Shipman found dead in prison cell
By Owen Dyer London
Harold Shipman, one of history's most prolific medical murderers, was found dead in his cell after apparently hanging himself with bedsheets attached to the bars of his window.
Shipman was serving multiple life sentences for murdering 15 women patients while working as a general practitioner in Hyde, Greater Manchester.

REX FEATURES
Harold Shipman: accuses of taking "the coward's way out"
An inquiry into his case by appeal court judge Janet Smith later found that he had killed at least 215 patients, and possibly as many as 260.
He had just entered the fourth year of his imprisonment, and would have turned 58 this week. On his conviction, trial judge Justice Forbes had told him, "Your crimes are so heinous that in your case life must mean life."
The Prison Service issued the following statement, "We can confirm the death of Harold Shipman at HMP Wakefield this morning.
"Mr Shipman was found hanging in his cell at 6 20 am, and despite the best efforts
of staff, who immediately attempted resuscitation, he was pronounced dead by a doctor at 8 10 am." The Prison Service will be conducting an investigation.
Prisons minister Paul Goggins said that in view of the public concern about this case, an investigation will be led by the new prisons and probation ombudsman, Stephen Shaw. It had been intended that Shaw would take up his duties in April.
Shipman was on suicide watch at HMP Manchester early in his sentence and again after being moved to HMP Frankland in February 2000, but his recent behaviour had given no cause for alarm. Last month, however, he was stripped of his privileges at Wakefield for general non-compliance with staff. The television in his cell was removed, and he had to wear prison uniform instead of casual clothes. He
had regained some privileges, however, before his death.
Danny Mellor, whose mother Winifred, aged 73, was one of Shipman's last victims, said that he was "bloody angry that Shipman has taken the coward's way out."
"I've always harboured a secret desire to confront him, though I know it would never have been allowed," said Mr Mellor. "Now we'll never know why he did it."
A spokeswoman for the ongoing Shipman inquiry said, "The death is a matter for others, such as the Prison Service. The news does not affect the work of the inquiry." She said phase two of the inquiry would go ahead as planned and submit its report this summer.
See www.the-shipman-inquiry.org.uk
studentBMJ 2004;12:45-88 February ISSN 0966-6494