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  • 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.

    ---

    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).
    Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 07-06-2019, 03:19 PM.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post
      Ok so you know for a fact he didn't know the call was traced? So then why say Belmont if he's gonna lie? That's not his usual route. There's a reason he chose that route. It's not Oxford Street but there are still people milling around at those times. Just ONE sighting and it's over for him. He chose it specifically for a useless letter mailing alibi maybe?
      How do you know that the Belmont stop wasn't his usual stop? If it was then this provides a reason for Wallace not appearing to do anything out of the ordinary on that night.
      You have to pay a fare when you get on the tram do you not? That's one person already who's seen him.
      It didn’t work that way then. You sat down and waited for the conductor to come to you to take your fairand give you a ticket. The conductor could have been upstairs when Wallace was picked up.
      And I think Parry called the club too early. I think he was meant to call around 10 minutes later than he did. I think that's why Wallace pressed Beattie for accuracy on the call time, because he expected it would have come later when he was nearer the club on the tram which would exonerate him.
      Good suggestion.
      Did Parry KNOW Julia would be killed? I don't think so. The voice was too confident and unwavering for that, most likely, though that's weak evidence as some people perform well under pressure.
      True.
      In Gordon Parry we have the PERFECT sacrificial lamb: A man with a dodgy reputation, a member of the club at the cafe, a man with arguably something personal against the Pru, a man who Julia would admit willingly, and importantly a man with no alibi for when the call was made (though we can place him at the box based on when he barged in on Lily), with an alias linked to his best pal.
      I don’t know what Parry could have had against the Pru? He left of his own volition. A man with a cast iron alibi for the time of the murder is hardly the perfect fall guy.
      Now why would Parry call? A few options. One is the use of a false pretext - with the pair being buddies. The second is, remember, Wallace was Parry's supervisor at the Pru. AFAIK he did NOT report Parry's discrepancies. Does Wallace know more than he's letting on about Parry's criminal activities? These things could have been used with or without monetary payment, and with or without Parry's knowledge of the true intention of the crime.
      I’m pretty sure that Wallace reported Parry? Parry’s father had to pay back some cash.
      ---

      So come murder night. This is gonna be hard to crack...

      What I WOULD say is it's highly likely is that anyone who entered came in the back as Julia was instructed to set up the parlor. WAS Julia in the habit of bolting the yard? Wallace says so. That's of high importance really as that's what would block an intruder unless they were let in.

      In any case the person came in the back is ny theory. If Wallace didn't fo it. And for SHEER odds of getting in and out with timr to clesn etc. Johnston is your most likely candidate.
      I can’t see a single reason for suspicion against Johnston.
      ---

      Would Parry crack YES. If he was arrested on suspicion of murder he would without any doubt fess up. Though in fairness he's pretty f'd as it were even if he tried to be honest. At best he'd be executed with William for murder conspiracy.

      i also wouldn't doibt his murder alibi is coerced. Just saying...

      He's the PERFECT scapegoat. But fortunately he was entirely acquitted and never had to sdmit to his potentisl role in all this.
      This is where it falls imo. Why would Wallace set up Parry knowing full well that if he was questioned he’d immediately drop William in it leading him to the gallows? I’d think that Parry would have a good chance of getting off Scot-free. All that he’d have needed to have done would have been to say that William asked him to make the call because he needed an excuse to go out because he was seeing a woman. Added to that when they saw Parry’s unshakeable alibi what would they nail Parry on? A potentially semi-innocent phone call? Way to big a risk for Wallace imo.
      Still Wallace alone for me.

      Regards

      Sir Herlock Sholmes.

      “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

      Comment


      • It's known that his usual route was down Pendennis.

        Either way he has someone there to take his fare, so I don't see the issue. I mean surely people couldn't just fraud what stop they got on and pay less lol. I'm not sure how trams work. Either way it relies too much on assumption.

        I've heard mixed messages on the reporting of Parry. If Wallace reported him that's more reason for revenge. But I've heard that wasn't actually what happened.

        However we must remember Parry and Wallace were still on friendly terms. Parry in fact gave William a calendar as a gift in December.

        There is suspicion against Johnston circumstantially speaking. To omit him is legitimately ridiculous. He's a viable candidate if you look into it. I've already listed so many reasons. Their chance leaving their home just as Wallace was there to visit someone who wasn't exoecting them, which John needing to be up st 4 AM lol. It's kinda ridic... The fact they were gonna go out leaving their yard door unsecured (I wonder if this was common practice and Wallace lied thaf Julia always bolted it)... There's a lot of stuff I could mention. He absolutely absolutely must be investigated seriously as a suspect. It's dishonest to discount him.

        I don't think Gordon would have been believed but whatever. All signs pointed to him and Marsden. I don't know if I believe his alibi even though I don't think he killed Julia (and Marsden didn't really have an alibi). Admitting he made that call, he'd have been pretty condemned... Perhaps the safety net of KNOWING Beattie will confirm it could not have been William's voice was enough. I just think William took the route he claimed, which makes Wallace impossible as the caller... On top of that all the timings match up for Gordon in that box and his barging in on Lily was weird. It all fits the timing perfectly. So eithet Gordon called or William was INCREDIBLY lucky that the second best suspect was around the box at the right time and gave a fake alibi.

        So pick your poison.

        We don't even know what other dirt William possibly had on Parry, he knew he was a swindler. I can see him goading Gordon into calling.

        JMO. And the opinion of my pal you know.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post
          It's known that his usual route was down Pendennis.
          Are you sure about that? I’ve never been of the understanding that this was the case. Why did he take different route on that particular night?
          Either way he has someone there to take his fare, so I don't see the issue. I mean surely people couldn't just fraud what stop they got on and pay less lol. I'm not sure how trams work. Either way it relies too much on assumption.
          Trams/Metro systems work like that these days too. I regularly visit a friend in Birmingham by Metro and three times recently I’ve had a free ride because the conductor hadn’t gotten to me by the time I’d arrived at my destination. I’m not saying that Wallace’s tram was so full that this could have happened but those trams had an upstairs. All I’m saying is that if the conductor had been upstairs whilst Wallace got on this might have led to doubt.
          I've heard mixed messages on the reporting of Parry. If Wallace reported him that's more reason for revenge. But I've heard that wasn't actually what happened.
          I’m pretty certain that Parry left his job at The Pru of his own volition.
          However we must remember Parry and Wallace were still on friendly terms. Parry in fact gave William a calendar as a gift in December.
          Would they have remained on friendly terms had Wallace caused him to have lost his job?
          There is suspicion against Johnston circumstantially speaking. To omit him is legitimately ridiculous. Sorry WWH but I see nothing at all against Johnston.He's a viable candidate if you look into it. I've already listed so many reasons. Their chance leaving their home just as Wallace was there to visit someone who wasn't exoecting them, which John needing to be up st 4 AM lol. There’s nothing strange about an unannounced or unplanned visit at a time when only the better off families owned telephones. It was a family visit. It might have been just for an hour or so meaning that they’d have been back home at 10.30-11.00. Weren’t the Johnston’s moving house the next day? Surely Mr Johnston would have had the day off? It's kinda ridic... The fact they were gonna go out leaving their yard door unsecured (I wonder if this was common practice and Wallace lied thaf Julia always bolted it)... There's a lot of stuff I could mention. He absolutely absolutely must be investigated seriously as a suspect. It's dishonest to discount him. I’ve always tried to look at the case honestly WWH.

          I don't think Gordon would have been believed but whatever. Why would the police automatically disbelieve him. He had an alibi for the murder and so even if he’d made the call they couldn’t have pinned the murder on him. Who else could they have gone for? Only Wallace. All signs pointed to him and Marsden. I don't know if I believe his alibi even though I don't think he killed Julia (and Marsden didn't really have an alibi). I’d say that Parry’s alibi is rock solid. Admitting he made that call, he'd have been pretty condemned...I disagree. I think that if he’d admitted the call claiming that he was tricked into it by Wallace, with his alibi, Wallace would have hanged. Perhaps the safety net of KNOWING Beattie will confirm it could not have been William's voice was enough. Beattie didn’t think that it was Wallace’s voice. It doesn’t mean that it wasn’t though. Beattie was focused on the content of the message. The idea of a prank call would have been an alien concept to him. He was a serious businessman and this call was about business. I don’t think that it’s at all an issue that Wallace might simply have disguised his voice. Wallace might have been a good mimic? We don’t know. Some people are but it’s not something that would have been common knowledge.I just think William took the route he claimed, which makes Wallace impossible as the caller... On top of that all the timings match up for Gordon in that box and his barging in on Lily was weird. Also, if Wallace left the house when he said that he did he’d have reached the call box at the right time.It all fits the timing perfectly. So eithet Gordon called or William was INCREDIBLY lucky that the second best suspect was around the box at the right time and gave a fake alibi. Or Wallace made the call by disguising his voice. He perhaps originally intended to say that he caught the tram near to the call box because the call couldn’t have been traced but as circumstances turned out such that they gave him confidence that he couldn’t be placed at or near to thecall box he decided to put himself further away bu claiming that he walked past two active stops to catch the tram near the Belmont Road junction.

