SHIN, ED: People Magazine Investigates TV -
An enterprising young man named Chris Smith … In early June of 2010 Chris makes arrangements to sell his share of the business to his partner Ed and to use this new windfall to travel round the world. People Magazine Investigates s4e7: Vanished, ID 2019
The investigators discover blood splatter in multiple locations throughout the office. ibid.
On December 3th of 2018 it takes the jury less than an hour to convict Ed Shin of first-degree murder. ibid.
SHIPMAN, HAROLD: Inside Strangeways TV - Mikaela Sitford - David Stone - Sue Booth - Crimes that Shook Britain TV - Murders that Shocked Britain TV - Colin Baker TV - Richard Badcock TV - Harold Shipman: Doctor Death TV - Harold Shipman: Born to Kill? TV - Killer Trials TV - Harold Shipman: Driven to Kill TV - Shipman: 5 Mistakes that Caught a Killer TV - The Shipman Files: A Very British Crime Story TV - Faking It: Tears of a Crime TV - The Trial of Harold Shipman
Making Harold Shipman Britain’s most prolific serial killer … Four years later he committed suicide in his cell. Inside Strangeways Prison s1e4, Channel 5 2017
I found out that the police had actually investigated Shipman before in March 1998 quite soon after breaking the story ... Shipman went on to kill three more women after that. Mikaela Sitford, author Addicted to Murder
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. Mikaela Sitford
He was allowed to build up fantasies ... Fred was not really allowed to develop socially and sexually. Dr David Stone, forensic criminologist
Harold Shipman never admitted his crimes. Dr David Stone
He was so well respected in the town [Hyde], well liked, and his patients loved him. You know, they all wanted to be on his list. He was a very popular doctor. Dr Sue Booth, general practitioner
A man who exercised the ultimate power of controlling life and death. The prosecution alleged that the Hyde GP enjoyed killing his patients. Crimes that Shook Britain s1e1: Harold Shipman, CI 2008
Dr Shipman is now the biggest single mass-murderer the world has ever seen. After he was finally accused of 215 killings. ibid.
In the following months the Funeral Directors grow increasingly concerned. More of Shipman’s patients are found in unusual circumstances. ibid.
He has callously murdered Kathleen [Grundy] and tried to forge her will to inherit nearly £400,000. ibid.
Shipman reveals nothing. ibid.
Shipman’s killing spree spanned more than twenty years. ibid.
The Shipman Inquiry made some major recommendations to the Health Authority in monitoring practitioners. ibid.
The true death toll could actually be closer to five hundred. ibid.
Harold Shipman committed suicide in Wakefield Prison in 2004. He never offered any explanation for his crimes. ibid.
Shipman had altered Kathleen Grundy’s will. Murders that Shocked Britain
Shipman would visit his patients, administer a fatal dose of diamorphine, then posthumously change the medical reports. ibid.
Shipman took his secrets to the grave. ibid.
Why did he do it? Just how did he get away with it for so long? Colin Baker, ITN senior correspondent
It’s an extreme way of trying to maintain control. Dr Richard Badcock, former psychiatrist
The murderous activity of British biggest serial killer was literally unearthed. Harold Shipman: Dr Death, ITV 2002
Detectives investigated the deaths of nearly one hundred and fifty patients of Dr Harold Shipman. ibid.
Four years later Shipman hanged himself in his prison cell. ibid.
Shipman’s greed was his undoing. ibid.
Experts quickly established that Shipman’s typewriter had been used to forge the will. ibid.
Some believe this early introduction to morphine and death had a lasting effect on Shipman. ibid.
He was a drug addict with a huge dependency on Pethidine. ibid.
He was fined a total of £600. ibid.
Shipman applied to join a group practice in Hyde. ibid.
In 1991 Shipman delivered a bombshell to his partners: after almost twelve years he decided to go it alone in a single-handed practice. He glibly announced he was taking his three-thousand patients with him. ibid.
Shipman was altering patient records to conceal his crimes. ibid.
The number of patients that Dr Shipman murdered is still unknown. Born to Kill? Harold Shipman, Channel 5 2012
Was Harold Shipman born to kill? ibid.
Over the years doctors, funeral directors and even pharmacists had raised suspicions about Dr Shipman. ibid.
Dr Shipman might have carried on killing for years had it not been for the suspicious death of Kathleen Grundy on 24th June 1998. ibid.
The Shipman Inquiry now documents that he killed 284 people over a period of thirty years. ibid.
It was discovered he had a drug addiction. ibid.
Mistake #1: Shipman’s use of the drug morphine – morphine is one of the few poisons that can remain in the body tissue for centuries; Mistake #2: the typewriter and the badly forged will. ibid.
Shipman saved his cellmate’s life. ibid.
Could a family doctor turn out to be Britain’s worst serial killer ever? Killer Trials s1e5: Do No Harm
They are all women whose death certificates Doctor Shipman signed. ibid.
Shipman’s secret stash of morphine is a smoking gun. ibid.
The British government sets up a public inquiry. ibid.
One murder every ten days. ibid.