The Shipman Inquiry was the report produced by a British governmental investigation into the activities of general practitioner and serial killer Harold Shipman. Shipman was arrested in September 1998 and the inquiry commenced shortly after he was found guilty of 15 murders in January 2000. It released its findings in various stages, with its sixth and final report being released on 27 January 2005 – by which time Shipman had died by suicide in prison.[1] It was chaired by Dame Janet Smith DBE.[2]
While Shipman was convicted of 15 murders, the inquiry in July 2002 established that he had killed at least 284 people, and may have killed as many as 300, although the true number could be even higher.[2] The inquiry took approximately 2,500 witness statements and analysed approximately 270,000 pages of evidence.[3] In total the six reports ran to 5,000 pages and the investigation cost £21 million.[4] In May 2001, it was announced that the inquiry would be investigating a total of 618 deaths between 1974 and 1998.[5]