          So pick your poison.
          There are certainly doubts and objections to most points.
          We don't even know what other dirt William possibly had on Parry, he knew he was a swindler. I can see him goading Gordon into calling.

          JMO. And the opinion of my pal you know.
          The thing that I’m most confident of in this case is that I believe that William is overwhelmingly the likeliest killer.
          I think that Parry should be entirely eliminated as the murderer.
          I see almost no reason for Parry/Marsden/Johnston’s involvement,
          I don’t think that William would have involved or trusted anyone else in this plan.

          I think that the murder was intentional and personal (ie motivated by emotion rather that gain)
          I think the Qualtrough plan involving the chess club smacks of Wallace himself.
          I think Wallace’s behaviour on that night both at Menlove Garden’s and on trying to get into the house point to Wallace acting out a plan.
          I think that the fact that the lights were out point to Wallace.
          I think that the fact that there was no blood outside of the Parlour points strongly to Wallace.
          I think that the fact that Wallace ignored the within reach Parlour to go upstairs points to a guilty Wallace.

          In short, I’m still at Wallace alone.

          I could’ve wrong though of course.

          Regards

          Sir Herlock Sholmes.

          “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

            The thing that I’m most confident of in this case is that I believe that William is overwhelmingly the likeliest killer.
            I think that Parry should be entirely eliminated as the murderer.
            I see almost no reason for Parry/Marsden/Johnston’s involvement,
            I don’t think that William would have involved or trusted anyone else in this plan.

            I think that the murder was intentional and personal (ie motivated by emotion rather that gain)
            I think the Qualtrough plan involving the chess club smacks of Wallace himself.
            I think Wallace’s behaviour on that night both at Menlove Garden’s and on trying to get into the house point to Wallace acting out a plan.
            I think that the fact that the lights were out point to Wallace.
            I think that the fact that there was no blood outside of the Parlour points strongly to Wallace.
            I think that the fact that Wallace ignored the within reach Parlour to go upstairs points to a guilty Wallace.

            In short, I’m still at Wallace alone.

            I could’ve wrong though of course.
            In The Telephone Murder (I believe it is) it is stated that he regularly took the route down Pendennis (like when he went on the wild goose chase to Menlove). That was the author's strongest point actually, that he took an odd route. It's also something I find somewhat strong.

            That is an important factor. He said he went that way to mail a letter - I tend to err on the side of this being an excuse, and err on the side of it being really weird he went that route... The mailing of a letter excuse does help to explain away any witnesses who may have seen him walking the wrong way up Richmond Park. But the tram route is so easily verifiable, and of course it is dangerous to lie moreso than it is to just tell the truth ESPECIALLY if he doesn't even know the call was traced. So what happened there? The police were very biased, did they bury evidence? Even if they did, why didn't William's defence team check it? We may never know, so sadly we have to let it go... But in my honest opinion, I THINK he probably took the route he claimed, just to be safer than telling an outright lie, which makes it impossible he placed the phone call.

            The fact that he apparently used that box and took that tram is pretty much the crux of the entire prosecution against him acting alone. So the fact it wasn't investigated seems weird. But that's what happened so we have to deal with that as it stands. But yeah as I said that's their screw up and we have to deal with that.

            It seems we're in agreement that Wallace and Parry were on good terms, and Wallace did not report him. I do wonder though - if Wallace did not report Gordon, and if they were friends, what else could Wallace have possibly have known about Parry and his crimes? We know Parry had pulled off insurance scams etc. One has to wonder if he had something else on him that he could use for blackmail? Just saying, would like to hear your thoughts.

            I definitely disagree that the Johnstons should be exonerated automatically. The police should have at least investigated them thoroughly. It's not just the things I mentioned. There's a lot more on them. For example how Johnston claimed Wallace "forced the door open" and then in court said "he opened the door easily, in the usual way". I mean if you really want I will list out ALL circumstantial evidence against them. There's a lot and I think I can truly convince you to at least consider them if I were to bullet point an entire list. Because to actually just automatically omit them as suspects is ludicrous.

            Wallace did leave his home at the right time. The proposal I have made is that he purposefully went that strange route to meet up with a person (who MIGHT have been Gordon) and then forked off in separate directions. The call I believe was intended to placed a tad later than it really was - to my mind this is the explanation for why Wallace would press Beattie so hard for accuracy on the time the call came. Maybe he thought it would have come at half past the hour which again would exonerate him.

            I also maintain it's UNSAFE for Gordon to say he was tricked into calling. His word against William's. And Marsden with the flu allegedly. Gordon wouldn't have to be the killer to have been involved in murder in the eyes of the police. For example, as I said, if he'd had someone else go there and rob the place. Just saying. It's not a reliable way out for him. it's very dangerous in fact. I think he would only have caved if he was legitimately arrested for the murder.

            ---

            By the way I also do not think Gordon killed Julia but I DEFINITELY wouldn't rule it out. There is evidence that alibi coercion was attempted (if the callers on Wilkes' radio show were not lying) and so I am not entirely sure. We also have Lily (jilted - so possibly lying) saying that Parry made her falsify an alibi. To COMPLETELY rule him out, I don't really think that can be done. But I agree for sure that to me, he is the least likeliest killer.

            And this thing about "Wallace wouldn't have trusted" others etc. I mean you're a true crime buff right? You know how many murders have been commited with multiple parties involved? People getting their friends to stage a robbery and kill their spouse. People getting someone they're having an affair with to go in and kill for them. It's been done many, many time. To completely discount it as even possible when there are so many examples of solved crimes where similar things have happened - I don't think that's reasonable to do. It must be considered.

            ---

            If we and other posters continue to discuss these points I really honestly believe we can come up with something coherent and possible. But for me I just want to solve the case, I have no vested interest in it being any particular person (despite my Johnston avatar lol), I just want to crack the case as far as can be possibly done with the evidence we have.

            I am actually considering taking a 3 hour train up to Merseyside and looking through the files.

            The facts Slemen brings up are GAME CHANGING, and the only reason they aren't considered is because they haven't been verified and I can't myself tell if they are true or fictional. If I can actually verify facts such as that a home was burgled with an IDENTICAL crime scene while the Johnstons were housesitting for a neighbor, etc. then obviously, you have to admit that would be a major breakthrough in this case... Of course, William could have staged the scene identically to try and frame the same burglar. But obviously it would be pretty major. There are actually a lot of facts he mentions which would be game changing if verified as fact in the police files.

            Comment


            • I'm sorry maybe I'm a lunatic but does nobody see the utter ABSURDITY of the events that unfold when William returns home? Let's see how it played out:

              1) Mr. and Mrs. Johnston have just gotten ready to pay a random visit to a relative at quarter to 9 at night. They apparently were going to move in with her the next day anyway, and this move was planned and they already had stuff packed. They did not take ANYTHING with them to lighten the load the following day.

              2) Mrs. Johnston hears William "knocking in the usual way on his back door". William states he never returned by the back door at night. Yet Mrs. Johnston does not find it at all suspicious to hear knocking on the back door.

              3) Mr. and Mrs. Johnston leave by their back door and out the yard door. Nobody follows them to bolt the yard door behind them. They are leaving the home happy to have their yard unsecured.

              4) William comes walking back around and Mr. and Mrs. Johnston are there. As you know he claims both doors are fastened against him. He goes to the door with the Johnstons and this time it opens easily. Note: Mr. Johnston claimed in another statement that Wallace had to force the door open, but in court said the door opened easily in the usual way. Also note Mr. Johnston offered to try his own key - meaning they knew that his own key would also unlock that door.

              5) They wait outside while Wallace checks around the home. Mr. Johnston isn't bothered about any potential danger since he does not follow William in just in case there's something wrong.

              6) Wallace comes out of the house hurrying, exclaiming "come see, she's been killed!" He is apparently certain his wife is dead. A more expected response would be rushing out like "Julia has been killed! Someone please get the police!" or even requesting an ambulance to be honest - I get it was relatively obvious she was dead, but in a panicked state a doting husband MAY in desperation hope she can be saved.

              7) The Johnstons follow William into the home and into the parlor. Mrs. Johnston's reaction to her brutally battered neighbor is: "oh you poor darling." A bit mild you might think? and then asking if a matchbox she saw belonged to Julia. WHO CARES who the matchbox belonged to, her brains are all over the floor, GET THE EMERGENCY SERVICES.

              8) At this point now things get more bizarre and we start entering "wtf territory". Because at this point it is absurd even for the Johnstons to not be like "oh, God! I'll go for the police, Florence you stay here!" or whatever.

              9) While Julia is lying in the parlor with her f-in brains splattered all over the place, Wallace and the Johnstons' concern now becomes to investigate the burglary. Again, this is clearly bizarre.

