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The Murder of Julia Wallace (1931) - Full DPP case files

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  • OneRound
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Hi One Round,

    Its good to hear from another escapee from the A6 thread. Thanks for your comments. Yes I’d never say that the case was solved but I simply that that Wallace is a far more likely candidate than anyone else and the more I look and think about the case the more firm are my opinions.

    On the question of the lights.

    Like most things there are no definites here but the question is who would benefit most? A guilty Wallace or another (by another I mean either someone from the single accomplice theory or WWH’s 2 accomplice theory.)

    We know that there was no attempt to search for cash or valuables after they found the meagre haul of £5 (to be divided between 2 or 3 people) and we know that no one washed away any blood in the sink. We know that they would have exited by the back door and escaped via the alleyway so it’s almost impossible to see why they would have taken the time and effort to turn of the lights. They’d surely have left pretty much as soon as everything went pear shaped with Julia’s murder.

    Wallace might have turned the lights off in caution. Probably over-caution to be honest. He was (imo) working to a plan where he would discover Julia’s body later that evening. He might have worried that if someone had come to the door say 10 minutes after he’d left (maybe his sister-in-law Amy?) and seen the lights on but received no response to her knocks then this might have led to panic and the police being called. The police would then have had a killer arriving at the house as William left, talking his way in, attempted to steal the contents of the box, killing Julia after being discovered then making his escape without leaving any blood outside of the Parlour all within a 10 minute time window. And this with Wallace always likely to have been, initially at least, the first person looked at.

    Now of course a visitor could have still arrived, seen the lights off and not bothered knocking. It would still have narrowed the window if they had come forward later (which Amy for example certainly would have.) Maybe Wallace only turned the lights down as a last minute thought without having time to think it through fully? The lights were certainly off though. It’s unlikely in the extreme that Julia would have wanted to be alone in a darkened house so we are left with Wallace or sneak thief/killer? I can’t think of a logical reason for the ST/killer. So maybe it’s a case of - a not particularly good reason versus no discernible reason?
    Hi Herlock - I've tunnelled out for a while at least. Strange that so many here believe Wallace did it but shouldn't have been found guilty whilst over on the A6 thread I seem to be in a minority of one in supporting Hanratty's guilt but not his conviction.

    Thanks for your follow up and reasoning about the lights.

    Best regards,
    OneRound

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  • WallaceWackedHer
    replied
    Originally posted by moste View Post
    I didn’t give much credence to the cat ‘Puss’ ((I think it’s name was) being missing ’ other than someone saying ‘the Johnsons may have abducted it as a plan to get Julia into the yard after dark’. Then I was just musing over the the possibility of Wallace using the cats disappearance as part of his plan, because like Wallace’s inability to gain access to the house on the particular night his wife is murdered, it is quite odd that the cat which Julia apparently thought the world of, only shows up after the murder, after being gone a long time.
    But then, Wallace couldn’t have successfully hidden it without outside help. Hidden in the outside toilet, or his laboratory, and Puss would be heard meowing , so I think this is a dead end, still you never know.
    He could have put it anywhere, I mean it factually WAS missing so it had to be SOMEWHERE unless its name is Schroedinger. I'd actually consider it possible altruism if he's guilty. He seemed to like the cat... He liked animals and plants and stuff like that... If it was part of a plan to seem innocent I think he would have actually ensured people realize the cat had randomly come back. But as it turned out basically nobody knew.

    However the actual confession itself, deserves very careful inspection. Without a doubt.

    You know how police withhold certain information to catch people out with something only the killer would know?

    Well this isn't something "only the killer would know" but it IS something so obscure and bizarre to know about and mention, that if an officer received that confession they would take it a LOT more seriously than all the false confessors who come forward.

    We must remember John had dementia. And we didn't hear John say this. A man named "Stan" said this. How do we know "Stan" isn't giving real information about what happened - i.e. the cat had been taken, perhaps to help gain entry - but pretending John said it?

    How do we know the Johnstons didn't know more about the crime than they let on and John in a state of delirium with dementia thought he himself had done it and killed Julia?

    Whoever said it must be EXTREMELY familiar with the case or with the Wallaces to know something that obscure and also be able to name the cat which I've never seen anywhere else.

