Originally posted by etenguy
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F1) Casting suspicion away from himself i.e. it was instrumental to the actual crime; cover
F2) Wanting to see Parry convicted i.e. it was intrinsic to the crime, a motive in its own right
F2 is an old motive: kill your wife and frame her lover (I'm not saying this is exactly the same in the Wallace case).
Herlock clearly favours F1. I do not. I'm saying it would have been F2. Here is one reason to start with: Wallace's post-acquittal behaviour is consistent with F2 and not F1. After acquittal, he had won - he didn't need any cover. Under double jeopardy, he could have admitted killing his wife.
Also (against F1), as husband, Wallace would always be the prime suspect. Any reputational "credit" etc would be trumped by that fact.
OR
F3) Wallace inferred Parry was guilty from (E); hence, the post-acquittal behaviour*.
Edit: * And I should add: and also Parry's post-murder behaviour i.e. not speaking about the crime for the rest of his life, despite at least two writers pointing the finger of suspicion at him (via description) during his lifetime.
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