Cash is pledged to patients' fighting fund
26/03/2002
Readers have pledged more than £2,600 from their own
pockets to keep hopes of a public inquiry into the Richard
Neale scandal alive.
The campaign group representing 250 victims of the North
Yorkshire surgeon needs to raise £10,000 to continue their
legal fight.
After losing a High Court bid for a full public inquiry,
the campaigners appealed for help through The Northern
Echo.
Eight readers pledged money, ranging from two people who
each said they would put up £1,000 each, to a pensioner who
said he wanted to contribute £25. By mid-afternoon
yesterday, the amount pledged stood at £2,625. One reader,
who pledged £100, said: "I only wish I could give more."
Campaigners believe a full public inquiry is the only way
to get at the facts behind Mr Neale's chequered career,
which left 250 women injured before he was struck off - for
the second time in his life - in July 2000.
The Friarage Hospital surgeon was given a job and promoted
despite having been struck off in Canada after two patients
died.
Encouraged by the response so far, the campaign group has
asked for readers to make one last push.
Six weeks ago, its legal team mounted a High Court action
to win a judicial review.
This would have forced the Department of Health to throw
open its investigation to the Press.
But the bid failed, leaving the campaign group with one
last chance - an approach to the Court of Appeal.
Sheila Wright-Hogeland, the campaign group founder who
claims she was left sterile after bungled treatment by Mr
Neale, has already spent more than £100,000 of her own
money on the campaign.
Last night she said: "It is lovely to know people care
desperately about justice. They want to know the truth."
To make a pledge or donation ring (01751) 432296