real6
03-11-2008, 06:25 PM
Old news but i've never really heard of this.
She had to be murdered.
http://jforjustice.co.uk/77/#6
A witness, Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead, aged 35, who worked at the BMA in Tavistock Square, and was hailed as a heroine for her actions during the London bombings, said she heard two explosions on the bus. The controlled media immediately went on the offensive, and did a character assassination of the heroine, because her testimony did not fit with the official story, and she died unexpectedly, shortly afterwards. However, other witnesses also reported a second explosion on the bus. Richmal’s and other witness’ testimonies would account for pre-planted explosives, and a bomb being planted later, on 7/7/2005.
What we can be certain about though, is that, either on the bus, or elsewhere, Hasib Hussain; like the other three Muslim patsies; was murdered.
http://www.declarepeace.org.uk/captain/murder_inc/site/whitehead.html
Bomb bus 'doctor' found dead
20 August 2005 - A New Zealander with questionable qualifications who was hailed a hero for her actions during the London bombings has been found dead in London.
Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead, 35, who worked in a non-doctor role for a British Medical Association publication, was found by police at Shepherds Bush on Wednesday (British time), an Auckland paper reported today.
The Metropolitan Police said her death was not suspicious but it would be investigated by a coroner.
The paper said officers went to Ms Oates-Whitehead's home after a call from a worried relative in New Zealand. Ms Oates-Whitehead had resigned last week as editor of the British Medical Journal's Clinical Evidence web publication after questions were raised about her claim to be a doctor.
She was quoted in a New Zealand newspaper after the London bombings as saying that she did the "ethical and moral" thing when asked to enter a wrecked bus in Tavistock Square and tend to the injured, despite fears of a second bomb. The paper said the Gisborne-raised woman studied medicine at Auckland University but the Sunday Star-Times said at the weekend the university had no record of her graduating. New Zealand's only other medical school, Otago Medical School, also had no record of her graduating.
The BMJ Publishing Group released a statement during the week saying it had received queries about Ms Oates-Whitehead's professional qualifications.
"The matter of her professional standing is currently being investigated," it said.
Ms Oates-Whitehead's cousin, Gisborne man Jim Whitehead, said she suffered from epilepsy. She had not qualified as a doctor in New Zealand but was well-qualified, he told NZPA today. "She may well have gone to the UK and done that (trained as a doctor).
"She was certainly no slouch. She was an intelligent person, so for her to have done that would not be unreasonable."
Mr Whitehead said Ms Oates-Whitehead had a brother. - stuff.co.nz
Is this for real?
below is a further article ''heroine' living a life of make-believe ' which,
even after this poor womans death...still digs in the dirt...
Ask yourself this: who started the investigation into Ms Whitehead? The BMJ/BMA ?
BMA/BMJ graphic REMOVED
This Graphic of BMAs logo header has been removed due to threats of legal action to Captain wardrobe & the webspace owner
The NZ Herald
or the 'Star Times'?
London bomb 'heroine' living a life of make-believe
21 August 2005 By GREG MEYLAN
Richmal Oates-Whitehead always dreamed of being a doctor and for a few chaotic, adrenaline-filled hours she was, tending to the wounded victims of London's deadly July 7 terrorist attacks. But that day's events also uncovered a deception that led to the 35-year-old Kiwi being found dead in her London home on Wednesday. The life of the woman who always carried a stethoscope in her handbag was a mix of truth and fiction. She said she was being stalked, that her partner was a retired professor in obstetrics, that she had given birth to twins who died, was receiving treatment for cancer and suffered from multiple sclerosis, all or some of which were make-believe.
An Auckland medical professional felt threatened by Oates-Whitehead and was concerned she was modelling her fictitious life after her own.
[Note: no names given]
Three weeks ago, Oates-Whitehead smiled from the front page of the Weekend Herald, beside an article about her bravely administering emergency aid to survivors of the Tavistock Square bus bombing.
But publication of the story exposed her to the scrutiny of Kiwis who knew her,
and several contacted the Herald and her employers at the British Medical Journal questioning her status as a doctor. The BMJ started an investigation, and Oates-Whitehead immediately resigned. Within a fortnight she was dead.
Her journey towards the deception appears to have begun in New Zealand in 2000, when she attended meetings of the local branch of the Cochrane Collaboration, an international affiliation of health practitioners and scientists who compile analyses of trial data about various drugs, medical procedures and treatments.
