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Jonathan Fields
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Our episodes deal with serious and often distressing incidents. If you feel at any time you need support, please contact your local crisis centre for suggested phone numbers, for confidential support and for a more detailed list of content warnings, please see the show notes for this episode on your app or on our website. At around 7pm on Monday, January 19, 1931, the telephone rang at Cottles City Cafe on North John street in the English port city of Liverpool. Waitress Gladys Harley picked up on the line was an unfamiliar elderly sounding man with a deep voice who asked quickly, is that the Central Chess Club? Liverpool's Central Chess Club was meeting at the cafe that evening, as it did every Monday and Thursday throughout autumn, winter and early spring. The club consisted of a small group of mostly amateur players whose informal and friendly matches were often played among the tables on the bustling main restaurant floor. The man on the telephone asked, is William Wallis there? Gladys recognised many of the chess club's members by sight, but she didn't know most of their names. Unsure whether William was among the crowd that evening, she approached the Club's captain, Samuel Beattie, and asked, is William Wallace here? Samuel had known William through the club for eight years. The 52 year old initially came across as shy and reserved, but over time developed a reputation as a pleasant, likeable gentleman. He wasn't a regular attendee at the club, appearing as little as once a fortnight, telling others it was because he disliked leaving his wife alone at night. In fact, William hadn't been seen at the club since before Christmas. But he was expected to appear that evening for a scheduled match in the second class championship. The highly anticipated tournament had been planned two months in advance, with a first prize of 10 shillings and a second prize of five. But when Samuel Beattie glanced around the cafe, he didn't see William there. This wasn't unusual, as most club members didn't arrive until between 7:30 and 8. Samuel went to the telephone and took the call on William's behalf. He didn't recognise the caller's strong, slightly gruff voice. When Samuel informed him that William hadn't arrived, the man asked, can you give me his address? I'm afraid I can't, Samuel replied. The man then asked, but will he be there? I can't say, Samuel answered. He may or may not. If he is coming, he will be here shortly. I suggest you ring up later. The caller said he was too busy to ring back and stressed the matter's importance, explaining that it was his daughter's 21st birthday and that he wished to arrange something for her that fell within William's nature of business. I want to see him particularly, the man insisted before asking Samuel to pass on a message. With pen in hand, Samuel noted that the man wanted to meet William at 7:30 the following evening at his residence, 25 Menlove Gardens east in the south east suburb of Mossley Hill. Samuel repeated the details, which the caller confirmed. He also gave his name, RM Quotrain. Not long after the call, Samuel Beattie noticed a tall, thin, bespectacled man with a grey moustache seated near the cafe entrance, absorbed in a chess match. It was William Wallace. He had arrived discreetly moments earlier, removed his hat and coat and quietly settled in to play his tournament game. Samuel relayed the message from RM Qualtra to William, who responded, qualtra? Qualtra. Who is Qualtra? He asked whether the man was a member of the chess club, which Samuel denied. I don't know the chap, William said, adding that he'd never heard of Menlove Gardens east either. When he suggested that the address might have been Menlove Avenue, also in Mossley Hill. Samuel assured him it was not. William nevertheless recorded Qualtra's name and the Menlove Garden's address in his pocket diary, scrawling east in big block letters. He then turned his attention back to his chess game, which concluded at 10pm in William's victory. Elated, he animatedly recounted the match as he left the cafe with several other club members. Yet the peculiar request from RM Qualtra lingered on his mind. He brought up the unfamiliar Menlove Gardens address to a fellow chess club member during the evening and to the others as they journeyed home. No one else had heard of it either, but they also suspected it might be somewhere off the more well known Menlove Avenue and offered suggestions on how William could get there. William jokingly remarked that he belonged to Liverpool and was therefore confident he could find his way once he reached the general area. After all, he knew Menlove Avenue quite well. The road ran alongside a park he sometimes visited with his wife to see the roses. As for Qualtra, William had little to say beyond the fact it was a peculiar name. The following morning of Tuesday, January 20, 1931, William Wallace set off for work as an insurance agent for the Prudential Assurance Company. His job required him to trudge through the drizzly weather, making house calls to clients and collecting payments. As William walked to one of his many