It's quite rare (maybe unheard of) for soft and gentle arguments to end in a slaying.
And as for her health condition, Wallace had claimed it was allegedly bad enough that she wouldn't have left the house to post mail... So yeah I would rather think these encounters on these two nights weren't sexual in nature.
We believe Amy was there, yes. We don't actually have anyone to corroborate that as far as I know... I wasn't aware that she was even really friends with Julia, let alone enough to visit and invite her out to some weird play or w.e... As per the Johnston family they could usually hear when Amy visited that home, as her voice was rather loud and boisterous... I am not sure if they corroborated her being there or not?... But just saying - we have to at least consider the option that the sole purpose of Amy's testimony is to help exonerate William (for example, if he was really going to murder her, why would he tell her about the trip, say he doesn't think he'll go, and she apparently "convinces him"?). Keep that in mind.
That does work with the fake address yes. Albeit again, look at the risk of him finding out quickly that the address legitimately doesn't exist. Allegedly he didn't check a map, and he didn't ask the officer on point duty (who could have, apparently, confirmed far sooner that there was most definitely no such place). Say he had done those things? I guess Julia would have to persuade him to try West and that Beattie may have misheard it. Either way the place was only 4 miles away. William returned RELATIVELY early as is (he was gone for only about an hour and a half, right?) and that's with EXTREME exhaustion of all options for search, including checking the newsagents and local directory etc. etc.
And now the issue of this killer... So okay if it was premeditated, then the cleanliness can be explained easier. I don't believe premeditation at all makes any difference to the brutality of the crime (actually you can check other true crimes to confirm this - plenty of premeditated killings have been VERY brutal). The intruder in this scenario still has to escape into the night unseen, out of the back door of course - the same way Julia would have let this person in. If it was premeditated, the person may also not have provoked an argument with Julia, just slain her without her expecting it at all.
And then what of that cabinet door? Half of it was torn off and on the floor. Yet this did not make any sound heard by neighbors? Another part of the silence that doesn't add up with expectation.
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But then we go back to the evidence and circumstantially there is a strong case against Gordon Parry ringing the club. And perhaps the most CONDEMNING piece of evidence against William - his writing of "WEST" which was then crossed out and replaced by East when relayed to him by Beattie. Now I'm not sure about you, but I find it hard to believe anyone could ever confuse the words "East" and "West" which sound distinctly different.
What I believe that shows is that William KNEW the gardens. And he either EXPECTED the call to say "west" OR, he was trying too hard to make it seem like he was clueless to what was happening... If he TRULY didn't know of the gardens, then he would have just written down the address without any question or confusion... For example - If I said to you a caller had requested you to meet him at 25 Prospect Park East, would you hesitate in writing down that address or assume it was West? Because Prospect Park East DOESN'T exist, and there IS a North, South, and West. Same scenario... Also factor in that William used the specific phrasing "I'm a complete stranger in this district", yet according to Amy who allegedly visited Julia that day, Wallace had told her he had business in the "Calderstones district", an area he was not a complete stranger to.
Another condemning factor in my view is the way that William failed to question how the caller knew he'd be there, WHY he's calling him there of all places, etc... Like if it was genuine, I would feel like I've been stalked, because obviously it would be someone who knew I attended the club, who knew which NIGHT I would be there, and for whatever reason chose to contact me there rather than through the Pru. He had never received business calls that way before - and beyond that didn't even recognize the caller's name (although he SHOULD have been familiar with the name "Qualtrough" rather than pointing out several times how peculiar it is - since it was a client of Marsden's, who he supervised).
And as for her health condition, Wallace had claimed it was allegedly bad enough that she wouldn't have left the house to post mail... So yeah I would rather think these encounters on these two nights weren't sexual in nature.
We believe Amy was there, yes. We don't actually have anyone to corroborate that as far as I know... I wasn't aware that she was even really friends with Julia, let alone enough to visit and invite her out to some weird play or w.e... As per the Johnston family they could usually hear when Amy visited that home, as her voice was rather loud and boisterous... I am not sure if they corroborated her being there or not?... But just saying - we have to at least consider the option that the sole purpose of Amy's testimony is to help exonerate William (for example, if he was really going to murder her, why would he tell her about the trip, say he doesn't think he'll go, and she apparently "convinces him"?). Keep that in mind.
That does work with the fake address yes. Albeit again, look at the risk of him finding out quickly that the address legitimately doesn't exist. Allegedly he didn't check a map, and he didn't ask the officer on point duty (who could have, apparently, confirmed far sooner that there was most definitely no such place). Say he had done those things? I guess Julia would have to persuade him to try West and that Beattie may have misheard it. Either way the place was only 4 miles away. William returned RELATIVELY early as is (he was gone for only about an hour and a half, right?) and that's with EXTREME exhaustion of all options for search, including checking the newsagents and local directory etc. etc.
And now the issue of this killer... So okay if it was premeditated, then the cleanliness can be explained easier. I don't believe premeditation at all makes any difference to the brutality of the crime (actually you can check other true crimes to confirm this - plenty of premeditated killings have been VERY brutal). The intruder in this scenario still has to escape into the night unseen, out of the back door of course - the same way Julia would have let this person in. If it was premeditated, the person may also not have provoked an argument with Julia, just slain her without her expecting it at all.
And then what of that cabinet door? Half of it was torn off and on the floor. Yet this did not make any sound heard by neighbors? Another part of the silence that doesn't add up with expectation.
---
But then we go back to the evidence and circumstantially there is a strong case against Gordon Parry ringing the club. And perhaps the most CONDEMNING piece of evidence against William - his writing of "WEST" which was then crossed out and replaced by East when relayed to him by Beattie. Now I'm not sure about you, but I find it hard to believe anyone could ever confuse the words "East" and "West" which sound distinctly different.
What I believe that shows is that William KNEW the gardens. And he either EXPECTED the call to say "west" OR, he was trying too hard to make it seem like he was clueless to what was happening... If he TRULY didn't know of the gardens, then he would have just written down the address without any question or confusion... For example - If I said to you a caller had requested you to meet him at 25 Prospect Park East, would you hesitate in writing down that address or assume it was West? Because Prospect Park East DOESN'T exist, and there IS a North, South, and West. Same scenario... Also factor in that William used the specific phrasing "I'm a complete stranger in this district", yet according to Amy who allegedly visited Julia that day, Wallace had told her he had business in the "Calderstones district", an area he was not a complete stranger to.
Another condemning factor in my view is the way that William failed to question how the caller knew he'd be there, WHY he's calling him there of all places, etc... Like if it was genuine, I would feel like I've been stalked, because obviously it would be someone who knew I attended the club, who knew which NIGHT I would be there, and for whatever reason chose to contact me there rather than through the Pru. He had never received business calls that way before - and beyond that didn't even recognize the caller's name (although he SHOULD have been familiar with the name "Qualtrough" rather than pointing out several times how peculiar it is - since it was a client of Marsden's, who he supervised).
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