The first reference in print to Parry seems to have been in 1934, just three years after the case. The author was Winifred Duke, a native Liverpudlian with some legal background, who wrote commentaries on a number of criminal cases. According to Wikipedia she referred to Parry, presumably for reasons of libel, as ‘Harris’ which is a cognate of that name. I don’t have a copy of her book in which the Wallace case features.
So although the Parkes statement and the police enquiries relating to Parry were not known to Wallace’s defence, there seems to have been some awareness of Parry’s possible involvement long before Goodman (1969) and Wilkes (1981) looked at the case. I am not sure how Duke’s obtained this information: maybe through contacts within the legal/police world, or by pursuing information from Wallace’s newspaper article, or maybe just local rumour. As it happens she believed Wallace was actually guilty which may be why she does not appear on Rod Crosby’s recommended reading list.
So although the Parkes statement and the police enquiries relating to Parry were not known to Wallace’s defence, there seems to have been some awareness of Parry’s possible involvement long before Goodman (1969) and Wilkes (1981) looked at the case. I am not sure how Duke’s obtained this information: maybe through contacts within the legal/police world, or by pursuing information from Wallace’s newspaper article, or maybe just local rumour. As it happens she believed Wallace was actually guilty which may be why she does not appear on Rod Crosby’s recommended reading list.
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