appointments that day, he passed a police constable who had known him for around two years. According to the constable, William kept his head down and appeared to dab his eyes with the sleeve of his coat as if he'd been crying. He also seemed uncharacteristically haggard and withdrawn, like he was distressed about something. The clients who William visited throughout the day described his mood differently. They recalled him being his usual gentlemanly self possession, polite, jovial and smiling. He gratefully accepted a cup of tea from one client and cheerfully remarked to another, let's hope it's going to stay this way. When blue skies suddenly appeared, he admired the beautiful flowers in another's window and told a fourth that he looked forward to seeing her again in three weeks. Time for their next appointment. One person remarked that they had never met a nicer man than William Wallace. All of William's clients agreed that he was perfectly normal and quite his usual self that day. None of them got the impression that he had been crying or distressed. They attributed his tired appearance and habit of dabbing at his eyes to the cold weather and poor health. William was a sickly man. He had lost one of his kidneys to disease and doctors had told him that he only had a few years left to live. As a result. He was also known as someone who never seemed to get rid of his cold and was often seen using a handkerchief to wipe his watery eyes and blow his nose. The only thing William's clients noted was that he would repeatedly ask for the time and check his watch during meetings, but this was considered a normal habit of his. He was highly time conscious as he relied on public transportation. He also had upwards of 560 house calls to make after falling behind after recently taking time off sick. For the past week William had been largely housebound as he recovered from a severe bout of influenza, something he'd mentioned to chess club members the night before. He said he wouldn't have attended if not for the long awaited tournament match, preferring to rest at home. Some noticed a slight huskiness in his voice, suggesting he was still on the mend. William's wife, 52 year old Julia Wallace, had also been unwell lately. She remained mostly at home, telling visitors that she had a touch of bronchitis. In truth, Julia had suffered a series of worsening illnesses and had recently begun coughing up blood. Concerned, William had called a doctor who advised him not to be alarmed and offered guidance on easing her symptoms. In the words of a friend, the winter months tried Mr. And Mrs. Wallace. Even when unwell, Julia Wallis remained her gentle, caring self, offering to make tea for a family member who dropped by to check in on her. When they offered her theatre tickets for later in the week, she doubted she would be well enough to attend. William, by contrast, was faring much better. Not only had he managed to return to work, Julia mentioned that he had attended his chess club the night before. She also said that he had plans again that evening, having received a telephone call from someone who wished to meet him in person about insurance business. The conversation then shifted to a recent spate of burglaries in the area. Just before 6pm William finished with his last client of the day and headed straight home. He set out again a short while later to keep his 7:30 appointment with RM Qualtra. By 7:06 he was spotted waiting for a tramcar at the junction of Smithdown Road and Lodge Lane during just over two miles from his home. When the tram arrived, William asked if it went to Menlove Gardens, stressing east. The conductor said no, but told him to stay on, explaining the tram would reach a nearby terminus where he could transfer to another that went to the area. During the journey. William remarked that he was a stranger in Mossley Hill and something to the effect that he had important business there was. He mentioned Menlove Gardens east upwards of four times and urged the conductor not to forget that that was where he was heading. At the terminus, William hurriedly boarded a second tramcar that he had been told went to Mossley Hill. He spoke to its conductor, requesting to be let off at Menlove Gardens East. The conductor agreed, but said the closest stop to William's destination was Menlove Gardens West. Upon arriving in Mossley Hill, the conductor beckoned William and explained that Menlove Gardens was triangular, consisting of three roads. He pointed out two roads running off on the right and suggested that Menlove Gardens east was probably one of them. William thanked the conductor, adding, I am a complete stranger around here. Before disembarking the tram, William then stopped a passerby to ask for directions. She said she didn't know where Menlove Gardens east was, but suggested it might be further along Menlove Gardens West. William continued, only to find the road ended at a junction with a thoroughfare called Dudlow Lane. He retraced his steps and approached another passerby. In a strange turn of events, William was told that while Menlove Gardens north, south and west existed, there was no Menlove Gardens East. William suggested that there must have been a mistake in the message