              10) William and the John go into the kitchen, Wallace states a cabinet door is wrenched off, and takes down a cash box. John asks if anything has been taken, and William says money has been stolen. He also actually bothers to take the time to check HOW MUCH is missing. When his wife is battered to death in the next room.

              11) Mr. Johnston asks that William goes upstairs to check again to see if anything else has been stolen. As opposed to going to the police. What are you doing Mr. Johnston?! A woman is DEAD. You've already seen him check all around upstairs from outside!

              EVEN WORSE! The fact you went for a doctor first means you thought she could be saved, so WTF are you doing dawdling wasting time instead of going for the doctor ASAP?!


              12) Mr. Johnston goes off and first goes to some doctors office or something and is told he needs to go to the police or whatever. He also randomly encounters one of his daughter's boyfriends very close to the home, who was on his way over to visit.

              13) Mrs. Johnston decides to light the fire in the kitchen just because she didn't know what else to do. Weak point: But there is evidence burning was attempted, raising the potential that the fire in the kitchen was used to incinerate certain things.

              ---

              I think it's important to take note of the fact that there is a LOT of contradiction about when exactly the mackintosh was found.

              When shown a photo of the crime scene in court, Mr. Johnston said there was no mackintosh present when he was in the house. I believe the mackintosh was NOT seen by William when he first entered the room. I believe it was discovered AFTER Mr. Johnston had left for the police. Take note also of Florence's statement: "I did not notice a mackintosh until Mr. Wallace drew my attention to it later."

              Let me point out more, take this extract from Florence:

              "He came round the body, and said, Whatever was
              she doing with her mackintosh and my mackintosh ? ” —
              Yes.

              When it was shown to you, and you saw it was a mack-
              intosh, did you remember if you had seen it there when
              you first went in ? — ^Well, it appeared to be something
              roughed up, you know ; I did not know really what it
              was. It was almost hidden under the body, you see.

              And he stooped down, and said, “ It is mine ” ? — ^Yes."


              William gave the same statement to Hector Munro (that he had said "her mackintosh and my mackintosh").

              Based on John claiming there was no mackintosh there, I think that this discovery happened AFTER John had already gone for the police, so if it was discovered quite late, it would be risky/too late for Florence and William to make too much of an attempt to get rid of it since police could arrive at any moment. Other flammable evidence I believe was incinerated completely in one of the fireplaces.

              CRUCIALLY he identified it as his mackintosh to two officers. One time he hesitated a lot, the other he said "it is an old one of mine". It is CRUCIAL to know WHICH of these happened first, because in my view if the hesitated reaction came first, I don't think Wallace EVER saw the mackintosh until the police found it, and that Florence was covering for him and lying that he'd pointed it out.

              Florence is also the only one to have said that William had broken down sobbing. She said nobody else was present, she was the sole witness to this sobbing. To everyone else he appeared cold and calculated at all times.

              William and Florence also mixed up who said "whatever have they used?" BOTH claimed in court that it was THEMSELVES who uttered this phrase:

              Florence:

              What did Mr. Wallace do then ? — Mr. Wallace stooped
              over Mrs. Wallace, and he said, They have finished
              her ; look at the brains ; and I said, “ Whatever have
              they used ? ’’ glancing round the room.

              William:

              And yet you glance round the room, and you say,
              ‘‘ Whatever have they used ? ” — Quite naturally.

              ---

              Please also take note of this, in the timeline:

              4.30pm. Amy Wallace leaves 29 Wolverton Street bidding Julia goodbye as she heads for home.

              4.30pm. Julia then chats to neighbour Florence Johnston in her backyard then pays window cleaner Charles Bliss.
              Did Florence hear/know of Amy's arrival, did she confirm this? Did Charlie Bliss see Amy? This should be checked obviously.

              ---

              I believe William was involved in the murder of his wife, but just for the sake of integrity I want to point out that if you think William is innocent, it is often speculated "how could the person be sure that William was going on that trip to Menlove Gardens?"... Well at least one person knows for sure (Amy claims Julia allegedly told her that William was going to the "Calderstone's district"). And it is also possible Florence could have extracted this information when she spoke to Julia that day.

              ---

              I think that Gordon Parry rang the Chess Club that night, and William and the Johnstons were involved in the murder or cover-up of the murder. Gordon Parry was an intended scapegoat. This is what I am thinking at the moment. Please actually consider what I have said instead of dismissing it automatically.
              Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 07-12-2019, 05:39 AM.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post

                I don’t just automatically dismiss things WWH. I do try and look at both sides and I fully accept that I could be wrong. One of the things that I regularly argue against when discussing The Whitechapel Murders is conspiracy theorist thinking. Now I’m not accusing you of that WWH but what can occur is that we can invest something or someone with a mystery where it might be most likely that none exist. Coincidences occur. People do and say strange things under difficult circumstances which might lead us to suspicion. So I’m hyper-wary of this.

                1) Mr. and Mrs. Johnston have just gotten ready to pay a random visit to a relative at quarter to 9 at night. They apparently were going to move in with her the next day anyway, and this move was planned and they already had stuff packed. They did not take ANYTHING with them to lighten the load the following day.


                We just can’t know the reason for this visit. Last minute arrangements and planning? Who knows? This day and age a phone call would probably have sufficed

                .
                2) Mrs. Johnston hears William "knocking in the usual way on his back door". William states he never returned by the back door at night. Yet Mrs. Johnston does not find it at all suspicious to hear knocking on the back door.


                If she heard knocking at the back door it was hardly likely to have been anyone else but William. Family and other visitors would use the front door of course. I don’t really see why it would seem particularly suspicious just because he usually used the front door after all she couldn’t have known if William occasionally used the back door but she just never heard him before. Perhaps this time William had forgotten his key whereas he usually let himself in?

                3) Mr. and Mrs. Johnston leave by their back door and out the yard door. Nobody follows them to bolt the yard door behind them. They are leaving the home happy to have their yard unsecured.


                I don’t really see anything sinister in that. Couldn’t they simply have locked the gate from the outside using a key?

                4) William comes walking back around and Mr. and Mrs. Johnston are there. As you know he claims both doors are fastened against him. He goes to the door with the Johnstons and this time it opens easily. Note: Mr. Johnston claimed in another statement that Wallace had to force the door open, but in court said the door opened easily in the usual way. Also note Mr. Johnston offered to try his own key - meaning they knew that his own key would also unlock that door.


                When someone is having difficulty opening a door with a key they often try different positions and angles. If William tried the key standing perhaps it gave Johnston the impression that he had his shoulder to the door?

                Offering to try his own key doesn’t mean that he knew that his key would fit. It just means that he’d be willing to try it. They would have had nothing to lose by trying.

                5) They wait outside while Wallace checks around the home. Mr. Johnston isn't bothered about any potential danger since he does not follow William in just in case there's something wrong


                Ive raised this point myself but from Wallace’s viewpoint. Why didn’t Wallace ask Johnston to accompany him inside? After all, it has been shown that he was under the impression that there might have been someone inside. Did Wallace just want a last look around, on his own, to make sure that he hadn’t made any errors?

                6) Wallace comes out of the house hurrying, exclaiming "come see, she's been killed!" He is apparently certain his wife is dead. A more expected response would be rushing out like "Julia has been killed! Someone please get the police!" or even requesting an ambulance to be honest - I get it was relatively obvious she was dead, but in a panicked state a doting husband MAY in desperation hope she can be saved.


                I take your point WWH but this applies to a guilty Wallace.

                .
                7) The Johnstons follow William into the home and into the parlor. Mrs. Johnston's reaction to her brutally battered neighbor is: "oh you poor darling." A bit mild you might think? and then asking if a matchbox she saw belonged to Julia. WHO CARES who the matchbox belonged to, her brains are all over the floor, GET THE EMERGENCY SERVICES.


                Yes but as I said earlier, under abnormal circumstances people don’t always act rationally or as we would have done with hindsight.


                9) While Julia is lying in the parlor with her f-in brains splattered all over the place, Wallace and the Johnstons' concern now becomes to investigate the burglary. Again, this is clearly bizarre.


                It does seem strange to us. But again, abnormal circumstances....

                In those circumstances some people just act like a lunatic or some go into shock and barely talk.

                10) William and the John go into the kitchen, Wallace states a cabinet door is wrenched off, and takes down a cash box. John asks if anything has been taken, and William says money has been stolen. He also actually bothers to take the time to check HOW MUCH is missing. When his wife is battered to death in the next room.


                This is another pointer to strange behaviour by Wallace. A man I believe to have been guilty.

                11) Mr. Johnston asks that William goes upstairs to check again to see if anything else has been stolen. As opposed to going to the police. What are you doing Mr. Johnston?! A woman is DEAD. You've already seen him check all around upstairs from outside!


                True. This is strange behaviour.

                EVEN WORSE! The fact you went for a doctor first means you thought she could be saved, so WTF are you doing dawdling wasting time instead of going for the doctor ASAP?!


                Again, I agree.

