Any news on the long awaited new book with alleged new evidence, written by John Gannon. Seems to have died a death after being promoted in the echo but then derided on a forum, a bit like somebody else's notion one time?
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The last anyone heard seems to have been a full year ago.
Paddy Shennan meets a writer who believes his forthcoming book will solve an age-old Liverpool murder mystery
IT is one of our biggest murder mysteries – but, after two years of painstaking research, a Liverpool writer believes he may have cracked the history-making case of the murder of Julia Wallace.
Already, several books, TV films and forests of newspaper print have been devoted to the intriguing tale of The Man from the Pru – the studious, chess-playing insurance agent William Wallace, who was found guilty of murdering his wife, Julia, at their home – 29 Wolverton Street, Anfield – on the evening of January 20, 1931.
Wallace was sentenced to hang in April 1931 but, the following month, at the Court of Appeal, legal history was made when he became the first man to overturn a conviction for murder and was set free.
He moved to Bromborough, but died two years later – a stress-induced death, it has been suggested, due to the ongoing whispering campaign that followed him.
Nonsense, according to full-time writer John Gannon, 49, from West Derby, who is putting the finishing touches to his 85,000-word manuscript which he hopes will be published under the title Julia Wallace And The Devil In The Detail.
John has had access to the files of Merseyside police and the Director of Public Prosecutions and unique access to the personal files of William Wallace’s solicitor, Hector Munro, which has enabled him to build on the published works of others, including Roger Wilkes, who John credits with helping and encouraging him in his dogged quest.
William Wallace, we already know, attended a meeting of the Liverpool Chess Club on January 19, 1931, where he was handed a telephone message asking him to call at 25 Menlove Gardens East, Liverpool, the following evening to discuss insurance with an “R.M. Qualtrough.”
Wallace made that fruitless journey – the address didn’t exist – and returned home to discover his wife’s battered body. The police believed Wallace could have made the journey AND killed his wife – and the jury agreed.
Crime writer Jonathan Goodman mentioned, but didn’t name, a man who knew Julia Wallace well in his book The Killing Of Julia Wallace. This man had worked with William but been sacked for stealing money.
Then Roger Wilkes (Wallace: The Final Verdict) named Richard Gordon Parry, who had been a junior employee at Wallace’s firm, but was sacked for stealing. A petty criminal, he was always short of money.
Wilkes suggested Parry knew Wallace’s takings for the day would be at his home and, since he also knew Mrs Wallace personally, he could easily have gained entry. Parry was seen by police but, despite a blood-stained mitten being found in his car, they were satisfied with his alibi. He died in 1980 without admitting any involvement in the crime.
But now, based on his extensive investigations and re-examination of the evidence, John Gannon’s forthcoming book will make some startling and sensational claims:
William Wallace, trapped in a miserable marriage and in extremely poor health, knew he didn’t have long to live – and didn’t want to spend his last years with his wife.
He DIDN’T batter Julia with an iron bar, but DID plan the murder – persuading petty thief Richard Gordon Parry to make the phone call which provided Wallace with an alibi, and blackmailing another man, who the ECHO will call Mr M (for Murderer!), to do the deed (you’ll have to wait for the book to learn the man’s identity).
Mr M was also desperately poor, but was looking forward to marrying into money – and a well-connected family. Wallace, though, knew (though probably hardly cared) that his wife had been paying Mr M for sex – and the ‘Man from The Pru’ said he would expose this sordid secret, naming Mr M in (what would have been extremely well-publicised) divorce proceedings, thereby ruining his future wealth and happiness, unless he carried out the murder (Parry would drive Mr M from the scene). Mr M. went on to live a quiet and prosperous life, with his new wife.
John, naturally, doesn’t want to pre-empt his book by giving away too many of the details he has unearthed, but he says: “The killer knew Julia Wallace and was a man who was always short of money.
“Parry himself – and, quite possibly, the killer – had been known to call on Julia Wallace in the afternoon.
“And I believe the killer, who was never tracked down, was a reluctant killer – he was pressed into it by Wallace, who I believe had the power to ensure he lost everything that was coming his way. Parry, though, was up to his neck in it – always desperate for money, I believe he made that phone call and was paid by Wallace.
“As for Wallace’s motive, due to his ill-health he knew he only had a couple of years left to live. There is evidence that he and his wife hadn’t been getting on and I believe he just wanted to end his days as he did – living quietly in Bromborough, in a house with a garden and with his various hobbies to keep him busy.
“The man who struck the blows never surfaced and he has never been named. After he got married, he suddenly knew people in high places.”
After so much work and so much research, is there now a feeling of anti-climax for the author?
“Not at all,” he says. “It is, basically, a domestic murder but it’s an intriguing domestic – an X-rated Agatha Christie domestic! I could never describe it as mundane – not least because I’ve been on such a journey of highs and lows during my research.
“And I do think my research and the book will be enough to allow people to finally draw a line under this case.”
John Gannon can be contacted via his page on the social networking site CrimeSpace. Go to http://crimespace.ning.com
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http://crimespace.ning.com/forum/top...Comment:226417
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This caught my eye.....
At 4:45am on November 29, 2009, Thomas Peter Brady said…
Dear John.I am obsessed by the Wallace case.If you met my friends they would tell you.Most people dabble.They know nothing about it.I went to a talk in St Georges Hall recently by a character called Frank Carlisle. Moron.Publicity seeker,I challenged his statements and found myself hated by his groupies.I patiently explained why he was mistaken.They did not want to know.
Then I ran into Tom Slemen and his mate Keith Andrews.More morons.They think the next door neighbours the Johnstons did it.I tackled Slemen at a meeting.Actually I will digress for a moment.There was a meeting advertised at a club on Church Road Wavertree.It was a winter Sunday night at 7 pm.I got there at 6 and the doors were locked with a hundred outside.It was like Anfield on St Etienne day ! .The interest is huge.Anyway I proved to Slemen and Andrews that their theory was nonsense and they scrapped their book.I would love to meet you John for a general chat about the case,You are not Slemen.You are clearly a scrupulous researcher and you can use the apostrophe ! Tom Brady
on this page.....
http://crimespace.ning.com/profile/J...ource=activity
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http://crimespace.ning.com/profiles/...=00b9c78v5n0cw
Some interesting though probably unsubstantiated any possibly now uncheckable theories.
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