he was given and headed to 25 Menlove Gardens west instead. An elderly lady answered the door. When William asked if anyone named Qualtra lived at the premises, the lady responded, no. William had no hope of finding his destination on Menlove Gardens south or north, as those streets only contained even numbered residences. He eventually came across a local police constable performing his rounds and asked him about Manluve Gardens East. The officer replied, there's no such place. William explained that he was an insurance agent and had received a call from a man named Qualtra requesting his presence at 25 Menlove Gardens East. He spelled out the name for the constable, who didn't know anyone by that name in the district. The constable suggested that William Inquire at 25 Menlove Avenue, A Street William was already familiar with and had long suspected might be the place he was meant to visit. William thanked him and as he started to walk away, asked if there was somewhere he could consult a directory, a printed book listing the contact details and addresses of local businesses and residents. The constable pointed him toward a nearby post office and police station. William then asked, it's not 8 o' clock yet, is it? Before the officer could answer, William checked his watch and stated that it was a quarter to eight. The constable confirmed the time and William bid him goodnight before heading off in the direction of the post office. The post office was closed, so William checked with the news agency across the road. He spent several minutes searching through their directory before asking the shop manager about the address he was trying to find. Like the others, she told him that it simply didn't exist. After spending about 45 minutes trying to figure out where he was supposed to go, William finally gave up and returned home. Shortly before 8:45 that night, married couple John and Florence Johnston were getting ready to go out when they heard knocking on the door of a nearby home from their living room. The sound was familiar, distinct and delivered in the same pattern their neighbour William Wallace always used. William lived next door to the Johnstons in one of the many near identical two storey Victorian brick terrace houses that stood wall to wall along Wolverton street in Liverpool's Anfield district. Over the next few minutes, the Johnstons heard William Wallace's distinctive knock at least three times. At 8:45, as the couple stepped out the back door of their home and into the alley behind it, William passed by in a hurry, looking worried. He was striding toward the rear of his house, his manner brisk and purposeful. As the Johnstones greeted William in passing, he surprised them by asking anxiously if they had heard anything unusual that evening. John and Florence hadn't and they asked if something had happened. I've been out since quarter to seven, william explained. On my return, I find the front door bolted against me. John asked if he had tried the back door. Yes, William replied. I couldn't open it. He was concerned as his wife Julia was supposed to be home and he was certain she wouldn't have gone out because she was sick. John suggested he try the back door again and if it still wouldn't budge, they could help fetch a spare key. The Johnstons watched as William approached the door and twisted its handle. It swung open easily at his touch. It opens now. He shouted to the Johnsons. I will see if everything is alright, he remarked as he stepped into the unlit kitchen. John said they would wait until everything was confirmed to be in order, and William didn't discourage them. Except for a dim light from the second floor, the house was in complete darkness. The Johnstons saw lights flicker in other rooms as William moved from space to space, lighting matches to illuminate the gas lamps within. Heavy blinds and curtains blocked the view from outside, but they heard William call out twice, presumably to Julia, though they couldn't make out what he was saying. About five minutes later, William emerged from the house looking distraught. In a hurried raised voice, he told the Johnstons, oh, come in and see. She has been killed. The Johnstons followed William into the house, fearing that Julia might have had a fatal accident, perhaps a fall down the stairs. After passing through the kitchen into the hallway, the trio entered the parlour or sitting room towards the front of the house. A gas lamp cast light on the compact, well kept and richly decorated space. The Wallace home, where the childless couple had lived for 16 years, was a picture of dignified domesticity. Potted plants, framed photographs, floral patterned cushions, and paintings of landscapes and pastoral scenes adorned the parlour. In front of a large window draped with deep burgundy velvet curtains stood a small cluster of well worn furniture, including a low armchair and a chaise lounge. They were arranged around the room's focal point, a dark, ornately carved wooden fireplace which featured a small grate for a gas fire. Sprawled out on a black rug in front of the fireplace was Julia Wallace. She was face down with her head turned toward the piano. She loved to play, its lid open with a book of music on the