                12) Mr. Johnston goes off and first goes to some doctors office or something and is told he needs to go to the police or whatever. He also randomly encounters one of his daughter's boyfriends very close to the home, who was on his way over to visit.


                I don’t think that we can read anything into a chance meeting.

                13) Mrs. Johnston decides to light the fire in the kitchen just because she didn't know what else to do. Weak point: But there is evidence burning was attempted, raising the potential that the fire in the kitchen was used to incinerate certain things.


                I don’t think that there was evidence of burning and I don’t think that Wallace would have been stupid enough to have tried any last minute disposal.

                Based on John claiming there was no mackintosh there, I think that this discovery happened AFTER John had already gone for the police, so if it was discovered quite late, it would be risky/too late for Florence and William to make too much of an attempt to get rid of it since police could arrive at any moment. Other flammable evidence I believe was incinerated completely in one of the fireplaces.

                CRUCIALLY he identified it as his mackintosh to two officers. One time he hesitated a lot, the other he said "it is an old one of mine". It is CRUCIAL to know WHICH of these happened first, because in my view if the hesitated reaction came first, I don't think Wallace EVER saw the mackintosh until the police found it, and that Florence was covering for him and lying that he'd pointed it out.


                I don’t think that we can claim that Johnston said that the mackintosh wasn’t there, only that he hadn’t noticed it. I’d be interested to hear you expand on this WWH as I’m not quite getting the significance of your point.

                I think it's important to take note of the fact that there is a LOT of contradiction about when exactly the mackintosh was found.

                When shown a photo of the crime scene in court, Mr. Johnston said there was no mackintosh present when he was in the house. I believe the mackintosh was NOT seen by William when he first entered the room. I believe it was discovered AFTER Mr. Johnston had left for the police. Take note also of Florence's statement: "I did not notice a mackintosh until Mr. Wallace drew my attention to it later."


                Ditto my comment above.


                Florence is also the only one to have said that William had broken down sobbing. She said nobody else was present, she was the sole witness to this sobbing. To everyone else he appeared cold and calculated at all times.
                True but thiscould be interpreted as a) William only breaking down in private, or b) a calculating William simply giving an impression to Mrs Johnston as evidence of his genuineness.

                .
                William and Florence also mixed up who said "whatever have they used?" BOTH claimed in court that it was THEMSELVES who uttered this phrase:

                Florence:

                What did Mr. Wallace do then ? — Mr. Wallace stooped
                over Mrs. Wallace, and he said, They have finished
                her ; look at the brains ; and I said, “ Whatever have
                they used ? ’’ glancing round the room.

                William:

                And yet you glance round the room, and you say,
                ‘‘ Whatever have they used ? ” — Quite naturally.


                The confusion of a difficult and stressful situation?

                Did Florence hear/know of Amy's arrival, did she confirm this? Did Charlie Bliss see Amy? This should be checked obviously.


                I don’t think that either of these things were checked at the time and there’s no way of checking them now.

                I believe William was involved in the murder of his wife, but just for the sake of integrity I want to point out that if you think William is innocent, it is often speculated "how could the person be sure that William was going on that trip to Menlove Gardens?"... Well at least one person knows for sure (Amy claims Julia allegedly told her that William was going to the "Calderstone's district"). And it is also possible Florence could have extracted this information when she spoke to Julia that day.


                Amy undoubtedly got that information from Julia but we have to stress that she said Calderstone’s district and not Menlove Gardens.

                One of my objections to the Accomplice theory is against the point that Julia would admitted Mr Qualtrough because she’d heard the name from William. Firstly, even if this was the case it’s still far from certain that she’d have let him in and secondly, as Julia took no interest in Williams business dealings, there’s no way that Parry the plotter could have expected William to have mentioned the name Qualtrough or even MGE. He might simply have said - I have to go out on business this evening dear.

                I think that Gordon Parry rang the Chess Club that night, and William and the Johnstons were involved in the murder or cover-up of the murder. Gordon Parry was an intended scapegoat. This is what I am thinking at the moment. Please actually consider what I have said instead of dismissing it automatically.




                If Wallace planned this murder with its phone call and MGE excursion, and the Johnston’s were a part of it, I find it scarcely believable that Wallace would have missed out on three very, very easy opportunities of massively helping his case and of improving his chances of getting away with it at no added risk to himself.

                One > Why didn’t he get the Johnston's to say that they’d heard Julia call out from the Parlour region at around 7.30? They wouldn’t have been expected to have acted upon it as they could have simply said - we just thought that she was calling out to William who was in another room or upstairs.

                Two > Why didn’t he get one of the Johnston’s to say - just before Mr Wallace got back I looked out of the bedroom window and saw someone run past our gate from the direction of the Wallace’s house.

                Three > Even better, why didn’t Wallace get the Johnston’s to say that they saw Julia seeing off William at the gate? Or that they saw Julia go into the yard for some reason after William had left. Then the police would have had Julia still alive after William had left. If they had done that then I don’t think that William would have been charged in the first place.
                Regards

                Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                  [/B]



                  If Wallace planned this murder with its phone call and MGE excursion, and the Johnston’s were a part of it, I find it scarcely believable that Wallace would have missed out on three very, very easy opportunities of massively helping his case and of improving his chances of getting away with it at no added risk to himself.

                  One > Why didn’t he get the Johnston's to say that they’d heard Julia call out from the Parlour region at around 7.30? They wouldn’t have been expected to have acted upon it as they could have simply said - we just thought that she was calling out to William who was in another room or upstairs.

                  Two > Why didn’t he get one of the Johnston’s to say - just before Mr Wallace got back I looked out of the bedroom window and saw someone run past our gate from the direction of the Wallace’s house.

                  Three > Even better, why didn’t Wallace get the Johnston’s to say that they saw Julia seeing off William at the gate? Or that they saw Julia go into the yard for some reason after William had left. Then the police would have had Julia still alive after William had left. If they had done that then I don’t think that William would have been charged in the first place.[/COLOR]
                  In regards to the Whitecapel thing. I honestly just don't have any interest in following it all.

                  I would say that as a criminal profile, the fact he sent letters etc. shows that he wanted recognition for his work - and also perhaps that he enjoyed taunting the police to show he is more intelligent than they are. He reveled in being featured in the papers, so perhaps through his regular life he never received the attention he felt he deserved. Much like the Zodiac and Unabomber - both of whom were highly intelligent, I think Kaczynski had an IQ of over 160. The Zodiac got off on outsmarting the police, the Unabomber did too BUT the latter felt he was doing a service to mankind with his actions. Jack apparently only killed sex workers? Perhaps he felt they were a dredge to society, ruining marriages, that kind of thing (so perhaps one of Jack's own relationships was ruined in this way - or he discovered his partner worked as a hooker). They're also easy targets like homeless people as an alternative reason he might pick them... Furthermore IIRC several organs were missing in victims of the ripper? IIRC the organs which were taken were carefully removed and taken, which raises the question of whether the killer was eating his victim's organs rather than taking simple trophies. If that's true check:

                  Cutting up the meat is sexually exciting, according to cannibals. Feeling the flesh as it leaves the body brought many offenders to orgasm. They so enjoy the process of removing the meat from the skeleton. It makes them feel all powerful and capable of something very few people have ever done. Even most serial killers do not eat their victims. So the cannibal is in the class by himself. And he knows it. This produces a euphoric state which activates the pleasure center in the brain. Each cut brings more good feeling. So it is common to find many smaller cuts on the body. The process is that exciting.

                  For someone who is isolated and resentful, it fills a void. Most cannibals are extreme loners. They do not have friends, and they are bitter about it. Killing and eating a victim ensures that the offender is never alone. He ‘has' the victims with him at all times. They can never leave. This helps the cannibal retain a sense of control over his life. To himself, he has demonstrated mastery over another human being. The victim is now part of him as a trophy. This is intoxicating and drives him to do it again.
                  I would need to know all the similarities between the crime scenes to come to more conlucsions or contradict the ones I made above.

                  There's one Ripper theory involving the killing of the last woman that apparently implicates the man she was with as a lover. However, I don't know if anyone has ever considered that perhaps a highly intelligent murderer with the same motive to off his lover would kill her in the middle of the pack, rather than last, to help distract from himself? Also as for surgical knowledge, there are others with this type of skill - game hunters, butchers, gangsters (who dismember bodies), and soldiers who have been through survival training.

                  ---

                  Anyway, back to this case because this is the one I do follow and care about... I'll address your points in order:

                  1) The visit in my view is peculiar and highly coincidental. They were moving in with her the following day anyway? Allegedly... I have a possible answer you might like. Julia was seen talking to Florence at 4:30 PM. Florence may well have told Julia she and John were going out at a particular time to visit their relative. William could have used this knowledge to plan the timing of his return, had he acted alone.

                  2) William had a key for both doors. He had no reason to knock unless as you said he'd forgotten his key. Knocking on the back door, they've lived as neighbors for many years, to the point I feel they MAY have been too familiar with his routine to not wonder what's going on. But you may be correct.

