Donald Teare

[1] Teare began his career as a lecturer in forensic medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College.

Teare was also a lecturer at the Metropolitan Police College, Hendon, and served as President of the Medical Defence Union.

Today this disease is considered the leading cause of sudden cardiac death in young athletes.

Together with Keith Simpson and Francis Camps, Teare was one of the "Three Musketeers", who dealt with almost all the suspicious deaths in the London area.

Teare's accident investigations included the Harrow and Wealdstone rail crash, which killed 112 people in 1952, and some of the victims of South African Airways Flight 201.