stand. A pool of blood had formed around her head and was spattered on the striped beige toned wallpaper on the nearby walls. Bone and brain matter was visible from a 3 inch wound above and in front of Julia's left ear. There were further depressions to the back of her skull, but her matted hair obscured the full extent of the damage. Nothing else in the room appeared to have been disturbed. Florence Johnston gently touched Julia's extended hand and said softly, you poor darling. She was still warm, though barely. William Wallace's initial distress and agitation gave way to what appeared to be a profound shock. His face was pale as he stooped beside his wife's lifeless body and felt her hand. They've finished her, he repeated, his voice trembling. He noticed her rings were missing, though he wasn't certain if she had been wearing them that day. I wonder what they have used, he murmured, seemingly pondering the murder weapon. He ran his hand along the edge of the rug, patting it as if checking for anything hidden underneath. John told him not to disturb anything and said he was going to fetch the police. William urged him to hurry, saying, and a doctor too, but I don't think it will do any good. The trio stepped back into the kitchen, where William wandered about in a bewildered daze. The kitchen appeared relatively normal, though Julia hadn't tidied up after dinner, suggesting she'd been attacked before she had the chance to do so. Three coins lay scattered on the floor, a half crown and two shillings, and William pointed to a damaged cabinet in the corner. Its door rested in two broken pieces nearby. See, they've wrenched that off, he said, implying the damage was caused by someone ransacking the otherwise intact space. William moved to the cabinet, its upper shelves mostly filled with books. From the left side of the top shelf he took down a cash box. John asked if anything was taken. The box typically held the insurance payments William had collected from his clients the previous week, which he was due to hand over to his employer the following day. There was only a crumpled American dollar one bill and four penny stamps inside. Four pounds were missing, the equivalent of roughly 350 pounds today. William returned the box to the shelf. The Johnstones didn't think he appeared overly concerned about the missing money. Before going to the police, John wanted to ensure everything was alright. Upstairs, William ascended the staircase alone and returned minutes later to report that several pounds in a jar upstairs had been left untouched. John departed and William and Florence briefly returned to Julia's body. Florence touched Julia's hand again, noticing it had grown colder. Look at the brains, william muttered, but Florence couldn't bear to. He scanned the room and asked, whatever have they used? Nothing stood out as having been used in the attack. William circled his wife's body carefully stepping over the blood spatter, and pointed out a steel grey Macintosh partially tucked around her. Often shortened to Mac, a Macintosh is an overcoat made from rubberised cotton, making it waterproof. It was a popular item in the UK at the time, suited to the wet climate before trench coats became common. Is it your Macintosh? Florence asked William. Yes, it is mine, he replied while smoothing some of the blood soaked fabric with his fingertips. As they waited for the police, Florence sat with William in the kitchen and asked if he wanted anything. With his head in his hands, he said he did not. He kept muttering to himself and occasionally ignored Florence as she spoke, as if she weren't even there. He then busied himself by stoking the kitchen hearth. By the time the police arrived at around 9.10pm, William and Florence were in the lobby by the front door. A constable knocked, but when Florence tried to open it, she found it wouldn't budge. Just like William had noticed earlier, the lock was different from those in her own home and after a brief struggle she said to William, you had better do it. He stepped forward, drew back the bolt and opened the door with ease. Come inside Officer, something terrible has happened, William announced. He led the way into the house where the officer saw Julia's body and asked, how did this happen? William recounted the events leading up to the grim discovery. He stated he had left home at 6:45pm with the Julia bidding him farewell. From the alley behind their house, William explained how he had spent nearly an hour wandering aimlessly around Mossley Hill, searching for a fictitious address given to him the previous night by a mysterious caller named RM Qualtra. He said he became uneasy when he was told that the address didn't exist and mindful of the recent spate of burglaries in Anfield, hurried back home. His key wouldn't work in the front door as it had been bolted from the inside. He tried the back door, which was closed but unbolted, but it wouldn't open on the first attempt. After alerting his neighbours, he tried again. I entered the house and this is what I found, william said, referring to his bludgeoned wife. After giving his statement, William sank into a chair in the kitchen. His complexion was sallow, his shoulders heaved and he sobbed