    John also could have invented it while delirious but it seems too elaborate for a man in that state of mind maybe?

    A possibility that the Johnstons were threatened has to be considered. I don't believe their plan to move was months in the making. I think they moved either because they were traumatized, or because they had been threatened and were scared.

    I should also add, apparently "Phyllis" wasn't expecting their visit. Neither John nor Flo seemed remotely shocked to see Julia dead, and Johnston was quite insistent about investigating a burglary (including searching upstairs again), almost like they knew she was dead and knew the home was robbed... I can imagine them (being totally innocent but knowing something happened) feeling bad for William and coming out to be with him when he sees what's happened hence the interception.

    Nobody followed them down the yard don't forget, so that implies they had no real plan to go out visiting anyone (AKA they made it up), since it would mean they were going to leave their yard door unbolted... Maybe that was normal though. I'm not going to say that's a major deal.

    This is totally off course of any discussion or theory I'm not really sure what this is. Musings I guess. But I think that could make sense... They act weirder than Wallace in the house.

    Florence tried hard to comfort him, and they both defended him very well in court. Flo saying he broke into tears in front of her for example when the prosecutors were trynna say he didn't care about his wife being dead.
    Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 02-12-2020, 08:28 PM.

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  • moste
    replied
    I didn’t give much credence to the cat ‘Puss’ ((I think it’s name was) being missing ’ other than someone saying ‘the Johnsons may have abducted it as a plan to get Julia into the yard after dark’. Then I was just musing over the the possibility of Wallace using the cats disappearance as part of his plan, because like Wallace’s inability to gain access to the house on the particular night his wife is murdered, it is quite odd that the cat which Julia apparently thought the world of, only shows up after the murder, after being gone a long time.
    But then, Wallace couldn’t have successfully hidden it without outside help. Hidden in the outside toilet, or his laboratory, and Puss would be heard meowing , so I think this is a dead end, still you never know.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post

    Wasn't Parry's sister forced to move colleges (or something like that) because a good many people thought Parry had murdered Julia? Lol.
    I haven’t heard that one but that doesn’t mean that it didn’t happen. Might it have been in a newspaper clipping that you’ve read somewhere. If it was then it wasn’t something I’ve seen. I know that William got some grief. Innocent or guilty for either there are always going to be people that think someone has gotten away with it rather than been found not guilty.

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  • WallaceWackedHer
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Just because Dolly Atkinson heard the lie too doesn’t make it true. One of the Atkinson brothers I believe said that the story of Parry’s visit was common knowledge around the garage. We have to ask how, when we’re talking about the most talked about crime in Liverpool crime history since the Maybrick poisoning in 1889, that this ‘common knowledge’ didn’t leak out until 50 years later? Surely the suggestion of a local lad virtually confessing to the murder, pointing out the location of the murder weapon and still being dismissed by the police, would have circulated like wild fire. Apparently not though.
    Wasn't Parry's sister forced to move colleges (or something like that) because a good many people thought Parry had murdered Julia? Lol.

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  • moste
    replied
    QUOTE. : I feel you are saying Parry because he's a known and dodgy character to have had some involvement with Wallace. However, there's no substantive evidence against Parry; particularly, as I'm inclined to dismiss Parkes' story as the ramblings of a sick old man, possibly suffering from dementia.

    Or on Acid !
    Last edited by moste; 02-12-2020, 05:57 PM.

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by OneRound View Post

    Yes, I'm pretty sure Dolly Atkinson was on the Radio City broadcast giving at least some support to Parkes. However, I still just can't buy what he alleged. All too outlandish for me. What would make me change my mind on that? Probably nothing short of dated cine film showing Parry driving up to the garage on the night and waving a bloodied mitten around! Unreasonable on my part? Probably yes but that's my take.

    Best regards,
    OneRound
    Not unreasonable at all. The story is unbelievable. And after saying and doing all of this self-incriminating stuff not once does Parry even ask Parkes to keep quiet about it.

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post

    I know that and I'm saying it's not easy to read. I ALWAYS assumed the Xs were no-shows until I read the trial. That's why I was like "wtf are people talking about he missed all those days he only missed one?". I thought the numbers were points or something.

