The End
Shipman would alter the medical records right after the killing of the patient. However, he didn't count on the fact that every record was timestamped by the computers. So when the times between the hard copy and computer copy were different, it was obvious they had been altered. In the end, Shipman was convicted of 15 counts of murder and one count of forgery. Shipman's defense attempted to alter the case in favor of him, but the attempts failed and the case commenced. The prosecution said Shipman did not kill compassionately due to the fact that none of the victims were terminally ill. The government pathologist showed the court some gruesome post mortem findings, proving that morphine was the cause of death in most cases. A fingerprint analysis of the will showed Kathleen never handled the paper. A handwriting expert proved the signature was a forgery. Then, a police computer analyst testified that the computer records were altered by Shipman to show the victims had symptoms they never actually had. In the end, Shipman was convicted of the 15 murders, yet he still denied them. He was sentenced to fifteen life sentences. So if he was reincarnated, he would have to serve 15 more life sentences, plus another 4 years for forgery. Shipman couldn't handle the prison life, though. He only lasted 4 years before he committed suicide by hanging. There's no telling how many people Shipman actually killed. It could only be those 15, it could be less, it could more--215+ more.