intermittently as countless police officers crowded his house, examining and re examining every inch and item. William remarked Julia would have gone mad if she had seen all this. William accompanied officers as they inspected each room. In the kitchen, he pointed out the cash box atop the cabinet, suggesting some money had been taken. When asked where he had found the box that evening, William answered, where it is now. The investigators found it odd that the box remained neatly on the shelf with its lid closed. Why would a violent intruder bother to leave it so tidy? William merely shrugged, saying nothing. Upstairs in the main bedroom, William collected a small ornamental jar from a mantelpiece and pulled out several 1 pound notes, stating they didn't seem to have been touched by any intruders. The officers immediately ordered him to return the notes and jar back to their original position, cautioning him not to disturb anything else that might be important for their investigation. This was despite the police's own carelessness while searching the Wallace home, where key items were handled by multiple officers and then often returned to different locations or positions. There appears to have been no one here, William observed of the main bedroom. A bathroom appeared equally unremarkable. Though it and the main bedroom were the only upstairs rooms with lights on, the rest were in complete darkness. With torches in hand, the officers crossed a landing to a second room at the back, which William had converted into a hobby laboratory. It had all started with a microscope he had purchased for 80 pounds, which he considered money well spent as it had become his most prized possession. William's fascination with chemistry, botany and biology ran deep. He had first studied these subjects about 10 years earlier at Technical College, later serving five years as a part time assistant lecturer in chemical studies. It was his dream to make some sort of scientific discovery. His laboratory contained numerous tools that police noted could be used as weapons. As their torches swept over shelves stacked with bottles, chemicals and specimens, they asked William to check if anything was missing. Everything's alright here, he confirmed. They moved on to a third room at the front, used as a spare bedroom. The bed within was in disarray, with pillows on the floor and sheets and blankets pulled aside, exposing the mattress. On the bed lay two of Julia's handbags and three of her hats, though a wardrobe and drawers nearby were closed. When asked if the room had looked like this earlier, William replied, I cannot say, claiming he hadn't stepped foot in it for a fortnight. It was the only room in the house that was significantly disturbed, yet to police the bedding appeared deliberately flung rather than rifled through. Jewellery belonging to Julia was found in the drawers, further indicating that the room hadn't been truly ransacked. Did you see anyone hanging around the house or inside it when you returned? The police asked William. Shaking his head, he replied no. Neighbours John and Florence Johnston hadn't seen anything suspicious either. There were no signs of forced entry on any doors or windows, but William asserted that Julia wouldn't have let anyone inside unless she knew them personally. Nevertheless, police searched lodging houses all night, cafes, railway station waiting rooms and the homes of known criminals for anyone with bloodstains on their skin or clothing. The intensive search for a suspect continued through the night to no result. Foreign. Casefile will be back shortly. 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Thank you for listening to this episode's ads. By supporting our sponsors, you support Casefile to continue to deliver quality content. Back at Wolverton Street, a police officer pointed out the rumpled Macintosh around Julia Wallace's body. William explained that it was an old one of his before gesturing towards a hallstand where it usually hung. He had worn it that morning to shield himself from the rain, but left it at home during his lunch break as the weather cleared by the afternoon. Curiously, the Macintosh bore scorch marks near the right hem, which William insisted hadn't been present when he last wore it. Three horizontal burn marks on the front of Julia's blood stained skirt matched those on the coat, leading police to speculate that both had come into contact with the hot clays of the gas fire. This suggested that after being struck, Julia and the Macintosh had fallen against the fire her killer then dragged her body by the neck of her jumper, tearing it in the process. Given that her otherwise neat hairstyle was in disarray, she had also likely been dragged by her hair. How the Macintosh ended up with Julia remained a mystery. Since she had no plans to go out that evening, perhaps she had draped it over herself to ward off the chill when opening the door to her attacker. This would explain why identical scorch marks were found on her skirt. But police began to suspect the Macintosh played a crucial role in the crime, reasoning that no one could have committed such a brutal, messy murder without getting large amounts of blood on themselves. The