As Honest John records in his book, Timothy Evans also had a half-brother from his mother's marriage to Penry Probert. For some reason this fact does not seem to have been mentioned in previous books on the case, including that by Ludovic Kennedy. One wonders whether this half-brother is still alive and what kind of relationship he had with Evans. If he is still alive this would be someone else who might possibly shed more light on the case, along with Lucy Dyson (nee Endecott).
In the programme Maureen Westlake repeated the story recorded by Ludovic Kennedy in his book that it was Evans's other sister Eileen who first spotted the vacant flat on the top floor of 10 Rillington Place from a passing tube train. There seems no reason to disbelieve this. I think Mrs Westlake said in the programme that her sister regretted spotting the flat for the rest of her life due to the tragic events which happened to her family there. If she had never seen it and the Evans's had not moved there Christie would never have been associated with the Evans murders and the case would have been somewhat different; he would probably only have been remembered as a rather nasty serial killer and the extra dimension of an innocent man having possibly been executed would have been absent. This might have meant that the case would have generated much less interest and would not have been remembered quite as well today. There would probably also have been rather less written about it, and Ludovic Kennedy would not have written his book which was chiefly aimed at proving Evans's innocence. On the other hand Honest John might still have produced his thorough analysis of Christie, his crimes and his victims.
In the programme Maureen Westlake repeated the story recorded by Ludovic Kennedy in his book that it was Evans's other sister Eileen who first spotted the vacant flat on the top floor of 10 Rillington Place from a passing tube train. There seems no reason to disbelieve this. I think Mrs Westlake said in the programme that her sister regretted spotting the flat for the rest of her life due to the tragic events which happened to her family there. If she had never seen it and the Evans's had not moved there Christie would never have been associated with the Evans murders and the case would have been somewhat different; he would probably only have been remembered as a rather nasty serial killer and the extra dimension of an innocent man having possibly been executed would have been absent. This might have meant that the case would have generated much less interest and would not have been remembered quite as well today. There would probably also have been rather less written about it, and Ludovic Kennedy would not have written his book which was chiefly aimed at proving Evans's innocence. On the other hand Honest John might still have produced his thorough analysis of Christie, his crimes and his victims.
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