Wow, just a few posts but a lot to take in...if I may, some brief comments:
1] JH did seem able to make friends easily, can't deny that, but there is little doubt that he did have quite serious personality problems. The much-abused (on this thread at any rate) Leonard Miller says that JH's relationship with his parents wasn't perhaps as warm as some would have it. I haven't read Miller for a long time, but I seem to recall that he put forward some credible evidence that JH's relationship with his mother was not so good. And his walking-away from the window-cleaning business demonstrates (to me, at least) that he was unable to fully appreciate the sacrifice that his father made for him. In other words, he was ungenerous and irresponsible, and unable to appreciate what was being done for his own good. My own father harped on at serious length about my own (perceived) lack of 'gratitude', for whatever reasons, but had my old man given up his pension and gone to the expense of setting up a business for my personal benefit, then I think that I'd have at least given it a good shot. JH in my opinion falls into the category of someone who'd rather make £1 illegitimately than £5 straight down the line.
I think JH genuinely loved his lifestyle and the risks he took. And he wasn't very successful at his chosen lifestyle, either, to judge by the amount of time he spent in chokey.
2] Alphon was something else altogether. He was, not to put too fine a point on it, a wierd-o. Apparently he hated his father, but doted on his mother, who bent over backwards to support him emotionally and financially. I don't believe he was any more of a committed Nazi than I am. Alphon was all gob and bluster. He happened into the A6 Case by sheer coincidence, and he made every attempt to profit by it, even though he came within a hair's breadth of being nailed for it. And profit by it he most certainly did, at least for a time, but ultimately he just drifted back into his old listless, aimless lifestyle, and he died a nobody. Sad? Well, yes, I suppose so. I'm no psychologist, but I think Alphon was an absolute master of whatever situation he found himself in, and so long as Justice and Fox were prepared to finance him, he revelled in it. When they could no longer afford to do so, he shrugged his shoulders and reverted to his old lifestyle and felt none the worse for it.
3] I have always believed that JH went into what can only be described as self-denial regarding the A6 crime. This probably suggests that he was not really in touch with reality, that he was immature and unable to face the consequences of his own actions. I said way back that the murderer John Cannan has always, without one single deviation, denied that he murdered Shirley Banks, even though the forensics (including DNA) fairly and squarely establish him as her killer. Maybe Cannan's reasons are not quite the same as JH's - Cannan was never in any fear of death courtesy of the Law. I believe that JH genuinely felt that so long as he continued to profess his innocence he would be 'let off'. I also genuinely believe that JH was totally amazed that he was found guilty of the A6 Crime, in the same way as most observers at the time were, including even the judge. If only JH had kept his trap shut, stuck to the Liverpool Alibi and kept off the witness stand, chances are that he'd have been acquitted and the A6 Case would have gone down as one of Britain's most sensational unsolved murders.
4] The Rhyl Alibi should never have been, and it continues to astonish me to this day that JH's counsel allowed him to introduce it. There is absolutely no concrete evidence to link JH with Rhyl at the crucial time. There is heresay and confused recollection, but no cold, hard support. JH had most definitely been to Rhyl, and it would seem that he used his recollections of his previous visit(s) to pad out his claim that he was there on the night of August 22nd, but he simply could not prove it.
5] There have been huge efforts by individuals on this thread to discredit the DNA results. The hard facts are that they are impossible to discredit and they will never be repeated, so they must stand. JH's DNA was on the underwear, to the exclusion of any other (apart from Gregsten's, and even that I'm not 100% sure of) and that, I am afraid, is that. Alphon's DNA sample was taken at the time of the tests, and did not match any results obtained. Ergo - Alphon did not deposit his DNA on the underwear. And if there is no forensic evidence linking JH to the car, then there certainly is none to link Alphon to it.
Did I say brief comments?
Cheers,
Graham
1] JH did seem able to make friends easily, can't deny that, but there is little doubt that he did have quite serious personality problems. The much-abused (on this thread at any rate) Leonard Miller says that JH's relationship with his parents wasn't perhaps as warm as some would have it. I haven't read Miller for a long time, but I seem to recall that he put forward some credible evidence that JH's relationship with his mother was not so good. And his walking-away from the window-cleaning business demonstrates (to me, at least) that he was unable to fully appreciate the sacrifice that his father made for him. In other words, he was ungenerous and irresponsible, and unable to appreciate what was being done for his own good. My own father harped on at serious length about my own (perceived) lack of 'gratitude', for whatever reasons, but had my old man given up his pension and gone to the expense of setting up a business for my personal benefit, then I think that I'd have at least given it a good shot. JH in my opinion falls into the category of someone who'd rather make £1 illegitimately than £5 straight down the line.
I think JH genuinely loved his lifestyle and the risks he took. And he wasn't very successful at his chosen lifestyle, either, to judge by the amount of time he spent in chokey.
2] Alphon was something else altogether. He was, not to put too fine a point on it, a wierd-o. Apparently he hated his father, but doted on his mother, who bent over backwards to support him emotionally and financially. I don't believe he was any more of a committed Nazi than I am. Alphon was all gob and bluster. He happened into the A6 Case by sheer coincidence, and he made every attempt to profit by it, even though he came within a hair's breadth of being nailed for it. And profit by it he most certainly did, at least for a time, but ultimately he just drifted back into his old listless, aimless lifestyle, and he died a nobody. Sad? Well, yes, I suppose so. I'm no psychologist, but I think Alphon was an absolute master of whatever situation he found himself in, and so long as Justice and Fox were prepared to finance him, he revelled in it. When they could no longer afford to do so, he shrugged his shoulders and reverted to his old lifestyle and felt none the worse for it.
3] I have always believed that JH went into what can only be described as self-denial regarding the A6 crime. This probably suggests that he was not really in touch with reality, that he was immature and unable to face the consequences of his own actions. I said way back that the murderer John Cannan has always, without one single deviation, denied that he murdered Shirley Banks, even though the forensics (including DNA) fairly and squarely establish him as her killer. Maybe Cannan's reasons are not quite the same as JH's - Cannan was never in any fear of death courtesy of the Law. I believe that JH genuinely felt that so long as he continued to profess his innocence he would be 'let off'. I also genuinely believe that JH was totally amazed that he was found guilty of the A6 Crime, in the same way as most observers at the time were, including even the judge. If only JH had kept his trap shut, stuck to the Liverpool Alibi and kept off the witness stand, chances are that he'd have been acquitted and the A6 Case would have gone down as one of Britain's most sensational unsolved murders.
4] The Rhyl Alibi should never have been, and it continues to astonish me to this day that JH's counsel allowed him to introduce it. There is absolutely no concrete evidence to link JH with Rhyl at the crucial time. There is heresay and confused recollection, but no cold, hard support. JH had most definitely been to Rhyl, and it would seem that he used his recollections of his previous visit(s) to pad out his claim that he was there on the night of August 22nd, but he simply could not prove it.
5] There have been huge efforts by individuals on this thread to discredit the DNA results. The hard facts are that they are impossible to discredit and they will never be repeated, so they must stand. JH's DNA was on the underwear, to the exclusion of any other (apart from Gregsten's, and even that I'm not 100% sure of) and that, I am afraid, is that. Alphon's DNA sample was taken at the time of the tests, and did not match any results obtained. Ergo - Alphon did not deposit his DNA on the underwear. And if there is no forensic evidence linking JH to the car, then there certainly is none to link Alphon to it.
Did I say brief comments?
Cheers,
Graham
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