                  3) I don't think so. Not unless they had a completely different gate to William, since William states his wife always had to follow him down the yard to secure the gate when he left.

                  4) Not really because it was very well known on the street that peoples' keys fit other doors. Remember a drunk Mr. Cadwallader (sp?) wandered into the Wallace's bedroom drunk, causing her to scream, since his own key had unlocked their house door.

                  5) Actually - I think you'll find the Johnstons TOLD HIM to go in alone while they waited outside. I don't put much stock into it hence why I didn't make a bolded statement. But it was them who sent him in alone as I recall.

                  6) Correct - I think he's guilty.

                  7 & 8) I don't like this as an excuse: "Yes but as I said earlier, under abnormal circumstances people don’t always act rationally or as we would have done with hindsight."... It's like Parry's alibi. Who would forget that two days earlier they had barged in on their girlfriend's music lesson? It seems like a stretch. I think it has to be admitted that in BOTH cases the behavior is unexpected... Parry's faked alibi should not be dismissed, the weird behavior of the Johnstons should not be dismissed.

                  9) Yes, as you know I believe him guilty. But you see you could use that same excuse about people acting irrationally in these situations. This is why I don't like that excuse. ALL of these things are unnatural and NONE should be dismissed.

                  10 & 11) In agreement it seems.

                  12) I agree, hence I didn't add a bolded statement. I believe it really could have been chance. But it is a coincidence and should be pointed out.

                  13) There is potential evidence that burning was attempted. You say Julia fell into the fire and caught alight. Okay. This is also a possibility. But the other possibility is that fire was used to incinierate incriminating items. Just as a random example, say he used some sort of cloth covering over the murder weapon to prevent blood getting upon it. That would be inciniterated with ease. It has to be considered that it was purposeful... IF the Johnstons are involved, then Wallace has time to attempt last minute disposal of items in fire, because Mr. Johnston has not yet gone to the police - hence no police are coming yet - he has as much time as he wants until Mr. Johnston leaves.

                  My friend made another very good suggestion, and it's that Julia caught alight and in a panic he threw the mackintosh onto her in order to put out the flames and wrapped her in it. If she had been burned there may have been smoke or a fire starting.

                  14) The significance of my point, is that IF Wallace didn't notice the mackintosh was there until AFTER Mr. Johnston had left for the police, they no longer have time to do much about it. It may well have been a mistake, it might not have meant to have been there. If it was a mistake, AND the Johnstons are involved, then whether or not it was first discovered before or after Mr. Johnston went for the police is important.

                  It is also CRUCIAL to know whether his hestiation when police officers picked up the mack happened before or AFTER telling the other officer it's "an old one of mine".

                  15) Why would a guilty William ONLY break down in front of Florence? If he was capable of sobbing and guilty, why did he stay so cold and calculating in front of officers. His cold demanor is one of the reasons people found him so suspicious. It would have served him FAR better had he shown emotion with officers etc. present.

                  16) No, no way. It sounds like the line was rehearsed and they mixed up who was meant to have said it. You would NOT forget the words that came out of your own mouth and what came out of someone elses. This must be acknowoledged as bizarre and any explanations for it are weak.

                  17) The use of the term "Calderstone's district" is a possible slip because William, on his trip, claimed to be a "total stranger in this district", yet we know he knew he had to go to the Calderstone's area, an area he was very familiar with.

                  ---

                  Further to your points, the Johnstons claimed to have heard a loud thump at around... 8 or 8.15 or something? Might even have been 8.30. The initial thing they were going for is that the killer was still in the home when Wallace got back, and supposedly fled from the scene. The Johnstons prefaced it that they thought it was "Arthur taking off his boots". Arthur, of course, was in the room directly adjacent to the Wallace's parlor.

                  I would also like you to consider how the other things cast suspicion on themelves. First, this is terraced housing. If they claim to have heard Julia call out, while the neighbors on the other side heard nothing, that's not good. They can get away with it sure, but if Julia called out loudly then you'd think the Holme family would hear that too... They could have said Arthur heard a brief conversation at a certain time. But forensics could have done him over on that with rectal temperature.

                  If you introduce a sighting of a person - they could have done that - but it might cause issues if anyone else was outside or in the area the apparent person ran to (e.g. Richmond Park) if the story doesn't match up with testimony of others who were about at that time. They'd also be asked for a description of the person, which might get iffy or cause problems if they're made to do sketches or whatever. They could say they just saw the back of a person. But still it introuces potential risk factors.

                  They probably could have done the third and gotten away with it. Unless the forensics actually did a good job and used rectal temperature to disprove she could've been alive at a specific time. They COULD have said they saw him see him off at the gate or saw Julia return after Wallace was gone. As long as they're sure nobody else could deny it.

                  But the gate thing was a later amendment. Remember the first initial statement was that Julia had followed him down the entry. As per the police officer's suspicion, I think he may have been angling at the idea that someone had slipped in the back while Julia walked down the entry with him. I don't know why he went back on this.
                  Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 07-12-2019, 10:44 PM.

                  Comment


                  • Btw my friend and myself went through this together on a call. All of it.

                    RE: Your third point about them seeing Julia leave, my friend says that would be a bad idea because it would cast suspicion on themselves.

                    It might seem like they were casing the joint if they were there to see her leave and there for him to come home. It's a bit sus. I didn't myself see that point.

                    My friend as you know has changed his mind and now thinks Gordon was made to call under a false pretext. He also said somethjng I didn't know which waz that apparently Parry used the word cafè and so did the caller, and that William said it the usual way: cafe.

                    I personally use cafè by the way lol. I mean it's the correct version. But the operators made fun of it.

                    My friend also suggested Parry may have been drunk as there was a popular drinking pub nesrby. He thinks this may be why he fudged the call and barged in weirdly on Lily. I had never considered that. I didn't know there was a pub there.

                    Another interesting point I considered is William's encounter with Beattie. He pretended he was exonerated, to get Beattie to talk to him openly, and pressed hard for accuracy on the timing of the call. Neither in court nor to police would he reveal why he did this... My suggestion: The call was made by Parry TOO EARLY and was meant to come at 7.30, which would exonerate William as the caller. I think this is the reason he tried to get Beattie to change his mind on the timing. I think William DID NOT KNOW the call was placed when it was and thiught it should have come later than it did.
                    Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 07-13-2019, 06:50 AM.

                    Comment



                    • 1) The visit in my view is peculiar and highly coincidental. They were moving in with her the following day anyway? Allegedly... I have a possible answer you might like. Julia was seen talking to Florence at 4:30 PM. Florence may well have told Julia she and John were going out at a particular time to visit their relative. William could have used this knowledge to plan the timing of his return, had he acted alone.
                      Good point. This might provide an explanation for why he went front door, back door, front door, back door. Was he waiting for the Johnston’s to appear?
                      2) William had a key for both doors. He had no reason to knock unless as you said he'd forgotten his key. Knocking on the back door, they've lived as neighbors for many years, to the point I feel they MAY have been too familiar with his routine to not wonder what's going on. But you may be correct.

                      3) I don't think so. Not unless they had a completely different gate to William, since William states his wife always had to follow him down the yard to secure the gate when he left.
                      I take your point but I can’t see anything sinister in this. The Wallace’s were in the habit of locking their back gate but perhaps the Johnston’s weren’t?
                      4) Not really because it was very well known on the street that peoples' keys fit other doors. Remember a drunk Mr. Cadwallader (sp?) wandered into the Wallace's bedroom drunk, causing her to scream, since his own key had unlocked their house door.
                      Fair point.
                      5) Actually - I think you'll find the Johnstons TOLD HIM to go in alone while they waited outside. I don't put much stock into it hence why I didn't make a bolded statement. But it was them who sent him in alone as I recall.
                      It’s been shown that Wallace either felt that there might have been someone inside the house or was trying to give that impression. I think it a valid, though not conclusive, question to ask why he didn’t ask Johnston to accompany him inside? Wallace was hardly Chuck Norris.
                      6) Correct - I think he's guilty.

                      7 & 8) I don't like this as an excuse: "Yes but as I said earlier, under abnormal circumstances people don’t always act rationally or as we would have done with hindsight."... It's like Parry's alibi. Who would forget that two days earlier they had barged in on their girlfriend's music lesson? It seems like a stretch. I think it has to be admitted that in BOTH cases the behavior is unexpected... Parry's faked alibi should not be dismissed, the weird behavior of the Johnstons should not be dismissed.
                      Yet some are quite happy to put it down to the stress of the situation that Parry blabbed to Parkes. I’d say that Parry’s alibi for the murder is rock solid.
                      9) Yes, as you know I believe him guilty. But you see you could use that same excuse about people acting irrationally in these situations. This is why I don't like that excuse. ALL of these things are unnatural and NONE should be dismissed.
                      I agree that we can’t simply use the stress of the situation as an explanation for everything but of course we should remember and accept that these factors can have an effect.
                      I know that you disagree WWH but I genuinely find it weird that Parry (who wasn’t an idiot) would give such an obviously, childishly disprovable alibi to the police. Under no stretch of the imagination could he have remotely expected to have gotten away with it. And again, if he was a part of a plan, why was no thought given to creating some semblance of a remotely believable alibi?

