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True Crime Guys

#75 Dr. Death & The Shipman Effect

True Crime Guys

True Crime Guys

Society & Culture, True Crime

4.62.7K Ratings

🗓️ 13 July 2019

⏱️ 72 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Harold Frederick Shipman was an English general practitioner and one of the most prolific serial killers in history. Much of Britain's legal structure concerning health care and medicine was reviewed and modified as a result of Shipman's crimes. Heres the life and crimes of Harold Shipman, aka Dr DEATH! OhMyGaia.com Mohave High Creations truecrimeguys.com Facebook Twitter/Instagram: @TrueCrimeGuys @AndImMichael Patreon.com/TrueCrimeGuys STICKERS CREEPER MERCH Creeper Galaxy Gear

Transcript

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0:00.0

Music

0:22.0

Hello, welcome back to the True Crime Guys podcast. I'm on and I'm Michael. What's up everybody? How you feeling today?

0:26.7

Hopefully you're feeling good because if you have to go to the doctor, I'm one of those guys that doesn't go to the doctor. I'll be all right. Yeah, I think that's why listen drink some water. Yeah, wait it out. Go for a run. Yeah. What if you're like broken foot? Go for a run. Go for a run. You don't hate yourself. What spring, DC? I'll be a little crooked. Whatever. My crack. It might pop forever. I got a little pulled hammy drink some water. Go for a run. I got all kinds of snaps and crackles. I sound like fucking right.

0:56.7

I got a nice crispy treats over here when I stand up. Dude, I went, I did some sprints yesterday. I felt pretty good. Sprints are amazing. I took a couple days off. I don't like the distance running shit so much, but I feel like you get just as much beneficial shit out of sprints. Maybe more. Yes. Dude, I took a couple days off and ran. I felt like a damn deer. Yeah. It's crazy. Rest is also important. Yes. A lot of people over train themselves. Yeah. Sure. I see it when I, which you just see this guys there. They're like every time I'm in there, they're all weak progress. And then you see them like they're just not as engaged.

1:26.7

And they're injury start to add up and everything. You got your body rest for sure. Your muscles can't heal. They can't grow. They can't. Yeah. You're tearing your muscles down. And you have to let them like you said, rebuild up. Yep. Yeah. So welcome to True Crime Guys Fitness Podcast. Yeah, man. That's what we're doing here. A little bit of true crimes, a little bit of fitness. But we started with a point was that we just don't go to a lot of doctors. And I think that's part of my theory as to why he, this guy, Harold, Harold Shipman, the most prolific serial killers in British history. Maybe the most prolific. Had largely

1:56.7

his victims were women, like older women, not men. And I think part of his men just don't go to doctors as much as women. I think they tend to women live longer for multiple reasons. One of them being they actually like get checkups more regularly. Men are like, adobe. All right. That face ball size fucking tumor on my leg. It'll go. I'll just ice it. Yeah. I'll just give it a name. Draw face on it. Yeah. I got two kneecaps. What's it to you? I'm supposed to have two bro. No, I mean on one leg. Oh, okay. I'm sorry. I should have cleared. Yeah. I got three kneecaps.

2:26.7

Yeah, I got three kneecaps. One of them's name Johnny. Yeah. But yeah, this guy, yeah. This guy was an animal. I really can't, you know, aside from a few of them where you benefited from wheels and stuff like that. That was my first instinct. I was like, okay, he's a doctor. He's killing people and taking their stuff. Yeah. But it doesn't seem like the motive. No, I think he just got greedy at a certain point. Or he was ready to retire and he saw a nice estate. He could grab on the way out. So all those before that he just like to see people die. No, I think he's.

2:56.7

Actually, you know, man, I have my own theories. We'll get into it. Okay. But yeah, I have a theory. We'll dive into later. All right. Maybe not the common the common belief with him. But all I'm interested to hear it. Okay. Let's get into it. Let's do it. It's the shipment effect in your house, like a deadly insect with higher in the looked. It's where the roads of trust and death intersect. And as your eyes roll back in your head, you don't even get a chance to reflect.

3:26.7

You have to trust somebody. And if you can't trust your doctor, you're supposed to trust. Just how many patients in the town of Hyde has this doctor killed?

3:56.7

There's no pain than there's a hush. Things will never be the same.

4:07.7

My mother trusted Dr. Shipman. He's sitting away and can honestly betrayed that trust.

4:14.7

For your own evil and wicked purpose, you took advantage of and grossly abused the trust each of your victims placed in you. You were after all each victim's doctor.

4:44.7

Shipman effects. Here we go. As your pulse starts to slow, you never know. You're just doing what you told him, want you so. And he's gone to collect blood. It's the shipman effects.

5:14.7

It's the shipman effect.

5:26.7

All right, a case this week. Harold Frederick Shipman, Dr. British Doctor, Doctor who you could say now, an evil bloke and evil bloke.

5:37.7

You know what, it's like when I was listening to the book, I kept forgetting it was in Britain for some reason, like it because it was narrated by an American.

5:47.7

That's why you got to watch the special on YouTube. There's like an ABC special on him.

5:53.7

ABC, ABC, there was a couple different ones. I think there was ABC one. I mean, there was like an American one, maybe. Okay, but they were interviewing a bunch of British people. Oh, okay. So it's easier to stay in that mindset. I should have watched that.

6:07.7

Yeah, hindsight's 20, 20. Yeah. So patients would check in and they wouldn't check out. He would basically went on to murder potentially in the hundreds. The kind of like the official number they have is 218. And that's after they did inquiries or investigations. You know, they have different terminology over.

6:26.7

This is like an investigation is an inquiry. Right. Detective is a what's it, what's the term they use for an investigator of like an inspector inspector, which inspectors over here like guys that you hate when you're trying to build something. Yeah, they're like pick apart your like.

6:42.7

You're plumbing's not up to code. Meanwhile, those are homicide detectives over there. Right.

6:48.7

You're right. Inspectors are hated. Oh, my God. Way more than detectives. There's not anybody that likes inspectors. No, absolutely not. Sorry if you're an inspector out there. Yeah.

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