    If I didn't get it, Josh didn't get it, my dad didn't get it, then it's not as easy as you're saying it is.

    I'm not accepting the assertion that it is.
    Ok. No problem. Three people don’t understand it (one of whom is American where things like this might be done differently) and so it’s indecipherable.

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post

    That would be fine, but I bet you don't know it was corroborated. Someone else from the time said Parkes had told them the same thing very shortly after the murder.

    Dolly Atkinson I think.

    John Sharpe Johnston had dementia and confessed. It was a VERYYYY convincing confession simply because it made use of something SO obscure and weird that only somebody very well acquainted with the Wallaces could have said it... And that was about the cat being missing. He gave the cat's name (never reported anywhere AFAIK) and said they'd taken it to lure Julia over.

    It's SUCH an obscure weird fact (that the cat was missing) that I am sure he really did say it - or whoever did, knew something and pinned it on John when it was really their own confession. But he had ACTUAL dementia at the time.

    The nursing home the guy who reported it was at was confirmed as being the one John had been at... If it interests anyone the man who said John said this was called Stan.

    Stan was the name of the third Pru employee Wallace fingered along with Parry and Marsden.
    Just because Dolly Atkinson heard the lie too doesn’t make it true. One of the Atkinson brothers I believe said that the story of Parry’s visit was common knowledge around the garage. We have to ask how, when we’re talking about the most talked about crime in Liverpool crime history since the Maybrick poisoning in 1889, that this ‘common knowledge’ didn’t leak out until 50 years later? Surely the suggestion of a local lad virtually confessing to the murder, pointing out the location of the murder weapon and still being dismissed by the police, would have circulated like wild fire. Apparently not though.

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  • WallaceWackedHer
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    A layman who didn’t know that a game of chess requires 2 people? A layman who can’t count that there are 7 players in the league? A layman that doesn’t know that there are 3 possible outcomes to a game of chess Win, Lose and Draw. And one that can’t work out that 7 divided by 2 = 3 with 1 left over. Therefore, every week there’s 1 player without a partner to play.

    This is simple stuff.
    I know that and I'm saying it's not easy to read. I ALWAYS assumed the Xs were no-shows until I read the trial. That's why I was like "wtf are people talking about he missed all those days he only missed one?". I thought the numbers were points or something.

    If I didn't get it, Josh didn't get it, my dad didn't get it, then it's not as easy as you're saying it is.

    I'm not accepting the assertion that it is.

    Leave a comment:


  • WallaceWackedHer
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Firstly Wallace knows he’s going to be the first suspect no matter what. He’s not reliant on another suspect to convince the police of his innocence. He’s relying on - everyone giving him a good character, no obvious motive, a connected phone call that didn’t sound like him, a short time frame for a murder in which he’d become soaked in blood and therefore a clean up, his desperate/genuine search for MGE. All of these things Wallace would have felt would have been enough to have convinced the police of his innocence. Plus we know very well that many killers feel themselves cleverer than the police.

    And so Wallace wasn’t relying on pinning it on Parry or Marsden because he would have known that they might have had an alibi (something that he had no control over) but it took absolutely no effort or risk to nudge the police in their direction. If they had alibi’s then ho-hum. If they didn’t then they become of interest to the police.
    No this doesn't work.

    The fact Parry has an alibi is why to this very day so many people say it MUST be Wallace 'cause he's the only one who knew cash was kept there except Parry - and Parry didn't do it.

    It's like a MAJOR point of evidence as to who could have done it, because they had to know money was kept there.

    If he killed Julia, Gordon called and he threw him under the bus because he KNEW he could. It's really an easy thing to see... Any alternative is reaching hard.

    A smart man would have sent himself to see Mr. Wilson at some address in Southport, knock knock, oh he doesn't live here? Okay bye. Return home. Jewelry and obvious things missing. Could be anyone.

    If that's what happened would we even be debating any case at all? He would have got away with it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post

    You can interpret it because you've been told how to.

    I'm inclined to believe anyone saying they knew what it meant before being told are lying. The scores for the 19th show he didn't attend. It's heiroglyphic tier.

    Whatever the case, it's not "easy" for anyone to see when he didn't go. Total nonsense. I won't allow it. I won't.

