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A doctor who was convicted of 90 sex offences against 24 former female patients has been jailed for life.
GP Manish Shah, 50, cited the cases of Angelina Jolie and Jade Goody to persuade patients aged between 15 and 39 to undergo unnecessary intimate examinations for his own sexual gratification, the Old Bailey heard.
Shah picked on patients' vulnerability, because of their age or family history of cancer, the court heard.
He brought up the news story about Hollywood star Jolie having a preventative mastectomy as he asked a woman if she would like him to examine her breasts.
He also mentioned Goody to another woman, saying an examination was in her best interests, it was claimed.
Shah would not always wear gloves and left one patient entirely naked on an examination table, jurors heard.
He was branded a "master of deception" as he was handed three life sentences with a minimum term of 15 years at the Old Bailey.
Shah, of Romford, east London, who claimed he had been practising "defensive medicine" was found guilty of 25 sexual offences against the six victims at Mawney Medical Centre between 2009 and 2013 last autumn.
At an earlier trial in 2018, he was convicted of offences relating to 18 other women, bringing the total number of offences to 90 relating to 24 women.
Fifteen of the victims sat in a packed court room today as Shah was sentenced by Judge Anne Molyneux QC to three life sentences with a minimum term of 15 years plus further jail terms to run concurrently.
The judge said Shah had deployed a "mixture of flattery and fear" and used celebrity cases to carry out the sex assaults.
Quoting one of his victims, the judge said: "You made up stories which got into heads and caused panic".
The judge went on: "You were a master of deception and you abused your position of power. This was a horrible abuse of trust and caused incalculable harm.
"The details show a pattern of behaviour over five years.
"Your behaviour was not only sexual but was driven by your desire to control and on occasions humiliate women."
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Earlier, the youngest victim described being left "anxious, fearful and shaking" at the prospect of visiting the doctor after being abused by Shah.
Speaking in court, the woman who was 15 at the time, said she felt different about men and worried about being seen as a "sex object".
Summarising other victim impact statements, prosecutor Rosina Cottage QC said the "lack of trust" created by Shah meant many of the women refused to see male doctors and that it had affected their relationships.
In mitigation, Zoe Johnson QC said: "Manish Shah will never again be able to practice medicine.
"The opportunity to offend and the ability to offend only arose because of Manish Shah's profession.
"There is not one centile of information to suggest he would offend within the community. Stripped of that profession he is a rather weak man.
"It goes without saying that all of these women feel grossly abused, humiliated, and that the trust that they placed in Manish Shah has been so dreadfully exploited.
"He deeply regrets hurting them and cannot say sorry enough."
Shah attempted to justify an examination in medical notes by suggesting it was "requested", the court heard.
He flouted NHS guidelines on giving healthy women aged under 25 smear tests and routine breast examinations on women under 50, which were said to cause more harm than good, jurors were told.
He also breached guidelines on the use of chaperones during intimate examinations.
Paul Goddard, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said: "Manish Shah was a trusted family doctor, but he took advantage of that trust to abuse his female patients and then falsified their medical notes to try to justify intimate medical examinations that should not have taken place.
"The Crown Prosecution Service wishes to commend those women, who by bravely giving evidence convinced the jury of Dr Shah's guilt."