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241. Introduction

Tameside Advertiser, Monday 8 July 2002
HAROLD Shipman's conviction for murdering 15 patients was never going to be the end of the matter.

242. Edith Brady

Tameside Advertiser, Monday 8 July 2002
EDITH Brady was the second inquest concerned with a patient who died within Harold Shipman's surgery.

243. Gladys Saunders

Tameside Advertiser, Monday 8 July 2002
THE death certification for Gladys Saunders was riddled with inaccuracies - Harold Shipman even gave a time of death which clashed with her talking on the phone to a friend.

244. Elsie Lorna Dean

Tameside Advertiser, Monday 8 July 2002
ELSIE Lorna Dean's daughter was comforted by Harold Shipman over the death of her mother.

245. Joan Melia

Tameside Advertiser, Monday 8 July 2002
COME rain or snow, Joan Melia was as fit as a fiddle.

246. What was the defence?

Tameside Advertiser, Monday 8 July 2002
LOOKING back on the mass murder crimes of Harold Shipman one can see how flimsy his version of events were - even though his legal team attempted to provide a substantial defence.

247. Lizzie Adams

Tameside Advertiser, Thursday 4 July 2002
LIZZIE Adams was much loved in Hyde as a dance teacher whose passion for the dancefloor inspired many, many others.

248. Ivy Lomas

Tameside Advertiser, Wednesday 3 July 2002
THE death of Ivy Lomas proved most vividly that Harold Shipman had, in the prosecution's words, 'the drama of taking life to his taste'.

249. Bianka Pomfret

Tameside Advertiser, Wednesday 3 July 2002
BIANKA Pomfret was the youngest murder victim at the Harold Shipman trial.

250. Kathleen Grundy

Tameside Advertiser, Wednesday 3 July 2002
THE last victim, the first to find justice.
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