"A man who saw the Highgate Vampire"?
David Farrant (the man you are talking about) has been taken to court for many things, but "vampire hunting" was certainly not among them. Farrant was not charged with "vampire hunting" when he appeared at Clerkenwell Court in August 1970. He was charged with (and I quote) "being in an enclosed area for an unlawful purpose" and that is all he was charged with on that occasion. Shortly afterwards he abandoned his lone "vampire hunting" antics. The magistrate was obviously obliged to acquit Farrant because it was demonstrably apparent to all present, not least defending solictor Mr Jeffrey Bayes, that Highgate Cemetery by any stretch of the imagination cannot be described as "an enclosed area." This technicality secured Farrant's release. However, we should also remind ourselves of what the magistrate, Mr J D Purcell, said when Farrant first appeared before him: "You should be seen by a doctor."
While it is true that Farrant claimed to have seen the Highgate Vampire in early 1970 and soon afterwards gave every impression to the media of hunting it with a cross and stake, he later denied that it was a vampire he had witnessed on three occasions or that he ever went vampire hunting in Highgate Cemetery. This note written by him in August 1970 might explain why:
Originally posted by Pirate Jack
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While it is true that Farrant claimed to have seen the Highgate Vampire in early 1970 and soon afterwards gave every impression to the media of hunting it with a cross and stake, he later denied that it was a vampire he had witnessed on three occasions or that he ever went vampire hunting in Highgate Cemetery. This note written by him in August 1970 might explain why:
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