical Council is gone to a memory to carry on working as a doctor and I'd love another chance and they believed him and took him in in 1977 he was accepted to practice in the Donnybrook Medical Center in Hyde and it was here that he felt free to kill you know highs not very big town and obviously we had a shot we knew lots of people that were Fred's patients and everybody seemed to have the same opinion that who was a caring guy you know he just seemed a normal guy again he played the role of the dedicated hard-working and community minded doctor highly respected in the area and making many friends we went to couple of social functions with them there were good company outside and extremely popular with everybody that was there give him the impression the guy was just a normal guy you know Howard Shipman found it very much more comfortable to kill and be in hide and hide was a fairly small naive community where he would be accepted this you know tweed wearing friendly local GP character Harold Shipman had had what we call career development as a killer he had actually developed as a killer to the stage of being dr. Dodd think shipment went into single-handed practiced purely to continue killing clearly if he worked on his own nobody would know exactly what he was up to most times he was okay but the uptime he was a bit off office so you know you tend to wonder what were those days were those days maybe when something happened you don't know it makes you think because of the nature of the shipment case it may never be possible to document the exact number of murders he committed the number and patterns of deaths in dr. Shipman's practice was examined when it was compared with those of other practitioners significant differences appeared notably that the rate of deaths of elderly patients was disproportionately high other variations appeared deaths were often clustered at certain times of the day patients records and previous symptoms were mismatched and dr. Shipman was usually in attendance the question remains why wasn't he stopped earlier in order to ascertain why Harold did what he did you have to examine those little chinks those flaws that show a glimmer under the surface of this projection as the good doctor as the average man as little doubt that some oh their lives to a determined and intelligent woman named Angela Woodruff determination to solve a mystery about her mother's will helped ensure that on Monday the 31st of January 2000 the jury at Preston Crown Court found Shipman guilty of murdering fifteen of his patients and forging the will of Angela's beloved mother Kathleen Grundy it's difficult to believe that we were friends with Fred Shipman he was one of the biggest serial killers in Great Britain but when he's such a normal guy he just fooled everybody you shouldn't be playing God anyway nobody should be doing many of his victims lived on their own a lot of them used to regard his visits to them as being something to look forward to there were many instances of them being dressed in their best clothes as if they were getting a visitor and it was something to look forward to and therefore you know let's put on something nice because the doctor is coming to visit that was all part of this great power trip that he was on that their last words would have been thank you doctor mistake number one Shipman's use of the drug morphine morphine is one of the few poisons that can remain in body tissues for centuries there are other substances which he could have used which would have been had a less trace of law or even not traceable at all within the body why he chose to use diamorphine I don't know one reason might be that he was simply not quite as clever as he thought he was and didn't realize that it would be so traceable so easily the other reason may be that he actually was quite willing and wanted to be found out at some stage mistake number two the typewriter and the badly forged will so when Shipman murder mrs. Grundy and the forged a will what was happening did he want to get caught was he looking for a way out so what having killed 283 people we came in he comes to Catherine Grundy well I nobody's fair game he's not being found out so far so far even though he most certainly should have been but the fact is he was a hospital doctor and a GP who was never challenged I was very surprised to see that whale and what a mess it was so I think at that point maybe you wanted to get caught on the other hand maybe he felt invincible I [Music] think that Harold was becoming a little bit paranoid as to whether he was in safe territory and he was testing the ground to find out whether or not people were suspicious of him and also to prove to himself that he could talk his way out of this amongst these people that were is intellectual inferiors his actual reason for doing it I'm not sure I must be honest I really don't know I think he expected to set the world on fire but instead he faced a series of setbacks he got Primrose pregnant while he was a medical student he became addicted to Pasadena and was caught so in the end he was quite disappointed with what he appeared to be he was quite small and lowly and quite a small man and I think that disappointment fueled an anger and an addiction to killing certainly there is a grandiosity involved he acted like a Supreme Being a god-like figure who clearly had the power of a life and death and he chose to kill people at a time when he wanted to kill them so why did he kill some speculate he hated older women citing comments he made about the elderly being a drain on the health system others feel he was recreating his mother's death scene in order to satisfy some deep masochistic need I think his mother's death informed the murders and gave him a theme but I don't think it's the reason and a lot of people lose their mothers when the teenagers to cruel and painful diseases and we don't all go out and start killing hundreds of people I think he had a personality disorder to start with but the fact that his mother used to wait for him to return from school sitting in the window with a cup of tea and the doctor would turn up and give her a morphine and that was her relief from the terrible pain of the cancer I think that was very important to him when he did start killing the first time that Harold Shipman actually