As a trained radiation therapist and health services manager she was invited to work on a review of "anticoagulant prophylaxis for preventing thromboembolism after major gynaecological surgery" - ways to prevent blood clots. Her review group co-ordinator told the Sunday Star-Times it was not unusual for non-doctors to work on reviews, but they were usually paired with experienced academics or doctors.
She described Oates-Whitehead as an intelligent woman and said the review was of high quality and led to her working on several others, most of which account for the 450 Google internet search matches on her name.
In 2001, Oates-Whitehead travelled to London and began calling herself a doctor. About three years ago, she started signing her emails as an epidemiologist - a specialist in controlling epidemics - when she was actually working as a clinical effectiveness co-ordinator for the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
When she got a job this year as an editor for the BMJ's Clinical Evidence publication, helped by papers saying she was a doctor, she began signing emails as Professor Richmal Oates-Whitehead.
Last August, she sent an email to colleagues at the Cochrane Collaboration explaining she had just lost twins who were born prematurely and lived for only a day. For many it was the first they knew she was pregnant and there was an outpouring of sympathy.
A death notice appeared in the Herald on August 23: "Two beautiful girls, Jemima Josephine and Molly Niamh. Born 7 August 2004, died 8 August 2004. Taken away from Mummy and Daddy too soon. Two more beautiful angels in heaven."
Five days later, Oates-Whitehead placed two more death notices in the Herald, one in her name and one in that of the father, Michael Fitzgerald.
A Star-Times attempt to find the twin's birth or death certificates proved fruitless.
The Lambeth registry office said if they had been born at St Thomas' Hospital in London, as indicated in the death notices, they would have been registered there, but they were not. Oates-Whitehead had told colleagues her partner worked as a doctor on London's famous Harley St but, again, there is no trace of him.
After the July 7 bombings, she told a surprised colleague she was about to undergo cancer treatment, and in one of her last emails to a friend said she had multiple sclerosis, which had flared under the pressure of media inquiries.
Sydney forensic psychiatrist Dr Anthony Samuels said Oates-Whitehead probably believed her own lies, and complaints of terrible illnesses were common among people with borderline personality disorder.
Samuels said she probably posed as a doctor to satisfy a psychological need rather than for monetary or practical benefits.
"In this role she may have started to feel good about herself and then it all blew apart," he said.
"It is a sad case." [my note: it is after you've driven her to suicide]
"People with borderline personality disorders often get into caring professions because they have so much need themselves and it distracts them from their own pain." At a superficial level they were often very charming, but they had difficulty forming relationships.
School friends described Oates-Whitehead as a quiet teenager, one of the "brainy crowd" and someone who always wanted to work in medicine. Her friend from Gisborne's Lytton High School, Natasha Delgarno, remembers her with affection and said she adored her at school.
"Richmal was a real sweetie. She was very, very sensitive, caring and quite highly strung. A huge softie. She had some health problems and was very accident prone and that affected her school life, because she had a lot of absences. "She was quite moody and sometimes seemed depressed, but we all loved her very much and accepted her as she was, with all her little quirks."
Delgarno got in touch with Oates-Whitehead as a result of her newspaper appearance, and said that in her last email she sounded "chirpy and bubbly". "Richmal was a real dreamer and talked a lot about her dreams - she was very interested in the medical profession and talked about marrying a doctor, becoming a nurse or other type of medical professional, and having children.
"Her other dream was to be an actress, and I remember she loved soap operas and knew all the names of the actors.
"It is terrible to think that she did not find happiness in life."
- stuff.co.nz
Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead, Class of 1987 - Lytton High School - Gisborne, New Zealand - namesdatabase.com
Cochrane Collaboration Steering Group (CCSG) member:
Dr Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead
Research Division, Royal College of Paediatrics
Institute of Child Health
Department of Epidemioloy & Biostatistics
50 Hallam Street
London W1W 6DE
UK
cached source
Criticism Management Advisory Group
Report to the Steering Group -
Since March, 2004, Dr. Richmal Oates-Whitehead has resigned from the role of Co-Convenor; Dr. Sheinfeld Gorin will retain the post alone. - cached source
Richmal Oates-Whitehead was listed as a doctor by NHS direct: Why???