    I can also interpret it now. Not before HS explained it, nor could my friend Josh who's into this case, nor can my dad who plays darts for a regional team (and is damn good at it btw)... I just sent him the pic and asked if he can tell what days people didn't turn up. He said maybe the Xs are no shows. Which is what any layman would be likely to assume.
    A layman who didn’t know that a game of chess requires 2 people? A layman who can’t count that there are 7 players in the league? A layman that doesn’t know that there are 3 possible outcomes to a game of chess Win, Lose and Draw. And one that can’t work out that 7 divided by 2 = 3 with 1 left over. Therefore, every week there’s 1 player without a partner to play.

    This is simple stuff.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by WallaceWackedHer View Post

    The other person would be Gordon Parry.

    If Wallace killed Julia he didn't just push the boat out and make it look like it COULD be Gordon, it's a very multi-layered framing that leads people to the conclusion that he's essentially the only person apart from William who could have done it.

    He didn't just make use of the chess schedule, he went further. He says Julia would only admit people personally known to her. Then further, he says only Gordon and Marsden know where the box is kept. It's a targeted strike on the box.

    Nobody wanting to get away with a crime narrows a suspect pool especially to that degree, unless there are personal hopes for revenge, or they know they can do so safely because the person is indeed involved hence 100% assurance of no alibi.

    The sole reason for the crime to be as it is, is if it's legitimate, OR it's been done in such a way as to purposefully frame Gordon.
    Firstly Wallace knows he’s going to be the first suspect no matter what. He’s not reliant on another suspect to convince the police of his innocence. He’s relying on - everyone giving him a good character, no obvious motive, a connected phone call that didn’t sound like him, a short time frame for a murder in which he’d become soaked in blood and therefore a clean up, his desperate/genuine search for MGE. All of these things Wallace would have felt would have been enough to have convinced the police of his innocence. Plus we know very well that many killers feel themselves cleverer than the police.

    And so Wallace wasn’t relying on pinning it on Parry or Marsden because he would have known that they might have had an alibi (something that he had no control over) but it took absolutely no effort or risk to nudge the police in their direction. If they had alibi’s then ho-hum. If they didn’t then they become of interest to the police.

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by OneRound View Post

    Hi Herlock - well, no rotten fruit and veg from me. An open and honest assessment with your views well explained. I particularly liked you distinguishing between fact and supposition, and not trying to ram the latter down our throats and make anyone out to be an idiot if he or she disagreed.

    When I first started looking into this case a couple of years or so ago, I was inclined to give the benefit of the doubt to William Wallace and put his odd actions down to the fact that … the geeky, chess playing, insurance man was odd. However, I've since formed the view that his actions weren't just odd but downright suspicious. Your piece - and I've read the whole full length shooting match! - goes a very long way to supporting those suspicions and pointing towards Wallace being responsible for his wife's murder. As you are at pains to emphasise, that's insufficient to legally convict him (and the jury were wrong to do so) but that's not what we are about here.

    From what we know of Wallace's character, his actions and inactions before and after the murder seem so unlikely if he were indeed innocent. Just a few examples - the normally meticulous Wallace not bothering to check or consult a map for where he was going for a potentially important meeting but to wing it; having set off, the usually shy and reserved Wallace trumpeting to so many where he was going and to whom he was going to see and then his refusal to accept the non-existence of MGE - I loved you likening it to him being thwarted in his attempt to discover the source of the Nile; and then all the performance with the keys and the bolt with his neighbours. Nope, together it's all too much for me to buy. I therefore side with you in believing he planned it.

    Where though I found your piece less convincing was in the actual physical killing of Julia. Although you make the case for Wallace having sufficient time, it was still tight for him to do so. Furthermore, there had to be the risk of blood splatter on him (even if it didn't occur) which may have stopped him from personally wielding the weapon. That then leads to another issue - if he did kill her himself, what did he do with the weapon and why wasn't it found? To your credit, you don't duck this but acknowledge it and don't attempt an invented explanation.

