Yorkshire Post

Michael Green Pathologis­t

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PROFESSOR MICHAEL Green, who has died at 82, was a Home Office consultant pathologis­t who became involved in some of the most notorious criminal cases of the late 20th century.

In the 1970s, while based at St James’s Hospital, Leeds and also working as a senior lecturer at Leeds University, he examined a 37- year- old woman who had survived an attack in Keighley by someone armed with a hammer. It was to be the start of the Yorkshire Ripper inquiry, and throughout its five years, Professor Green was the man to whom the detectives turned.

He was already something of a medical veteran. Before turning to pathology he had wide general training, including a two- year spell with the Flying Doctor service in South Australia. He once survived a plane crash when the small aircraft taking him to a remote location in the outback hit a hole on landing and a wing broke off the fuselage.

Back in Britain, as deputy to Professor David Gee at Leeds University, he became involved in a raft of cases which attracted huge public attention. Among these was the death of Leeds nurse Helen Smith, in Saudi Arabia in 1979. It became a cause célèbre, with allegation­s by her father that she had been murdered, rather than having fallen 70 feet, during an illegal drinks party.

In another case involving the disappeara­nce in August 1974 of a 36- year- old mother of two whose body was never found, Professor Green helped secure a life sentence for her jealous lover, based on DNA evidence.

Throughout his career he maintained a special interest in child abuse deaths and lectured and published widely on the subject. He acted as an adviser to the Government in the second appeal of a solicitor who had been found guilty at a “cot death” trial of murdering her two small children. Following research conducted at Sheffield University, where he was later Emeritus Professor in forensic pathology, he published a paper arguing that greater caution should be applied to unexpected cot deaths in the first year of life.

He also took a close interest in the disappeara­nce in 1974 of the Hull- based fishing trawler the Gaul in the Barents Sea, with the loss of the 36- man crew. As consultant pathologis­t to the official inquiry, he travelled to Murmansk and carried out a series of exhumation­s in subArctic conditions from the sunken vessel.

Michael Alan Green was born in Batley in 1938, the only child of Thomas and Annie Green. His father was the manager of a local Ford garage and his mother worked in a wallpaper shop. Michael attended the local church primary school and later Batley Grammar. He excelled in English and literature but medicine was always his calling and he started at the Leeds Medical School in 1956.

He qualified in 1961 and obtained a job as a junior doctor, with the ambition of becoming a paediatric­ian. During a period as Registrar in paediatric­s at the Leeds General Infirmary in 1962, he married Jennifer Mencher, an anaestheti­st from a Jewish family, whom he met at medical school.

His boss was an anti- Semitic consultant who told him: “Because of your unfortunat­e marriage, Green, I will no longer be able to support your future career.” Michael resigned on the spot. He then joined the department of forensic medicine at Leeds University. However, after a couple of years, he took up an offer in Australia, where Jennifer had relatives. It wasn’t an easy life, with sick people living in remote areas needing medical care. Surgeries would be held by radio, powered by someone sitting on a fixed bicycle, generating electricit­y, with a community of several hundred people able to listen in, while Michael and Jennifer gave instructio­ns. There were just two small planes to cover an area bigger than England and Wales.

After two years Professor Green joined the forensic department in Sydney but by 1969 he returned to England. Jennifer qualified as an ophthalmol­ogist, Michael as a forensic pathologis­t, becoming a member of the Royal College of Pathology in 1981 and a Fellow in 1992.

He was a member of the British Medical Associatio­n central consultant­s’ and specialist­s’ committee, a visiting lecturer, and an external examiner at universiti­es.

After retirement he and Jennifer did a five- year stint as directors of Child Advocacy Internatio­nal in Uganda, a charity bring services to children orphaned by HIV. His home interests included vintage motor cycles, model railways and a 1956 open- top Morris Minor which he took to Norway and Holland.

He and Jennifer had two daughters and four grandchild­ren.

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