Our contributors
Richmal Oates-Whitehead
Area of expertise: nausea and vomiting in pregnancy
Dr. Oates-Whitehead is an epidemiologist (a doctor who studies how common diseases are in groups of people). She has done research on health management, medical philosophy, ethics and forensic science. She is also an editor for the Cochrane library, which collects and analyses research to help doctors put research into practice. - saved cache of page
She is listed as a member of the Welsh Institute for Health & Social Care Staff as a Research Student at the university of Glamorgan
She had to be murdered.
http://jforjustice.co.uk/77/#6
A witness, Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead, aged 35, who worked at the BMA in Tavistock Square, and was hailed as a heroine for her actions during the London bombings, said she heard two explosions on the bus. The controlled media immediately went on the offensive, and did a character assassination of the heroine, because her testimony did not fit with the official story, and she died unexpectedly, shortly afterwards. However, other witnesses also reported a second explosion on the bus. Richmal’s and other witness’ testimonies would account for pre-planted explosives, and a bomb being planted later, on 7/7/2005.
What we can be certain about though, is that, either on the bus, or elsewhere, Hasib Hussain; like the other three Muslim patsies; was murdered.
http://www.declarepeace.org.uk/captain/murder_inc/site/whitehead.html
Bomb bus 'doctor' found dead
20 August 2005 - A New Zealander with questionable qualifications who was hailed a hero for her actions during the London bombings has been found dead in London.
Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead, 35, who worked in a non-doctor role for a British Medical Association publication, was found by police at Shepherds Bush on Wednesday (British time), an Auckland paper reported today.
The Metropolitan Police said her death was not suspicious but it would be investigated by a coroner.
The paper said officers went to Ms Oates-Whitehead's home after a call from a worried relative in New Zealand. Ms Oates-Whitehead had resigned last week as editor of the British Medical Journal's Clinical Evidence web publication after questions were raised about her claim to be a doctor.
She was quoted in a New Zealand newspaper after the London bombings as saying that she did the "ethical and moral" thing when asked to enter a wrecked bus in Tavistock Square and tend to the injured, despite fears of a second bomb. The paper said the Gisborne-raised woman studied medicine at Auckland University but the Sunday Star-Times said at the weekend the university had no record of her graduating. New Zealand's only other medical school, Otago Medical School, also had no record of her graduating.
The BMJ Publishing Group released a statement during the week saying it had received queries about Ms Oates-Whitehead's professional qualifications.
"The matter of her professional standing is currently being investigated," it said.
Ms Oates-Whitehead's cousin, Gisborne man Jim Whitehead, said she suffered from epilepsy. She had not qualified as a doctor in New Zealand but was well-qualified, he told NZPA today. "She may well have gone to the UK and done that (trained as a doctor).
"She was certainly no slouch. She was an intelligent person, so for her to have done that would not be unreasonable."
Mr Whitehead said Ms Oates-Whitehead had a brother. - stuff.co.nz
Is this for real?
below is a further article ''heroine' living a life of make-believe ' which,
even after this poor womans death...still digs in the dirt...
Ask yourself this: who started the investigation into Ms Whitehead? The BMJ/BMA ?
BMA/BMJ graphic REMOVED
This Graphic of BMAs logo header has been removed due to threats of legal action to Captain wardrobe & the webspace owner
The NZ Herald
or the 'Star Times'?
London bomb 'heroine' living a life of make-believe
21 August 2005 By GREG MEYLAN
Richmal Oates-Whitehead always dreamed of being a doctor and for a few chaotic, adrenaline-filled hours she was, tending to the wounded victims of London's deadly July 7 terrorist attacks. But that day's events also uncovered a deception that led to the 35-year-old Kiwi being found dead in her London home on Wednesday. The life of the woman who always carried a stethoscope in her handbag was a mix of truth and fiction. She said she was being stalked, that her partner was a retired professor in obstetrics, that she had given birth to twins who died, was receiving treatment for cancer and suffered from multiple sclerosis, all or some of which were make-believe.
An Auckland medical professional felt threatened by Oates-Whitehead and was concerned she was modelling her fictitious life after her own.
[Note: no names given]
Three weeks ago, Oates-Whitehead smiled from the front page of the Weekend Herald, beside an article about her bravely administering emergency aid to survivors of the Tavistock Square bus bombing.
But publication of the story exposed her to the scrutiny of Kiwis who knew her,
and several contacted the Herald and her employers at the British Medical Journal questioning her status as a doctor. The BMJ started an investigation, and Oates-Whitehead immediately resigned. Within a fortnight she was dead.
Her journey towards the deception appears to have begun in New Zealand in 2000, when she attended meetings of the local branch of the Cochrane Collaboration, an international affiliation of health practitioners and scientists who compile analyses of trial data about various drugs, medical procedures and treatments.
As a trained radiation therapist and health services manager she was invited to work on a review of "anticoagulant prophylaxis for preventing thromboembolism after major gynaecological surgery" - ways to prevent blood clots. Her review group co-ordinator told the Sunday Star-Times it was not unusual for non-doctors to work on reviews, but they were usually paired with experienced academics or doctors.