                      10 & 11) In agreement it seems.

                      12) I agree, hence I didn't add a bolded statement. I believe it really could have been chance. But it is a coincidence and should be pointed out.
                      Agreed.
                      13) There is potential evidence that burning was attempted. You say Julia fell into the fire and caught alight. Okay. This is also a possibility. But the other possibility is that fire was used to incinierate incriminating items. Just as a random example, say he used some sort of cloth covering over the murder weapon to prevent blood getting upon it. That would be inciniterated with ease. It has to be considered that it was purposeful... IF the Johnstons are involved, then Wallace has time to attempt last minute disposal of items in fire, because Mr. Johnston has not yet gone to the police - hence no police are coming yet - he has as much time as he wants until Mr. Johnston leaves.
                      Not impossible.
                      My friend made another very good suggestion, and it's that Julia caught alight and in a panic he threw the mackintosh onto her in order to put out the flames and wrapped her in it. If she had been burned there may have been smoke or a fire starting.
                      A possibility.
                      14) The significance of my point, is that IF Wallace didn't notice the mackintosh was there until AFTER Mr. Johnston had left for the police, they no longer have time to do much about it. It may well have been a mistake, it might not have meant to have been there. If it was a mistake, AND the Johnstons are involved, then whether or not it was first discovered before or after Mr. Johnston went for the police is important.
                      For me the most important question is why it should be there in the first place? That the killer (Wallace) used it is the only satisfactory solution for me,
                      It is also CRUCIAL to know whether his hestiation when police officers picked up the mack happened before or AFTER telling the other officer it's "an old one of mine".

                      15) Why would a guilty William ONLY break down in front of Florence? If he was capable of sobbing and guilty, why did he stay so cold and calculating in front of officers. His cold demanor is one of the reasons people found him so suspicious. It would have served him FAR better had he shown emotion with officers etc. present.
                      Good point.
                      16) No, no way. It sounds like the line was rehearsed and they mixed up who was meant to have said it. You would NOT forget the words that came out of your own mouth and what came out of someone elses. This must be acknowoledged as bizarre and any explanations for it are weak.
                      I have no books with me at the moment but the quote that you say is William goes - And yet you glance around the room and you say whatever have they used? To which the reply is - Quite naturally. This sounds like the police questioning what William was doing or thinking. If this was after they had spoken to Florence who had said - whatever have they used? To me this is the police asking why they were interested in what weapon was used with Wallace saying that it was quite natural to wonder about it.

                      17) The use of the term "Calderstone's district" is a possible slip because William, on his trip, claimed to be a "total stranger in this district", yet we know he knew he had to go to the Calderstone's area, an area he was very familiar with.
                      How a slip?
                      ---

                      Further to your points, the Johnstons claimed to have heard a loud thump at around... 8 or 8.15 or something? Might even have been 8.30. The initial thing they were going for is that the killer was still in the home when Wallace got back, and supposedly fled from the scene. The Johnstons prefaced it that they thought it was "Arthur taking off his boots". Arthur, of course, was in the room directly adjacent to the Wallace's parlor.

                      I would also like you to consider how the other things cast suspicion on themelves. First, this is terraced housing. If they claim to have heard Julia call out, while the neighbors on the other side heard nothing, that's not good. They can get away with it sure, but if Julia called out loudly then you'd think the Holme family would hear that too... They could have said Arthur heard a brief conversation at a certain time. But forensics could have done him over on that with rectal temperature.
                      I don’t think that it would have mattered had the Holmes not heard anything. The Johnston’s weren’t suspected. Sometime someone can hear something that another doesn’t hear. I’d say that saying that they’d heard Julia call out would have been risk free.
                      If you introduce a sighting of a person - they could have done that - but it might cause issues if anyone else was outside or in the area the apparent person ran to (e.g. Richmond Park) if the story doesn't match up with testimony of others who were about at that time. They'd also be asked for a description of the person, which might get iffy or cause problems if they're made to do sketches or whatever. They could say they just saw the back of a person. But still it introuces potential risk factors.
                      I don’t see a risk WWH. They could have been slight vague on the time and said that it could have been twenty past or half past and that they weren’t sure. So anyone in the alley wouldn’t have been an issue unless they were unlucky enough to have had someone in the alley for twenty minutes in which case the Johnston’s would have appeared mistaken at worst.
                      They probably could have done the third and gotten away with it. Unless the forensics actually did a good job and used rectal temperature to disprove she could've been alive at a specific time. They COULD have said they saw him see him off at the gate or saw Julia return after Wallace was gone. As long as they're sure nobody else could deny it.
                      I don’t see how Wallace as a planner, with the Johnston’s on his team, could have missed this very obvious opportunity to have put himself in the clear.
                      But the gate thing was a later amendment. Remember the first initial statement was that Julia had followed him down the entry. As per the police officer's suspicion, I think he may have been angling at the idea that someone had slipped in the back while Julia walked down the entry with him. I don't know why he went back on this.
                      Regards

                      Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                      “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                      Comment


                      • 5) Well he was specifically told to go in alone while they waited. Of course he knew there was nobody in the house anyway in my view. And if the Johnstons were in on it they of course knew too.

                        Important to point out - if they're working together ALL events from his return to when the police arrive can't be fully trusted.

                        7/8/9) First of all I don't think Parry knew necessarily that he would even need an alibi. So many reasons can be thought of as to how he may have been tricked into calling.

                        In any case ask yourself with complete honesty: Would you forget that two days earlier you'd barged in on your girlfriend's music lesson? It's not an easy mistake to make.

                        So if we're being honest we have to actually consider every odd action and not just dismiss them quickly by saying, like, oh she was stressed, oh he forgot what he did that day.

                        As for Parkes there's very little chance his story is true. Nobody would randomly volunteer where they dropped a murder weapon etc.

                        14) I tend to think he didn't use it. My friend's suggestion of dousing out flames is good. But to use his OWN jacket as splatter protection and leave it with the body was tantamount to suicide. I tend to believe he didn't necessarily know it was there until John had gone for the police or even later after they arrived... It may well have been used in a panic to put out flames as my friend said.

                        You see how damning it is: You yourself say the mack being there makes you think Wallace HAD to have put it there. It's a huge and terrible blunder. Maybe he thought he could burn it entirely. I'm not sure.

                        16) It's in the trial. They question Wallace on why HE said that phrase. But earlier Flo claims she said it.

                        17) Maybe it's not, but William was acting lost and clueless saying he's a complete stranger in this district. We know that line is a lie since he knew the district well

                        ---

                        The three points you made are good. My friend doesn't like the third because it points police in their direction... They weren't suspected but if William was exonerated entirely like that, I'm quite sure they'd be major suspects. It would seem odd they saw William go and return. Like for real. I hadn't thought of that so I was initially on your side with that. But I think he makes a good point.

                        Remember even locals were suspicious of the Johnstons. They were hsrdly a pair the police wouldn't ever consider suspects. But they had William as suspect #1 and were even corrupt forcing the milk boy to change his timing etc.

                        They could have got awsy with hearing her call out. But I want you to remember the VERY FIRST scenario William was trying to paint: 1. A killer was POSSIBLY.still in his house when he got home and 2. Julia walked down the entry with him allowing someone to slip in the back.

                        He went back on the second. I do not know why since it was very good for his defence???? Maybe because that really IS what happened: e.g. William takes her down the entry, killer slips in, William tells her to go set up the fireplace for a guest he's going to meet and bring back... I'm not sure why else he would have changed the story here unless he forgot what he'd said... There's a reason, IMO, he wanted to make it seem that Julia had bolted the back yard door and I think it's because someone went in that way for real, and he didn't want police investigating that possibility.

                        And for the first, if they hear Julia call out, it has to be at a time NEAR when William returns (hence the thuds they say they heard at half 8 or w.e.) since remember they're angling for the killer still being in there. To actually hear her speak, they could have been done over by forensic rectal temperature. I think they were smart to say they heard thuds but assumed it was Arthur. Backing up that someone was still in the house, yet giving themselves plausible deniability. If they'd gone too far (like saying they heard a man talk, Julia call out) forensics could have had them arrested easily.

                        About sighting a man running I am not sure. They could have done this but it is potentially risky. But they could have. And I'd like to see what my friend thinks of this.

                        ---

                        Btw my friend brought up another point. That two people were in the house. Ao for example William tells Julia it's been a long day (whatever) he's not going to the meeting because he found out the address is fake (whatever) and so let's have some music... So Julia sets up the parlor. The killer has already been let in the back. As she goes down to the fireplace he comes in and does her in. William.lwaves swiftly.

                        It's like saying "why didn't William say he heard noise in the house on his first visit to the back door, or why he didn't say he saw a atranger run up the entry or Richmond Park on his return.