killed someone it is probable that in his mind there was rising pleasure associated with the incidence of his mother's death at that point he will have felt a certain amount of power and control and a certain calmness associated with the euphoria with his mother and this would have been rewarding enough to propel him forward but I'd feel that that form of euphoria in contrast to many other serial killers would have died out fairly quickly after the incident [Music] despite overwhelming evidence of his guilt Harold Shipman continued to maintain his innocence and shield the motives of his crime even in prison the when Fred first went into prison and I started to correspond with him because you know she firmly believed he was innocent there are roundabout 25 letters which were written in all the letters there's obviously no reference to the fact that he's admitting to anything at all he was definitely trying to keep as much normality about his actions as he possibly could so that anything that people might come up with about what he's supposed to have done seeing totally illogical pins warehouse roll the sleeve administered morphine killed them that's what happened business in dr. Harold always maintained his innocence to me it never once as far as I know to evil to me or any of the other prisoners admits the guilt of actually merging any of the patients the levels social this woman actually died toxicity of morphine not as you wrongly diagnosed in play speaking no when dr. was finally convicted my wife was very upset and I said well there's only one thing you can do and you can't write to the guy I said I think you know judging by the amount of evidence has been put forward and the time it's take and I said I think it's pretty conclusive that he is guilty I remember when the first tried charging him for children 18 murders on top of what they already accused him of that was the first are their assertion Ameria so the sewage trial on what was going on I remember when he came back from courts I just broke down in tears and was explained to me what I've gone and he said the channel opinion or 218 murders on cell phonee I thought I don't know where it's coming from or whether getting the evidence from or anything you know where they getting these stories used to scold them um that was the first time that's the sinner reaction from him you smash yourself basically he loves Oakland Harold Shipman never admitted to his crimes not to prison waters not to prison inmates Harold Shipman maintained the act that he'd started in childhood where he as it were acted out the role of a social person where he acted out the role of the good doctor he could not at the end of his existence changed that because if he had admitted that he had done this he would unpick and undo the fabric of his entire life which was built on a facade in an extraordinary turn of tables Shipman saved his cellmates life I saw scared of bein in a cell with dr. Shipman because of the reputation the rest of the prisoners used to as you say to me that sir not so who's that doctors killed all patience on I mean I was in fear from your life so much so I attempted to save me on life himself because I was a I was that much scared light I mean he called me down and it saved me well after that we seem to get on pretty well maybe you saw intent on murder and that was his pleasure why didn't he leave me to die Shipman had a particular victim type with a method of killing them that he was comfortable with in locations again either the victims territory or summer where he was in control the guy he revived was most certainly not sick in the clinical sense he was not the preferred victim type of shipment and I think Shipman probably did then the only decent thing he'd ever did it's becoming a doctor instead of taking lives he saved one I'm still confused because like I can't understand as a nun such as Harold that like I said to me he's a friend ow he could have gone about doing it all those people I mean hey it's not something I mean it's not a natural thing is it's a human life to many of dr. Shipman's victims his suicide is a final betrayal not only did he kill their loved ones but he escaped the punishment of spending the rest of his natural life in prison I think Fred planned his suicide I think he knew exactly what he was doing I think he knew about the fact that primrose would be financially better off if he died before a certain age he made sure primrose as well looked after and again he was winning the game and he he was beating the authorities not only that he was taking his secrets to the grave I think one of the main issues with regard to our shipment was that he was a doctor and we all learned from a very early age that doctors are to be trusted from the evidence we have the question is was Harold Shipman born to kill when we look back at his early life we see a trait that seems to run through that trait seems to make him objectify people stops him feeling the feelings of others in the way that we do and call empathy he also seems to have prevented him from normal childhood development to created a world of fantasy to actually have led and helped certain incidences in his life where he adopted the role of a GP of a trusted person who then went on to kill people rather than prolong their lives yes it would seem that without that early characteristic none of the other events would have had sufficient impact to actually lead to that line of behavior therefore it would seem that how Shipman was in fact born to kill and I feel towards him now indifferent [Music] you [Music] you [Music]
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Channel: Real Stories
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Keywords: Real Stories, harold shipman, doctor death documentary, dr death full documentary, documentary dr death, harold shipman doctor death, Real Stories Full Documentary, dr harold shipman, Channel 4 documentary, serial killers, true crime, Full length Documentaries, documentary 2018 crime, Documentary Movies - Topic, serial killer, Real Stories Documentary, documentary history, unsolved mysteries, Documentary, serial killer documentary
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Length: 45min 30sec (2730 seconds)
Published: Sat Jan 26 2019
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