She described Oates-Whitehead as an intelligent woman and said the review was of high quality and led to her working on several others, most of which account for the 450 Google internet search matches on her name.
In 2001, Oates-Whitehead travelled to London and began calling herself a doctor. About three years ago, she started signing her emails as an epidemiologist - a specialist in controlling epidemics - when she was actually working as a clinical effectiveness co-ordinator for the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
When she got a job this year as an editor for the BMJ's Clinical Evidence publication, helped by papers saying she was a doctor, she began signing emails as Professor Richmal Oates-Whitehead.
Last August, she sent an email to colleagues at the Cochrane Collaboration explaining she had just lost twins who were born prematurely and lived for only a day. For many it was the first they knew she was pregnant and there was an outpouring of sympathy.
A death notice appeared in the Herald on August 23: "Two beautiful girls, Jemima Josephine and Molly Niamh. Born 7 August 2004, died 8 August 2004. Taken away from Mummy and Daddy too soon. Two more beautiful angels in heaven."
Five days later, Oates-Whitehead placed two more death notices in the Herald, one in her name and one in that of the father, Michael Fitzgerald.
A Star-Times attempt to find the twin's birth or death certificates proved fruitless.
The Lambeth registry office said if they had been born at St Thomas' Hospital in London, as indicated in the death notices, they would have been registered there, but they were not. Oates-Whitehead had told colleagues her partner worked as a doctor on London's famous Harley St but, again, there is no trace of him.
After the July 7 bombings, she told a surprised colleague she was about to undergo cancer treatment, and in one of her last emails to a friend said she had multiple sclerosis, which had flared under the pressure of media inquiries.
Sydney forensic psychiatrist Dr Anthony Samuels said Oates-Whitehead probably believed her own lies, and complaints of terrible illnesses were common among people with borderline personality disorder.
Samuels said she probably posed as a doctor to satisfy a psychological need rather than for monetary or practical benefits.
"In this role she may have started to feel good about herself and then it all blew apart," he said.
"It is a sad case." [my note: it is after you've driven her to suicide]
"People with borderline personality disorders often get into caring professions because they have so much need themselves and it distracts them from their own pain." At a superficial level they were often very charming, but they had difficulty forming relationships.
School friends described Oates-Whitehead as a quiet teenager, one of the "brainy crowd" and someone who always wanted to work in medicine. Her friend from Gisborne's Lytton High School, Natasha Delgarno, remembers her with affection and said she adored her at school.
"Richmal was a real sweetie. She was very, very sensitive, caring and quite highly strung. A huge softie. She had some health problems and was very accident prone and that affected her school life, because she had a lot of absences. "She was quite moody and sometimes seemed depressed, but we all loved her very much and accepted her as she was, with all her little quirks."
Delgarno got in touch with Oates-Whitehead as a result of her newspaper appearance, and said that in her last email she sounded "chirpy and bubbly". "Richmal was a real dreamer and talked a lot about her dreams - she was very interested in the medical profession and talked about marrying a doctor, becoming a nurse or other type of medical professional, and having children.
"Her other dream was to be an actress, and I remember she loved soap operas and knew all the names of the actors.
"It is terrible to think that she did not find happiness in life."
- stuff.co.nz
Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead, Class of 1987 - Lytton High School - Gisborne, New Zealand - namesdatabase.com
Cochrane Collaboration Steering Group (CCSG) member:
Dr Richmal Marie Oates-Whitehead
Research Division, Royal College of Paediatrics
Institute of Child Health
Department of Epidemioloy & Biostatistics
50 Hallam Street
London W1W 6DE
UK
cached source
Criticism Management Advisory Group
Report to the Steering Group -
Since March, 2004, Dr. Richmal Oates-Whitehead has resigned from the role of Co-Convenor; Dr. Sheinfeld Gorin will retain the post alone. - cached source
Richmal Oates-Whitehead was listed as a doctor by NHS direct: Why???
Our contributors
Richmal Oates-Whitehead
Area of expertise: nausea and vomiting in pregnancy
Dr. Oates-Whitehead is an epidemiologist (a doctor who studies how common diseases are in groups of people). She has done research on health management, medical philosophy, ethics and forensic science. She is also an editor for the Cochrane library, which collects and analyses research to help doctors put research into practice. - saved cache of page
She is listed as a member of the Welsh Institute for Health & Social Care Staff as a Research Student at the university of Glamorgan