Elsie’s Voice

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Elsie’s Voice

Elsie’s Voice

@bee_devine

参加日 Aralık 2012
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Elsie’s Voice
Elsie’s Voice@bee_devine·
JUNE 20th MEMORIAL DAY🌹 The day #VictimsOfGosport heard the echoing words: “A DISREGARD FOR HUMAN LIFE” This video is to ensure those who lost their lives will never be forgotten & for all to understand it’s a lonely & treacherous road to #Justice youtu.be/_wVWCi2R6oc
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Spotlight Justice
Spotlight Justice@SpotlightJustiz·
#Gosport Hope that justice is coming Ann. It is beyond farcical for Hampshire Police to pretend that their actions have been acceptable. Hundreds of lives ended prematurely by the unlawful administration of opioids and no criminal charges and police think that's ok. It was nothing short of a medical massacre and it is imperative that there is a day of reckoning for those accountable for not only the deaths but the despicable cover-up that followed. And not forgetting all those harmed since Gosport either. @human_frozen_ @geofio @eolwatch @keepnhshonest @LorraineNorton @endoflifecampaigner @MikeTrottervrs @solotrotter @willcpowell @Ada_02_05
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Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy

Read the article 👇🏻 Families challenge watchdog review of Gosport hospital deaths (The Times, 16 March 2026) A judicial review claim is expected to begin on Monday over alleged failings in an investigation into the deaths of more than 450 patients at an NHS hospital nearly 30 years ago. Eight family members are to challenge the police watchdog’s review of an investigation by Hampshire and Isle of Wight constabulary into the deaths at Gosport War Memorial Hospital between 1989 and 2000. In 2018 an independent panel chaired by James Jones, a retired Anglican bishop of Liverpool, concluded that hundreds of lives had been shortened because of a routine practice at the hospital of prescribing and administering opioids. Six years later, senior officers at Hampshire constabulary dismissed the 72 complaints raised by family members over its investigation, which resulted in no criminal charges. In November eight of the families began a judicial review application over the process at the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which had reviewed an internal investigation. Monday is the deadline for the watchdog to state whether it will defend the claim, which is being led by David Wilson. He and people from the other families have also served legal proceedings as interested parties on Hampshire constabulary as well as the police force in Kent, which conducted a separate inquiry into the handling of the initial investigation. Two other interested parties in the potential judicial review are the chief coroner and the secretary for work and pensions, whose department is responsible for the Health and Safety Executive. Speaking to The Times, Wilson, 79, said that so far “no independent investigation of the police or other state bodies has ever taken place” into the handling and findings of the original investigations. As a result, Wilson, the nephew of a deceased patient, said any potential for criminal prosecutions was “now legally fragile because key lines of inquiry were excluded, and every death remains without the lawful investigation the families were entitled to”. He argued that the failings were a breach of “the state’s obligation to investigate each death in compliance with Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights”. That article, which is incorporated into UK legislation, protects the right to life. Jones’s panel found that there had been a “disregard for human life” at the hospital and a “culture of shortening lives”. His report added that “when the relatives complained about the safety of patients and the appropriateness of their care, they were consistently let down by those in authority — both individuals and institutions”. Wilson and other families have long argued that Hampshire investigators failed to prevent some patients from being harmed and the independent panel described the force’s three investigations between 1998 and 2010 as “consistently poor”. The families went on to accuse 16 Hampshire officers of corruption and dishonesty over the investigations. The force has consistently denied wrongdoing and said that the actions of officers “were acceptable”. Kent police oversaw Operation Magenta, the fourth criminal investigation into the deaths, which so far has resulted in no charges. While no prosecutions have been brought over the allegations, in 2010 a doctor who oversaw prescribing on the wards was found guilty of serious professional misconduct by a General Medical Council tribunal. The IOPC told The Times that it was “aware that a judicial review claim has been submitted to the High Court in relation to reviews we have carried out into complaints made about the force’s investigation into the hospital deaths, which we are currently considering”.

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
Breaking News 👇🏻#VictiimsOfGosport🕊️ Judicial Review Two further State bodies in scope: Chief Coroner Department for Work & Pensions (HSE) This was never just about one investigation. It is about a system that failed to investigate itself for nearly 30 years. #Gosport
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy

Read the article 👇🏻 Families challenge watchdog review of Gosport hospital deaths (The Times, 16 March 2026) A judicial review claim is expected to begin on Monday over alleged failings in an investigation into the deaths of more than 450 patients at an NHS hospital nearly 30 years ago. Eight family members are to challenge the police watchdog’s review of an investigation by Hampshire and Isle of Wight constabulary into the deaths at Gosport War Memorial Hospital between 1989 and 2000. In 2018 an independent panel chaired by James Jones, a retired Anglican bishop of Liverpool, concluded that hundreds of lives had been shortened because of a routine practice at the hospital of prescribing and administering opioids. Six years later, senior officers at Hampshire constabulary dismissed the 72 complaints raised by family members over its investigation, which resulted in no criminal charges. In November eight of the families began a judicial review application over the process at the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which had reviewed an internal investigation. Monday is the deadline for the watchdog to state whether it will defend the claim, which is being led by David Wilson. He and people from the other families have also served legal proceedings as interested parties on Hampshire constabulary as well as the police force in Kent, which conducted a separate inquiry into the handling of the initial investigation. Two other interested parties in the potential judicial review are the chief coroner and the secretary for work and pensions, whose department is responsible for the Health and Safety Executive. Speaking to The Times, Wilson, 79, said that so far “no independent investigation of the police or other state bodies has ever taken place” into the handling and findings of the original investigations. As a result, Wilson, the nephew of a deceased patient, said any potential for criminal prosecutions was “now legally fragile because key lines of inquiry were excluded, and every death remains without the lawful investigation the families were entitled to”. He argued that the failings were a breach of “the state’s obligation to investigate each death in compliance with Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights”. That article, which is incorporated into UK legislation, protects the right to life. Jones’s panel found that there had been a “disregard for human life” at the hospital and a “culture of shortening lives”. His report added that “when the relatives complained about the safety of patients and the appropriateness of their care, they were consistently let down by those in authority — both individuals and institutions”. Wilson and other families have long argued that Hampshire investigators failed to prevent some patients from being harmed and the independent panel described the force’s three investigations between 1998 and 2010 as “consistently poor”. The families went on to accuse 16 Hampshire officers of corruption and dishonesty over the investigations. The force has consistently denied wrongdoing and said that the actions of officers “were acceptable”. Kent police oversaw Operation Magenta, the fourth criminal investigation into the deaths, which so far has resulted in no charges. While no prosecutions have been brought over the allegations, in 2010 a doctor who oversaw prescribing on the wards was found guilty of serious professional misconduct by a General Medical Council tribunal. The IOPC told The Times that it was “aware that a judicial review claim has been submitted to the High Court in relation to reviews we have carried out into complaints made about the force’s investigation into the hospital deaths, which we are currently considering”.

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
#VictimsOfGosport At a meeting 5 February 2003 Operation Rochester while beychallenged on corporate liability Supt. Steve Watts told the Gosport families: ‘There is an issue of corporate liability… all these issues will be looked at. Yes, there are commonalities in how many people met their deaths.’ So just why was that avenue never pursued? #HSE And why, 27-years later — with 5th police investigation Operation Magenta now seven years in at £M5 a year— are they still ‘looking at it’?
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy

Breaking News 👇🏻#VictiimsOfGosport🕊️ Judicial Review Two further State bodies in scope: Chief Coroner Department for Work & Pensions (HSE) This was never just about one investigation. It is about a system that failed to investigate itself for nearly 30 years. #Gosport

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
Call it what you like — at #Gosport, safeguards failed and lives were taken into others’ hands. Patients who were not dying had no idea were given powerful opioids and sedatives. Families are still fighting decades on. #VictimsOfGosport🕊️ NO #assisteddying
Lois McLatchie Miller@LoisMcLatch

Nobody thinks this bill is safe. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Not the First Minister. Not the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Not Disability groups. Not doctors. No one thinks it’s a good idea to let the NHS kill patients. 💉👇

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
Our journey so far #VictimsOfGosport🕊️ m.youtube.com/watch?v=_wVWCi… The imbalance over 28 years is stark and shameful. It’s been a life sentence. State bodies operated with full disclosure and legal advantage, while families were left effectively blind — navigating a process without equality of arms. Evidence was withheld for decades — yet the CPS had all evidence?? The Times reports on the Gosport Judicial Review. This is the reality behind it. #Gosport #VictimsOfGosport #Article2
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy

Please RT: BREAKING NEWS GOSPORT: thetimes.com/uk/crime/artic…

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Families Against Involuntary Medical Euthanasia
📢 Breaking news: Families challenge watchdog review of Gosport hospital deaths and demand the examination of the police investigation into 456 patients who were poisoned with opioids and hastened to early graves. thetimes.com/uk/crime/artic… FAIME (@EoLWatch) stands in solidarity with @ann_poppy and all the families of the #Gosport victims in their decades-long battle for justice. Please repost.
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy

Read the article 👇🏻 Families challenge watchdog review of Gosport hospital deaths (The Times, 16 March 2026) A judicial review claim is expected to begin on Monday over alleged failings in an investigation into the deaths of more than 450 patients at an NHS hospital nearly 30 years ago. Eight family members are to challenge the police watchdog’s review of an investigation by Hampshire and Isle of Wight constabulary into the deaths at Gosport War Memorial Hospital between 1989 and 2000. In 2018 an independent panel chaired by James Jones, a retired Anglican bishop of Liverpool, concluded that hundreds of lives had been shortened because of a routine practice at the hospital of prescribing and administering opioids. Six years later, senior officers at Hampshire constabulary dismissed the 72 complaints raised by family members over its investigation, which resulted in no criminal charges. In November eight of the families began a judicial review application over the process at the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which had reviewed an internal investigation. Monday is the deadline for the watchdog to state whether it will defend the claim, which is being led by David Wilson. He and people from the other families have also served legal proceedings as interested parties on Hampshire constabulary as well as the police force in Kent, which conducted a separate inquiry into the handling of the initial investigation. Two other interested parties in the potential judicial review are the chief coroner and the secretary for work and pensions, whose department is responsible for the Health and Safety Executive. Speaking to The Times, Wilson, 79, said that so far “no independent investigation of the police or other state bodies has ever taken place” into the handling and findings of the original investigations. As a result, Wilson, the nephew of a deceased patient, said any potential for criminal prosecutions was “now legally fragile because key lines of inquiry were excluded, and every death remains without the lawful investigation the families were entitled to”. He argued that the failings were a breach of “the state’s obligation to investigate each death in compliance with Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights”. That article, which is incorporated into UK legislation, protects the right to life. Jones’s panel found that there had been a “disregard for human life” at the hospital and a “culture of shortening lives”. His report added that “when the relatives complained about the safety of patients and the appropriateness of their care, they were consistently let down by those in authority — both individuals and institutions”. Wilson and other families have long argued that Hampshire investigators failed to prevent some patients from being harmed and the independent panel described the force’s three investigations between 1998 and 2010 as “consistently poor”. The families went on to accuse 16 Hampshire officers of corruption and dishonesty over the investigations. The force has consistently denied wrongdoing and said that the actions of officers “were acceptable”. Kent police oversaw Operation Magenta, the fourth criminal investigation into the deaths, which so far has resulted in no charges. While no prosecutions have been brought over the allegations, in 2010 a doctor who oversaw prescribing on the wards was found guilty of serious professional misconduct by a General Medical Council tribunal. The IOPC told The Times that it was “aware that a judicial review claim has been submitted to the High Court in relation to reviews we have carried out into complaints made about the force’s investigation into the hospital deaths, which we are currently considering”.

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
Read the article 👇🏻 Families challenge watchdog review of Gosport hospital deaths (The Times, 16 March 2026) A judicial review claim is expected to begin on Monday over alleged failings in an investigation into the deaths of more than 450 patients at an NHS hospital nearly 30 years ago. Eight family members are to challenge the police watchdog’s review of an investigation by Hampshire and Isle of Wight constabulary into the deaths at Gosport War Memorial Hospital between 1989 and 2000. In 2018 an independent panel chaired by James Jones, a retired Anglican bishop of Liverpool, concluded that hundreds of lives had been shortened because of a routine practice at the hospital of prescribing and administering opioids. Six years later, senior officers at Hampshire constabulary dismissed the 72 complaints raised by family members over its investigation, which resulted in no criminal charges. In November eight of the families began a judicial review application over the process at the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which had reviewed an internal investigation. Monday is the deadline for the watchdog to state whether it will defend the claim, which is being led by David Wilson. He and people from the other families have also served legal proceedings as interested parties on Hampshire constabulary as well as the police force in Kent, which conducted a separate inquiry into the handling of the initial investigation. Two other interested parties in the potential judicial review are the chief coroner and the secretary for work and pensions, whose department is responsible for the Health and Safety Executive. Speaking to The Times, Wilson, 79, said that so far “no independent investigation of the police or other state bodies has ever taken place” into the handling and findings of the original investigations. As a result, Wilson, the nephew of a deceased patient, said any potential for criminal prosecutions was “now legally fragile because key lines of inquiry were excluded, and every death remains without the lawful investigation the families were entitled to”. He argued that the failings were a breach of “the state’s obligation to investigate each death in compliance with Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights”. That article, which is incorporated into UK legislation, protects the right to life. Jones’s panel found that there had been a “disregard for human life” at the hospital and a “culture of shortening lives”. His report added that “when the relatives complained about the safety of patients and the appropriateness of their care, they were consistently let down by those in authority — both individuals and institutions”. Wilson and other families have long argued that Hampshire investigators failed to prevent some patients from being harmed and the independent panel described the force’s three investigations between 1998 and 2010 as “consistently poor”. The families went on to accuse 16 Hampshire officers of corruption and dishonesty over the investigations. The force has consistently denied wrongdoing and said that the actions of officers “were acceptable”. Kent police oversaw Operation Magenta, the fourth criminal investigation into the deaths, which so far has resulted in no charges. While no prosecutions have been brought over the allegations, in 2010 a doctor who oversaw prescribing on the wards was found guilty of serious professional misconduct by a General Medical Council tribunal. The IOPC told The Times that it was “aware that a judicial review claim has been submitted to the High Court in relation to reviews we have carried out into complaints made about the force’s investigation into the hospital deaths, which we are currently considering”.
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John Clarke
John Clarke@C7RKY·
@ann_poppy @bee_devine Beautiful memories. 37 yrs ago mum bought me a pot plant as a housewarming present for my 1st home. Somehow, I didn’t kill it and now it’s blooming more than ever, a year after mom finally succumbed to what the NHS did to her in Nottingham. Antonio Martin-Ucar - I still see you!
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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
#MothersDay Memories surround us today as we filled Mumsy’s favourite porcelain vase with flowers — our lovely, kind and gentle Mum, never to be forgotten. Her memory is with us every day, and so is our determination to expose the truth and seek justice for what happened to her at #Gosport — the fateful day that changed our lives forever. Elsie Devine, a #VictimOfGosport. We miss you, Mumsy. 🌹
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Elsie’s Voice@bee_devine·
Beautiful flowers for a beautiful Mum. 🤍 She’d be so proud of the love and strength you show every day. Her kindness lives on through you, and she will never be forgotten. Always with you. 🌸
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy

#MothersDay Memories surround us today as we filled Mumsy’s favourite porcelain vase with flowers — our lovely, kind and gentle Mum, never to be forgotten. Her memory is with us every day, and so is our determination to expose the truth and seek justice for what happened to her at #Gosport — the fateful day that changed our lives forever. Elsie Devine, a #VictimOfGosport. We miss you, Mumsy. 🌹

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
#Gosport CPS relied on an expert opinion from Professor David Black — who had no litigation experience working at the GMC and had never written expert reports for the courts. Yet his erroneous opinion carried decisive weigh; that at the time PERRYQC(KC) wouldn’t allow us to see. There were hundreds of medical experts who regularly prepared court reports. Yet CPS chose Black instead who has disregarded human life. That decision shaped the entire #Gosport cases?? What a fight we have..
Ada@Ada_02_05

@human_frozen_ Dr. Evans was only a GP. Not even a respiratory specialist, or a specialist in dying, so with no expertise at all to give advice and guidance on these death protocols. And Matt Hancock without a medical background sits there like a tool, but he is a very dangerous tool.

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Jason Ginnelly
Jason Ginnelly@JasonGinnelly1·
@ann_poppy Thank you Ann, Bridget & all still affected families if Gosport I stand with you & walk with you always and anything I can do to help just let me know love Jason x
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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
Thinking of you Jason 💙Remembering your beautiful and brilliant Dad, William ‘Billy’ Ginnelly and your fight for Justice @JasonGinnelly1 Thirteen years since his life was cruelly shortened by the death pathway, robbing you and your family of the time you should have had together. I know it must be a difficult day — sending hugs #VictimsOfGosport
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Elsie’s Voice
Elsie’s Voice@bee_devine·
Thinking of you today Jason. Hard to believe it’s been 13 years since we first connected. Your support for the families and the fight for justice has always meant a lot. Take care of yourself, B x
Jason Ginnelly@JasonGinnelly1

@ann_poppy Thank you Ann, Bridget & all still affected families if Gosport I stand with you & walk with you always and anything I can do to help just let me know love Jason x

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Justice4Elsie
Justice4Elsie@ann_poppy·
We have already seen what happens when powerful drugs are used without proper safeguards. At #Gosport, vulnerable patients were given opioids and sedatives when they were not dying. Families are still fighting decades later. Medicine must always protect life, not abandon it. #VictimsOfGosport
Kevin Yuill@historykev

This would be a fundamental shift in the meaning of medicine. Presently, the doctors' role is to cure disease and alleviate symptoms. If the McArthur Bill passes, it will include killing patients "in their own interest". This is frightening, if not monstrous. #assistedsuicide

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Will Powell
Will Powell@willcpowell·
@SpotlightJustiz @ziegesleftfoot @wesstreeting @EoLWatch @geofio @CompassnInCare @ann_poppy @MikeTrottervrs @solotrotter @LorraineNorton Difficult to understand why no-one has been prosecuted for murder, or manslaughter, re the hundreds of deaths at Gosport. I'm sure that if any one of us intentionally gave our elderly loved ones, an amount of opiates that would kill a healthy young adult, we would be in jail. 😔
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Spotlight Justice
Spotlight Justice@SpotlightJustiz·
@ann_poppy Thank you Ann for being a true inspiration for those of us who have followed in your footsteps in fighting for the right for our loved ones not to be harmed. I hope that there will be justice for all the victims of #Gosport soon.
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