Dr Freddy Patel has been criticised in the past by the General Medical Council for failings in his work The pathologist criticised over the death of a man at the G20 protests has been found guilty of 29 counts of misconduct and “deficient professional performance” over a separate case.
Dr Freddy Patel failed to properly examine a woman’s body in 2002, the General Medical Council (GMC) found.
It said he acted dishonestly and in a way likely to tarnish his profession.
Last year Dr Patel was suspended for three months for sub-standard work in three other cases.
And his decision that newspaper seller Ian Tomlinson had died from natural causes at the G20 demonstration was contradicted by another post-mortem examination which blamed abdominal bleeding.
The latest allegations to be upheld related to Dr Patel’s handling of a post-mortem examination on 31-year-old Sally White.
She was murdered by Anthony Hardy, who became known as the Camden Ripper.
Hardy was given three life sentences in 2003 for killing her and two other women.
Miss White’s naked body was found in Hardy’s flat in Camden, north London.
There were blood stains on her clothes and the bed, as well as the wall of the room in which she was found.
Dr Patel said injuries including gashes to her liver and bite marks could all have come from natural causes and there were no signs she was assaulted.
But the GMC decided 29 allegations of misconduct against him could be proved.
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