                        I like my friends idea of the mack being used to put out a fire. It well could have happened. After all burning and smoke could alert neighbors.

                        ---

                        But for me and my friend it's the first part we are more sure of, that William.went up that direction, and the two branched off. The caller maybe rings too early hence William's questioning of Beattie. But we really think odds are high Parry was in that box.

                        I also think the mounting evidence regarding the strange Johnston behavior, lies, slips in courf, should have anyone serious about the case considering them suspects.

                        My friend also raised the point that they could have used the whole "investing the burglary" thing to account for time they spent cleaning the scene etc. And POSSIBLY incineratimg vital evidence.
                        Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 07-13-2019, 02:17 PM.

                        Comment


                        • I also want to make a note od how weirdly silent the entire discovery was. Nobody yelled out. Nobody did anything that could have alerted neighbors.

                          Remember it's a street full of people. If John and Flo wanted to stay put they could easily go wack on neighbor's doors and say what's happened and to for emergency services. They could have got their own family to do it.

                          But it's almost like they didn't want to raise the alarm until they were sure the crime scene was just right, bloody marks wiped off handles. Whatever else. They purposefully wanted to wait until the scene was right before the police arrival.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post
                            5) Well he was specifically told to go in alone while they waited. Of course he knew there was nobody in the house anyway in my view. And if the Johnstons were in on it they of course knew too.

                            Important to point out - if they're working together ALL events from his return to when the police arrive can't be fully trusted.
                            Then I’d have to ask why the play acting with the door? Either a) the backdoor was stuck and he couldn’t get in first time (and remember this would have been the first time that this had ever occurred) or b) he was pretending that there was someone still in the house. But if the Johnston’s were in on it then pretending that there was someone in the house wasn’t a part of the plan
                            7/8/9) First of all I don't think Parry knew necessarily that he would even need an alibi. So many reasons can be thought of as to how he may have been tricked into calling.
                            This is one point that, at least at the moment, I just can’t get past. I don’t think Wallace would have taken the massive risk of involving Parry (especially against his will)
                            In any case ask yourself with complete honesty: Would you forget that two days earlier you'd barged in on your girlfriend's music lesson? It's not an easy mistake to make.
                            Honestly, yes. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve sworn blind that something happened on a Thursday for example when it had happened on a Friday. Again 2 opinions. a) an innocent Parry, not believing that he needed an alibi gets something wrong or b) a guilty Parry, a man who is being implicated in a capitol crime, gives the world’s worst alibi. One that a reasonably competent toddler could have disproven. He easily had time to visit his girlfriend and ask her to cover for him but he doesn’t do that. Can we believe that Parry would have simply hoped that the police would have neglected to have checked his alibi?
                            So if we're being honest we have to actually consider every odd action and not just dismiss them quickly by saying, like, oh she was stressed, oh he forgot what he did that day.
                            Im balancing point a) against point b) For me point b) is the unlikeliest of the two.
                            As for Parkes there's very little chance his story is true. Nobody would randomly volunteer where they dropped a murder weapon etc.

                            14) I tend to think he didn't use it. My friend's suggestion of dousing out flames is good. But to use his OWN jacket as splatter protection and leave it with the body was tantamount to suicide. I tend to believe he didn't necessarily know it was there until John had gone for the police or even later after they arrived... It may well have been used in a panic to put out flames as my friend said.
                            The fact that there was no blood outside of the Parlour is heavily in favour of a guilty Wallace. Wallace had to clean up so that he could continue with the plan. Lights were turned out, doors were closed and locked and yet not a smidgeon of blood. This points to a level of caution that only Wallace would have needed to have taken.
                            You see how damning it is: You yourself say the mack being there makes you think Wallace HAD to have put it there. It's a huge and terrible blunder. Maybe he thought he could burn it entirely. I'm not sure.
                            The question was - what was Julia doing with the macintosh. So the implication was that she was just carrying it. I don’t see how it points to Wallace. I can think of no explanation as to how the Macintosh became bunched up underneath Julia. I’ve heard no one come up with a remotely plausible alternative. All the appearances are that this was put there deliberately. What reason and by whom? It can only have been William. And the only reason that I can give is that he used it to protect himself from blood and so he thought that by bunching it up beneath Julia the spatter would be smeared so as to not resemble spatter and it might also have got contaminated by the blood from Julia’s wounds.

                            And remember - who was it that suggested that the killer might have used the mackintosh as a shield?

                            16) It's in the trial. They question Wallace on why HE said that phrase. But earlier Flo claims she said it.
                            Ok
                            17) Maybe it's not, but William was acting lost and clueless saying he's a complete stranger in this district. We know that line is a lie since he knew the district well
                            It might be taking it a little far to say that he knew the area well but it appears that he was more familiar with it than he let on.
                            ---

                            The three points you made are good. My friend doesn't like the third because it points police in their direction... They weren't suspected but if William was exonerated entirely like that, I'm quite sure they'd be major suspects. It would seem odd they saw William go and return. Like for real. I hadn't thought of that so I was initially on your side with that. But I think he makes a good point.
                            Tell him I’m disappointed. I thought point three was the strongest.
                            Remember even locals were suspicious of the Johnstons. They were hsrdly a pair the police wouldn't ever consider suspects. But they had William as suspect #1 and were even corrupt forcing the milk boy to change his timing etc.
                            We disagree there. I don’t think that they forced the milk boy to change his timings. The evidence of the Johnston’s and the Holme’s favour an earlier time too.
                            They could have got awsy with hearing her call out. But I want you to remember the VERY FIRST scenario William was trying to paint: 1. A killer was POSSIBLY.still in his house when he got home and 2. Julia walked down the entry with him allowing someone to slip in the back.
                            But the -allowing someone to slip in- only allows for Johnston. Wallace wasn’t trying to incriminate him. The cat! Why didn’t the Johnston’s say that they’d seen Julia in the backyard at say 7.45 and that she’d picked up the cat. If the Johnston’s were involved there were so many very simple ways of strengthening the case for William’s innocence.
                            He went back on the second. I do not know why since it was very good for his defence???? Maybe because that really IS what happened: e.g. William takes her down the entry, killer slips in, William tells her to go set up the fireplace for a guest he's going to meet and bring back... I'm not sure why else he would have changed the story here unless he forgot what he'd said... There's a reason, IMO, he wanted to make it seem that Julia had bolted the back yard door and I think it's because someone went in that way for real, and he didn't want police investigating that possibility.
                            A big issue that I have is that there was no need for all of this if the Johnston’s were involved. He could have gotten Julia into the Parlour, with it set up for a musical evening, the Johnston calls. He goes into the Parlour and.....
                            And for the first, if they hear Julia call out, it has to be at a time NEAR when William returns (hence the thuds they say they heard at half 8 or w.e.) since remember they're angling for the killer still being in there. To actually hear her speak, they could have been done over by forensic rectal temperature. I think they were smart to say they heard thuds but assumed it was Arthur. Backing up that someone was still in the house, yet giving themselves plausible deniability. If they'd gone too far (like saying they heard a man talk, Julia call out) forensics could have had them arrested easily.
                            They needn’t have mentioned thuds. They could have just said that they heard her call out. They could even have said that they thought that they’d heard someone at the front door. How could an intelligent William have missed all these very obvious possibilities to have used the Johnston’s to strengthen his alibi?
                            About sighting a man running I am not sure. They could have done this but it is potentially risky. But they could have. And I'd like to see what my friend thinks of this.
                            I can’t see it being too risky. The police might have said that they might have been mistaken at worst.

                            ---

                            Btw my friend brought up another point. That two people were in the house. Ao for example William tells Julia it's been a long day (whatever) he's not going to the meeting because he found out the address is fake (whatever) and so let's have some music... So Julia sets up the parlor. The killer has already been let in the back. As she goes down to the fireplace he comes in and does her in. William.lwaves swiftly.
                            This could have occurred but equally it could have occurred with Wallace as the killer.
                            It's like saying "why didn't William say he heard noise in the house on his first visit to the back door, or why he didn't say he saw a atranger run up the entry or Richmond Park on his return.
                            Good points but William was always going to be a suspect. Corroboration from a third party (the Johnston’s is always better.)
                            I like my friends idea of the mack being used to put out a fire. It well could have happened. After all burning and smoke could alert neighbors.
                            It could have but I still question how it ended up where it did. And also, if Julia’s skirt caught fire would he have really gone out into the hall to pick up a coat for the flames? Wouldn’t he have more likely used something within the room?
                            ---

                            But for me and my friend it's the first part we are more sure of, that William.went up that direction, and the two branched off. The caller maybe rings too early hence William's questioning of Beattie. But we really think odds are high Parry was in that box.
                            As I’ve said before WWH I certainly accept that the most difficult part of the Wallace-was-guilty viewpoint is the Monday night walk from house to tram. I have absolutely no doubt in my own mind that William could have made the call without Beattie recognising the voice. That’s no issue for me. But I agree the difficulty of Wallace being seen or recognised in an area that was considerably away from where he was supposed to have been.
                            I also think the mounting evidence regarding the strange Johnston behavior, lies, slips in courf, should have anyone serious about the case considering them suspects.
                            I can’t see it but I could be wrong of course.
                            My friend also raised the point that they could have used the whole "investing the burglary" thing to account for time they spent cleaning the scene etc. And POSSIBLY incineratimg vital evidence.
                            To be honest, if the Johnston’s were involved then they would have had time to clean up before William returned.
                            As you know I think that a major pointer to William’s guilt is that fact that, on his return, he avoided the Parlour to go upstairs. I still can’t dismiss this as others do. I think it’s significant but it wouldn’t have been significant if the Johnston’s were involved. If the Johnston’s were a part of the plan he’d have opened the Parlour door as soon as he emerged from the kitchen.
                            Regards

                            Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                            “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                            Comment


                            • Well, to address your replies:

                              5) No, if they were working together it doesn't really make a difference. We don't even know if he WAS play acting with the door for certain in that case (remember - IF the Jonstons are involved, you have to question EVERYTHING they claimed happened). Either way here IS what William was initially going for:

                              "William goes to the front door, knocks, no answer. He goes round to the back and finds it bolted against him. He goes back around to the front and at this point the person in the house escapes out the back door. He goes back around to the back door and this time it opens easily, since it's no longer bolted against him."