killer must have worn the coat to protect themselves from the spatter, while perhaps it was scorched because they attempted to destroy it in the fire, but quickly realised that the resulting smoke, odour and flames might alert witnesses before they could escape. So they pulled it away. Although William had freely admitted to four different people that the coat was his, he suddenly clamped up when asked about it. Further, William was widely regarded as an intelligent man. To the police, it appeared that he realised that the Macintosh was a significant and potentially incriminating piece of evidence, and that speaking about it could put him at risk. Shortly before 10pm, a medical examiner named Professor John McFall arrived at Wolverton street to examine Julia's body in situ. From the blood spatter, he concluded that Julia had likely been sitting on the edge of a chair to the right of the fireplace, her head slightly forward and turned a little to the left, as if speaking to someone. The first and most severe blow caused the deep laceration in front of her left ear. After collapsing, McFall believed she had been struck three or four more times with terrific force, causing her scalp to burst open. Apart from these head injuries and a small recent bruise on the inside of her upper left arm, no other marks of violence were found on her body. Based on signs of rigor mortis in Julia's neck and the upper part of her left arm, along with the consistency of the blood pooled around her head, Professor McFall estimated she was killed at around 7:50pm. Before Professor McFall's arrival, the police had briefly inspected the upstairs bathroom and found nothing of interest. However, McFall spotted a small blood stain on the rim of the white porcelain toilet bowl. He suggested it had been overlooked due to the room's light casting a shadow over the bowl and because the police had only used handheld torches during their initial check. The stain, no larger than a small pea, was divided into two parts, a central circular clot and A faint streak extending towards the centre of the bowl. Tests confirmed it was human blood and not of menstrual origin. To McFall, the blood's presence indicated that after attacking Julia, her killer had cleaned themselves in the bathroom, inadvertently splattering blood into the nearby toilet. This was highly unusual. A random intruder would be expected to flee the crime scene immediately, maximising their chance of escape. Even if they intended to wash up, it would have made more sense to do so in the ground floor kitchen, where a quick exit out the back door was available, rather than in the upstairs bathroom. A cleaning brush in the bathroom was partially wet, but not bloody. Every other surface, including a white towel draped over the bathtub, was completely clear. The toilet, its waste pipes, the bathroom basin and the kitchen sink were removed and examined. Yet not even microscopic traces of blood were found. A thorough inspection of the Wallace house revealed no further evidence of blood beyond the parlour and bathroom. As the initial examination of the crime scene was winding down, William Wallace agreed to attend the police station to make a formal statement. By now, investigators were viewing William with suspicion. In their view, he seemed too quiet and too collected for a husband who had just been confronted with his wife's shocking murder. One detective remarked, I didn't see any sign of emotion in him at all. At one point, he smoked a cigarette in the parlour, casually leaning over the sideboard near Julia's body to flick ash into a bowl, which police noted as abnormal behaviour. At the station, he was asked again whether he had noticed anyone moving about the house when he returned from Menlove Gardens. This time, William said he thought someone might have been in the house because he couldn't open either the front or back doors. The implication was that the killer was still present when William arrived at the lock to down house. As he moved back and forth trying to get in, the killer fled through the back, leaving the door unlocked and allowing William to finally enter. As William was being questioned, Julia's body was removed from the Wallace home along with several items considered significant, including her handbags, the three coins found on the kitchen floor and the ornamental jar from the main bedroom that contained the one pound notes. A detective placed the folded notes in an envelope and took them to police headquarters where he counted them before handing them to a station officer for safekeeping. During this process, he noticed that the top note was smeared with blood along the left hand side. It appeared to have been caused by a blood stained finger or thumb being swiped across the surface. It seemed highly unlikely that after killing Julia, a random thief would have handled the notes, yet ultimately left them in the jar. Especially since money had been taken from the cash box in the kitchen. Why would a thief steal some money but leave the rest behind? Investigators considered the simplest explanation to be that William had transferred the blood onto the money while handling it in front of them, implying that his hands bore blood from the