"The 81-year-old British man passed away, and the will he left behind actually involved 215 lives." In 1998, Catherine Grandy, the former mayor of Hyde, Greater Manchester, England, suddenly passed away. A will she left behind was filled with of doubts and confusion.

"The 81-year-old British man died, and the will he left behind actually involved 215 lives." In 1998, Catherine Grandy, the former mayor of Hyde, Greater Manchester, England, suddenly passed away. In a will she left behind Full of doubts and confusion.

Angela Woodifer, the son of Catherine Grandy, took this will to Bernard Bosler, the experienced police chief of the town at the time, to help find the truth about the death of her mother Catherine Grandy.

But no one thought that this will would actually involve 215 lives. What secrets were hidden behind this will?

What is the truth behind the death of 81-year-old Catherine Grundy? Why did the murderer kill 215 people including Catherine Grundy?

What does this have to do with the murderer’s growth experience?

The secret behind the will

81-year-old Catherine Grandy was the mayor of Hyde City during her lifetime. Apart from her son Angela Woodifer, the most important thing in her life was this city.

Catherine Grandy, who has entered her senior life, pays special attention to her physical health. She makes a corresponding diet plan for herself every day. Whenever she has time, she will go hiking and take a walk with her son Angela Woodifer. , the mother and son also took the opportunity to talk.

When talking about her son Angela Woodifer, her face was full of pride. Angela Woodifer was a well-known lawyer in Hyde City who could handle matters large and small in an orderly manner. Catherine Grundy's affairs It is also managed by Angela Woodifer herself.

But Catherine Grundy had a rigorous habit of writing all her legal documents by hand. This also became the key evidence that Angela Woodifer discovered that there was a hidden secret behind her mother's death.

On June 24, 1998, Catherine Grandy died suddenly at home. When the police notified Catherine Grandy's son Angela Woodifer, he was at home sorting out information about the law firm's affairs.

When he heard the news of the death of his mother, Catherine Grandy, he was stunned. From surprise to silent sadness, he could not believe that his mother, who was walking with him that day, that day, he and he were imagining that they would be 100 years old. What kind of mother would it be to leave him alone?

Angela Woodifer didn't know how he got home. Along the way, he was thinking about why his strong mother left for no reason.

But when he got home and saw the death certificate of death due to old age written by the family doctor Harold Shipman himself, he had to believe that his mother Catherine Grundy died of old age.

Angela Woodifer buried his mother, Katherine Grandy, in accordance with her wishes during her lifetime. He watched his mother sleep underground with mixed feelings in his heart.

Mother Catherine Grundy did not suffer from illness. It should be a joy to leave quietly, but the departure of Catherine Grundy brought eternal pain to Angela Woodifer. Since June 24 Since then, he has lost his mother who loved him to the core.

In the days that followed, Angela Woodifer would often visit his mother, Catherine Grundy, in the cemetery. His mother's departure made him too painful, but he gradually returned to life from the pain. He believed that his mother also hoped that he could Live well.

Shortly after Katherine Grundy was buried, Angela Woodifer received a call from the lawyer who claimed to be Katherine Grundy. The other party claimed that she had a copy of the old man's will. Angela Woodifer suddenly Shocked.

You must know that Angela Woodifer personally handled the legal documents of mother Catherine Grundy during her lifetime, as well as the will. And in 1986, the 69-year-old Catherine Grundy personally processed it under the witness of her son. A handwritten will.

So where does this will come from now? Mother Catherine Grundy changed her will? Angela Woodifer continued to listen to the call with doubt.

The client's lawyer claimed that in Catherine Grundy's will, she gave away a country house worth 386,000 pounds and a valuable country house to family doctor Harold Shipman.

Hearing this, Angela Woodifer was filled with questions. How could her mother's inheritance be handed over to a doctor?

Although Dr. Harold Shipman gave his mother regular physical examinations, his mother would not give up her wealth to an outsider.

In order to solve the doubts in her heart, Angela Woodifer asked; "Hello, I want to see my mother's will with my own eyes. Can I make an appointment with you to meet?"