    This makes me wonder if Wallace was aided by an accomplice who actually killed Julia and perhaps made the phone call to the chess club which would of course explain why Wallace's voice wasn't recognised. [I gave more of my thinking about this on the main thread in January last year to your mate Antony as he requested although he p*ss*d me off by not having the grace to even acknowledge.] ADMITTEDLY (it's a large ''admittedly''), this then prompts the question - who could that person have been? I don't know and don't pretend to but don't see it as inconceivable. As I've said in earlier posts, we don't know everything about Wallace and anyone who says we do is a fool.

    On one particular bit of detail, I'm unclear why you attach so much significance to the killer turning the lights off and that pointing to Wallace. If Wallace killed her himself, I would have thought he would have wanted to leave the lights on so as to make it seem that Julia was safely there by herself when he left. If someone else killed her, I could more readily envisage that person turning the lights off to aid his escape unseen.

    Best regards,
    OneRound



    Hi One Round,

    Its good to hear from another escapee from the A6 thread. Thanks for your comments. Yes I’d never say that the case was solved but I simply that that Wallace is a far more likely candidate than anyone else and the more I look and think about the case the more firm are my opinions.

    On the question of the lights.

    Like most things there are no definites here but the question is who would benefit most? A guilty Wallace or another (by another I mean either someone from the single accomplice theory or WWH’s 2 accomplice theory.)

    We know that there was no attempt to search for cash or valuables after they found the meagre haul of £5 (to be divided between 2 or 3 people) and we know that no one washed away any blood in the sink. We know that they would have exited by the back door and escaped via the alleyway so it’s almost impossible to see why they would have taken the time and effort to turn of the lights. They’d surely have left pretty much as soon as everything went pear shaped with Julia’s murder.

    Wallace might have turned the lights off in caution. Probably over-caution to be honest. He was (imo) working to a plan where he would discover Julia’s body later that evening. He might have worried that if someone had come to the door say 10 minutes after he’d left (maybe his sister-in-law Amy?) and seen the lights on but received no response to her knocks then this might have led to panic and the police being called. The police would then have had a killer arriving at the house as William left, talking his way in, attempted to steal the contents of the box, killing Julia after being discovered then making his escape without leaving any blood outside of the Parlour all within a 10 minute time window. And this with Wallace always likely to have been, initially at least, the first person looked at.

    Now of course a visitor could have still arrived, seen the lights off and not bothered knocking. It would still have narrowed the window if they had come forward later (which Amy for example certainly would have.) Maybe Wallace only turned the lights down as a last minute thought without having time to think it through fully? The lights were certainly off though. It’s unlikely in the extreme that Julia would have wanted to be alone in a darkened house so we are left with Wallace or sneak thief/killer? I can’t think of a logical reason for the ST/killer. So maybe it’s a case of - a not particularly good reason versus no discernible reason?

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  • WallaceWackedHer
    replied
    Originally posted by OneRound View Post

    Tbh with you, my knowledge of the case doesn't extend to that detail and so it's difficult / impossible to give a meaningful opinion. I do agree with you that it was a weird thing for Johnston to say. However, I would though always be wary of attaching too much significance to anything said by someone with dementia. Possibly he knew and heard things / rumours at the time and over the years which he added to his own delusions as his death neared.

    Best regards,
    OneRound
    Yes I don't think he did it (I did before, strongly - he's legitimately a strong suspect)... But I'm wondering if it WASN'T John who said it, but actually the man named "Stan" giving information pretending that it was Johnston who had said it/did it. Or Johnston DID say it because he had heard it from someone else (or knew exactly what had happened) and due to dementia believed he himself did it.

    To my knowledge, none of the books or articles on the case give much detail on the "Stan Young" Wallace named as a suspect, who worked for the Pru.

    I also have no idea how long it was missing for. Goodman gives no time, Slemen says "days" plural, newspapers (only one mention) says 24 hours.

    It would be less unusual if it was July or something, but this was a rainy and freezing cold January. Then it just turns up again on the night of the murder.

    It's really peculiar and the fact it was mentioned, given the obscurity of that fact, makes it worthy of investigation. To me it seems like something too specific, too obscure, to simply cast aside without even giving it thought. For a man with dementia that's a very elaborate thing to come up with if it's just rambling.
    Last edited by WallaceWackedHer; 02-12-2020, 01:51 PM.

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