Originally posted by ColdCaseJury
View Post
There's actually a case VERY similar to the Wallace case in which inaccurate methods were used to determine the time of death, look into Mark Lundy:
An "impossible" time frame (uni students tried to beat his 3 hour trip time, calling it the "Lundy Three Hundy" lmao - police also could not beat the time). The attack was "overkill" suggesting it was personal. Only one thing was stolen from the home. The murder weapon was never found. Witnesses who arguably saw him and his car. There's a question of how he avoided blood. Logged telephone locations. And an inaccurate method used to determine time of death:
Because of modern forensic evidence, he was implicated more heavily because they found brain matter with DNA of his wife on one of the t-shirts in his car. But there's still doubt. The difference though, is that Lundy was not acquitted on appeal.
It's almost a 1:1 modern replica! Interesting case for sure.
P.S. Wallace was a keen chemist. Did they ever check the wife for poison? He could've used a poison in her food or drink that would kill her after a certain time frame, then made the wounds when he got home. Too far out? Almost certainly looool.
Comment