So Angela· Woodifer and the attorney appointed him made an appointment for a time and place to meet. On the day of the appointment, Angela Woodifer took the will handwritten by her mother, Catherine Grandy, to the agreed place.

Angela Woodifer thought; maybe this is revealing the truth about her mother's death, and this meeting also confirmed Angela Woodifer's inner suspicion.

When she watched the entrusted lawyer take out the will from the bag, Angela Woodifer's whole body tensed up. When he saw the will, he was extremely sure that although the handwriting on it was the same as that of his mother, Catherine Grundy looks similar, but is definitely not the handwriting of his mother, Catherine Grundy.

Moreover, this was a printed will. His mother Catherine Grand's documents were all handwritten, which made Angela Woodifer even more certain that he was right to doubt the truth about his mother's death on June 14. Mother Catherine Grundy's sudden death was definitely not due to old age.

There is probably a huge secret hidden behind this. The murderer was probably motivated by the property of his mother, Catherine Grandy.

Uncovering the truth

Angela Woodford took out the will in his hand. He told the other party that the will was fake and he wanted to use it to investigate the truth behind it. He stood up and He hired a lawyer to say goodbye and went directly to the police station to report the crime.

It was Sheriff Bernard Bossler who took over the case. At first he felt sorry to hear the news of the death of former Hyde City Mayor Catherine Grandy, but now he heard what Angela Woodifer said. , indeed a bit suspicious.

The will is clearly in the hands of the son, why do we need to find someone else to change the will? Moreover, the heir was not his own son, but just a family doctor, Harold Shipman, whom he had been checking regularly and whom he had rarely met. This was really strange.

After investigation, the police found that the heir to the will, Harold Shipman, was the most suspected. However, the police had no definite evidence to prove that the death of Catherine Grundy was related to Harold Shipman, so they could not make an arrest. .

Sheriff Bernard Bosler could only find the truth from clues. He took the will written by Catherine Grundy, the death certificate issued by Harold Shipman and the printed He read the will back and forth, trying to find evidence left by the murderer in the writing.

Sheriff Bernard Bosler discovered that Catherine Grandi paid great attention to the handwriting requirements of documents during her lifetime. The handwriting was indeed similar to the printed will, but the signature on the printed will was even more scrawled.

Sheriff Bernard Bosler picked up another death certificate and compared it, and found that the handwriting was almost the same. In other words, the person who forged the will brought his usual writing habits to the forged will.

Sergeant Bernard Bosler, who discovered the problem, immediately took the death certificate and printed will to the traces department and handed them over to trace experts for examination. The results obtained were almost exactly the same as Bernard Bosler's conjecture: This is indeed Made by one person.

In other words, this is Harold Shipman's handwriting , but Sergeant Bernard Bursler thought about it again. Even if a doctor wanted to forge a will, he would not leave evidence against himself to the police. , such behavior is too stupid.

Sheriff Bernard Bosler interrogated Harold Shipman. He wanted to know from his mouth who was behind the will, but Harold Shipman not only Instead of explaining the handwriting problem, kept emphasizing, “I did not kill Catherine Grandy."

Bernard Bursler was happy to see that the interrogation was fruitless, so he had to give up getting clues from Harold Shipman. In desperation, Sheriff Bernard Bursler had to find another way to find the truth.

Bernard · Sheriff Bossler made an appointment with Angela Woodifer on the second day, and he asked for Angela Woodifer’s consent: Open coffin for autopsy.

Angela Woodifer has been following the case, and he knows that there is only one step left to know the truth behind it. When hearing the suggestion of open coffin for autopsy, Angela Woodifer just hesitated and nodded in agreement. An autopsy was conducted

html In August, Sheriff Bernard Bosler. The officers exhumed Catherine Grandy's coffin and took the body to the National Criminal Squadron for examination. While awaiting the results of the examination, Sergeant Bernard Bosler applied for a residential investigation order

at the home. The police found something suspicious in the house of doctor Harold Shipman. Harold Shipman is a doctor. Doctors have always been the symbol of purity. , the home should be tidy.

But Harold Shipman's home is extremely messy, with dirty clothes and various filthy items scattered everywhere. The whole house looks more like the home of a murderer who has been hiding for a long time.

