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Doctor in Clark case escapes a life ban

Posted: 09 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


A doctor who failed to disclose vital post-mortem evidence in the Sally Clark murder trial has escaped a life ban from medicine.

A General Medical Council panel found Dr Alan Williams guilty of serious professional misconduct and banned him for three years from Home Office pathology and coroners' cases. But he can continue working as a consultant.

Williams made post-mortem errors on Clark's babies, Christopher and Harry, and withheld evidence.

The panel said Williams had failed in his duty as an expert witness by not disclosing test results from Harry's post-mortem.
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Later disclosure led to the quashing of Clark's conviction at her second appeal.

"Your errors and omissions were formidable," said the panel. "[They] seriously undermined confidence in the role of a doctor as an expert witness."

But a life ban was inappropriate because Williams had not intended to mislead, was not a danger to patients and was not generally incompetent.

The panel also criticised Williams' verdict on the boys' deaths. His finding that 12-week-old Christopher died of a lung infection in 1996 was given despite being based on "slender evidence" and ignored bruising that suggested an unnatural death.
Williams later changed his mind at Clark's trial, saying Christopher had been smothered.

At Harry's post-mortem in 1998, Williams "attributed death to shaking, although all the key evidence could not be sustained".


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