                              You might think that's stupid, but that is LITERALLY what he was going for if he was guilty. In court they made him admit that he'd had to give up that theory since it makes no sense.

                              7/8/9) Parry was involved without being forced to do it. I mean, blackmail is possible, but I see it far more likely there was just some false pretext. The following day he acts totally normal, just going about his day, as though he doesn't expecting anything bad is going to happen. He doesn't expect Julia is going to be killed.

                              When he goes to Parkes' garage, Parkes apparently knew that Julia Wallace had been murdered at that time. If he mentioned this to Gordon, Gordon may have realized he was involved unwittingly in a murder scheme and acted really weird. I don't believe he told Parkes he dropped a weapon down a grid etc. Like I said the ONLY way I can see this happening is if he was freaking out to Parkes about how he'd been tricked into calling and had all this stuff dumped on him (in this case Gordon also already knew about the murder - probably) but Parkes is unreliable. He has a personal vendetta against Parry and I think he took a tiny grain of truth and exaggerated into ridiculousness that's hard to believe.

                              My friend and I do not tend to feel it's likely he would accidentally get confused. That's our position, I don't think it's going to change since we're repeating the points back and forth. We don't think it's at all likely he would get confused. And we also think it's MORE likely William would tell the truth about his route.

                              14) What it's HEAVILY in favor of is that this was anything OTHER than a burglary gone wrong. Some clean up attempt may have been made... Now IF the Johnstons are involved, there's time for them to let William check around and make sure everything's in order before he goes to get the cops. They have time to discard things which shouldn't be there, time to clean blood off door handles, that sort of thing. After all - they remained silent during the entire discovery ordeal - so no neighbors were alerted, and nobody even knew anything was awry until John went to the police... The blood on the notes in the vase is interesting, because when William was sent upstairs to check on things (again, for some reason) while John was still in the house he came down and allegedly said there's money in a vase they haven't taken. So that raises a posibility he, at the time, had blood on his hands, and that's how it got onto those notes. Just a thought.

                              When it comes to the mackintosh. A very smart man would have used one of Julia's own jackets, or even a completely new jacket from a charity store or w.e... It's not intelligent to purposefully leave one of your own possessions smeared in blood under her body. Maybe he did - but in hindsight it would be very stupid of him.

                              17) He was quite familiar with the area. He had violin lessons around there, Mr. Crewe lived there, and he wrote in his diary that he and Julia had (allegedly) gone to Calderstones park like, a week earlier. He also said they would go there at least once a year to look at the roses.

                              ---

                              As for the rest the milk boy WAS forced to change his timing. He said 7.45. They forced him back to 7.30. The real time was ~7.37.

                              Anyone could have slipped in to be honest. But yes Mr. Johnston is the most likely candidate in that scenario. The fact he went back on his word which actually helped his own defence makes me suspicious that that is indeed what happened. IMO.

                              Yes they could have said they'd seen her with the cat.

                              I'd like to know how accurate rectal temperature was. How much time could they feasibly get away with saying they saw her at before forensics prove them liars? And of course the cat didn't come back until the police arrived. I think the cat may indeed have been removed on purpose... Call me stupid but I even think it might have been for altruistic reasons LOL (e.g., William didn't want poor Puss to see Julia's brains based in), or more logically that the cat may have made noise if distressed? I'm not sure. Its disappearance and reappearance in THOSE weather conditions for me is odd. But I struggle to see the purpose of the cat. It's one of the case oddities along with the random unnecessary mention of the dog whip etc.

                              Johnston couldn't call (if you mean at the front door). The front door is far too risky. If someone came in it was through the back. But yes William could have said let's have music, after having unbolted the yard door and opened the back door. And then Mr. Johnston could have come in yes.

                              "Mistaken at worse" I wouldn't think so. You can't really be mistaken about seeing someone running from the scene, you could be mistaken about a voice... I THINK they could have gotten away with this. And it would exonerate William yes. But I do think if they go too far they themselves are going to become suspects. IMHO it's better to give plausibly deniable evidence like thuds that could be Arthur's boots. Gives the impression it was Julia getting wacked, but if they're proven wrong via forensics (or whatever) then they have nothing to fear because they can be like "ah right, must've been Arthur then"... Hearing voices, seeing suspects, these are things more difficult to give plausible deniability to. They could probably get away with it. It's not risk free. But I find myself in agreement.

                              But then gain Wallace could also have done more. I mean he returns home and he's trying to say someone was still in the house... Yet he claims he heard absolutely nothing from inside. No thuds, no nothing. He could've said the yard door wouldn't open when he went round the back, but once he went to the front then back around it was open along with the back door... But I tend to agree with your angle more than not.

                              ---

                              If Julia caught fire yes, they would likely use something in the room, which lends credibility to Wallace chucking his own mackintosh over her to put out the flames. The mackintosh was after all quite badly burnt. This does not necessarily mean he acted alone by the way, but it's deifnitely possible. It's a smart point from my friend that I don't think has ever been thought of.

                              ---

                              As for the final parts, Johnstons did have time to clean up before William got back. Of course, William would want to check things jus tto be sure, since really its his neck on the line here. I think it would be terribly unlikely for him to just automatically trust they did everything right and run off to the police without making sure first.

                              As for going into the parlor last - again, if the Johnstons are involved, remember, EVERYTHING that happened from his arrival home could be warped or entirely fabricated. If he did go into the parlor last that does suggest knowledge that he shouldn't have. But I understand people who argue the opposite. After all it's a rarely used room, it's late at night with a sick wife, maybe she went to sleep in bed.

                              ---

                              My friend and I will have to discuss this more. We both think the Johnstons should AT LEAST be considered possible suspects, we find it ridiculous they are automatically dismissed when they are actually among the strongest candidates for collaboration with William.

                              Like I said we're more sure about the first part. That William didn't make the call, and Parry probably did under flase pretense (again I didn't even know about the café thing until he told me, which strengthens it even more). The involvement of the Johnstons is something we think needs to be strongly considered but we aren't saying with certainty that they were in on it. But their automatic dismissal as even being potential suspects is frankly dishonest.

                              We want more information on Marsden... We'd also like more information on possible connections between the Qualtrough whos' daughter had her birthday that day, and any of the suspects involved. Though my thinking is the alias was used to frame Parry/Marsden for the crime.

                              Comment


                              • I will add the mackintosh is of big importance. If he was legitimately shocked that it was there it shows he was not present when it was chucked over or shoved under her or whatever. The fact it was so badly burned (almost halfway in fact) lends credence to the idea that it was used as a means to put out a fire (or last minute incinerstion was attenpted and interrupted). It's harder to imagine how it had caught fire - and so severely at that - if he was wearing it the whole time.

                                There's evidence Julia's skirt was burned and her actual body was moved - which adds up with her being pulled out of the fire. IIRC she was moved by her hair judging from the forensic report... I would think the perp would avoid touching a part of her that was on fire, so perhaps her head and hair was clear of the flames?

                                William's initial statement to Munro was that he first noticed it with Mrs. Johnston. This would be after John had gone for the police. I think the timing of that could be important because as I said, if John has gone for the police, they're now on very limited time (if in it together) to discard any additional evidence.

                                ---

                                If used as a shield from blood then since William is so much taller than his wife, I doubt any of her jackets would have fitted him. They may have fitted a smaller man to be fair... But it may have forced him to use his own if he killed her himself. I would have thought with how condemning it is he would have made more effort to explain away its presence or picked something up from.a charity shop. I don't know...

                                Something to think about. I struggle to find a logical answer for why and how it got so badly burned apart from my friend's suggestion. Or a purposeful attempt at incineration which the person was unable to complete for whatever reason.

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