In the bedroom, the police found a desktop printer, an ancient machine owned by Bernard Burgh. Sheriff Sile immediately requested that the desktop printer be sent to the traces department. After identification by trace experts, it was determined that this was the machine used to print the will.

Harold only revealed the fact that he printed the will during the second interrogation. When Bernard Bosler asked him why he printed his will, he explained that the printer was lent to Catherine Grundy.

Immediately afterwards, the test results of the National Criminal Squadron came out. was highly consistent with the death at an advanced age as stated on the death certificate, which made Bernard Bosler fall into deep thought.

Bernard Bosler thought of another way to kill people without anyone noticing: poisoning. Sheriff Bernard Bosler invited two poison identification experts: Julie Evans and Steven Ketch.

Two experts said that there is indeed a kind of poison that can cause death without anyone noticing. Method: Injecting an overdose of maca. After receiving new clues, Sheriff Bernard Bosler approached the National Criminal Squadron to cooperate with the poison identification expert

html. 0 The test results were consistent with what the two experts said. Catherine Grandy did die from an overdose of maca.

html On September 7, Harold Shipman was arrested. In his clinic, the police also It was discovered that Harold Shipman had murdered 15 people, including Catherine Grundy.

Harold Shipman's computer contains evidence that he changed the patient's original diagnosis report. Previously, an old man named Winnie died of a sore throat and chest tightness . After an open coffin autopsy, found The old man also died from an overdose, and the doctor at the time was Harold Shipman.

The police also found key evidence: maca. In the UK, doctors used their own identities to buy the prescription drug maca. At that time, Harold Shipman bought a large amount of maca on the pretext of treating patients and killed these maca. patient.

At the end of 1998, the court heard the murder of Harold Shipman. The eight patients who were opened for autopsy all died of an overdose of maca. All eight of them were Harold Shipman's patients, and the other six patients died. Also died of a normal old age like Catherine Grundy.

However, Harold Shipman always insisted that he did not kill Catherine, claiming that she was a maca addict, but this testimony was overturned by expert Steven Karcher.

Under the examination of Steven Ketch, it was discovered that Catherine Grundy was not a maca addict. Even so, Harold Shipman still insisted on appealing for himself.

After trial in 2001, Harold Shipman was sentenced to 4 years for forging a will and 15 years to life imprisonment for killing 15 people from March 1995 to June 1998.

The Price of Growth

Harold Shipman is a necrophiliac. The reason why he has his current ending has a lot to do with his growth experience.

Harold Shipman's mother, Vera, has always had a strict love for him. Vera made daily plans for him, hoping that his son could succeed as soon as possible, which also led to Harold Shipman's withdrawn character. Not talkative.

When Harold Shipman was 17 years old, his beloved mother, Vera, was suffering from cancer. He witnessed doctors injecting maca to relieve Vera's pain.

Unfortunately, Vera left Harold Shipman in 1963. His character became more withdrawn and he lived alone every day. Vera's death also planted a seed in Harold Shipman's mind. The seed of wanting to be a doctor.

Later, Harold Shipman was admitted to the School of Medicine at the University of Leeds. After graduating, Harold Shipman's personality changed drastically and he suddenly became amiable. He also married a beautifier and had his own child. children.

In 1974, Harold Shipman was a doctor in Yorkshire . He was affable on the surface but very arrogant secretly. Harold Shipman's colleagues discovered that Harold Shipman had forged prescriptions and took them away. Maca in the hospital.

After questioning, Harold Shipman was charged with drug crimes. After paying 600 pounds in compensation, he stayed in a drug rehabilitation center for three months and lost his job.

In 1993, Harold Shipman opened his own clinic in Hyde City. He seemed to be checking patients regularly every day, but was actually secretly injecting maca into the patients. As he went back and forth, the patients in the town liked it very much. This doctor.

After Harold Shipman was imprisoned, everything about him was exposed to the people of the small town. For many years, Harold Shipman had been using the opportunity to treat patients as an excuse to inject an overdose of maca, resulting in 215 people died at his hands. Soon after, police changed the number of people killed by Harold Shipman to 250.

At this time, the people of the small town realized that the amiable doctor they had always loved was a murderous demon.