murder. However, it was also possible that William had picked it up from the blood stained Macintosh he had touched before the police arrived. Examination of his hands revealed no trace of blood, nor any sign that they had been recently washed. In fact, William's entire body and clothing bore no traces of blood, even when chemically tested. This didn't mean William could be ruled out as a suspect. It simply added credence to the police's theory that the killer used the Macintosh to protect themselves from the blood spatter. Yet cross contamination during the police search was also plausible. Seven hours had passed between the start of the investigation and the discovery of the bloodstained note, during which countless officers had handled items repeatedly without documenting or photographing them. In fact, the first photograph of Julia Wallace at the scene was taken only after the Macintosh had been moved away from her body. It was then left bunched up by her side, with no effort made to restore it to its original position. This made it hard to definitively prove whether she had been wearing it or if her killer had left it behind. The Wallaces kitchen had only been photographed after almost all of the evidence was already seized, including the broken cabinet, coins and cash box. Worse still, a detective who arrived at the scene intoxicated, went upstairs and flushed the toilet where the stray blood stain had been found. At the police station, William was asked, is there nothing more you'd like to tell us, Mr. Wallis? He shook his head. When asked if he was sure, he replied, what about? After a lengthy silence, the interview concluded and William was allowed to leave. He wished to return home, saying he didn't want to put anyone out by staying elsewhere that night. It was an absurd request, as his home was still an active crime scene. When the police refused, William grew irritated, but ultimately went to stay with family. As news of Julia Wallace's murder spread, so did word that her husband was the prime suspect. Yet nearly everyone interviewed by police described the couple as devoted partners who never quarrelled. Among the few rare negative opinions were a woman who disliked them both and a family doctor who sensed some callousness in their relationship. The overwhelming majority attested that the Wallace home was characterised by mutual trust and happiness. The only noteworthy events in the days leading up to the murder were that the Wallaces had been unwell and that there had been reports of a burglary two doors down. Otherwise, by all accounts, it was life was good. Visitors recalled the Wallaces joy in making music together. Julia at the piano and William on the violin. Julia was a devoted wife who took great pleasure in caring for her husband. Someone noted that Julia had concerns about William's makeshift laboratory, but not in the way one would expect. Julia thought the room was too cold and damp and she simply wanted her husband to be comfortable. John and Florence Johnston, who had lived next door to the Wallaces for 10 years, said they had never heard anything concerning coming from the household. The walls were so thin that they could hear Julia playing the piano clearly enough to know her entire repertoire almost by heart. They were confident that if the Wallaces had ever had even the slightest argument, they would have heard it. The Johnstones also had a different opinion of William's so called quiet and unemotional behaviour on the night of the murder. They had sat with him throughout the ordeal and had seen him break down in sobs, only to compose himself whenever the police approached so he could answer their questions as coherently as possible. Others who knew William said he had acted appropriately in the aftermath of Julia's death. A stoic introvert, he avoided displaying emotions publicly, which explained why he appeared calm or even indifferent around the police. Yet when among friends and family, William broke down in tears and expressed his heartbreak on the night he discovered Julia's body. He couldn't even bring himself to undress for bed, tearfully saying I shall miss her terribly. Meanwhile, two police officers were assigned to guard the Wallace home until the crime scene examination could resume. At daybreak, to pass the time, one officer browsed the kitchen shelves for a book. Most were scientific works, though a few literary classics were mixed in. At the end of a shelf, stacked atop one another, were four large diaries covering the years 1928 to 1931. Flipping through them, the officer realised they were the personal diaries of William Wallace. William was a meticulous record keeper, noting his height, weight, age and even his hat, collar and glove sizes in each entry. The diaries depicted a relatively uneventful life, interspersed with his personal reflections on a wide range of subjects, from philosophy to astronomy. Occasionally, he recorded minor differences of opinion with Julia. For example, her lack of enthusiasm for a radio play he had enjoyed, or his own indifference to religion despite her attending Christian services every Sunday. Yet the tone of these entries suggested they weren't serious disagreements, merely observations he deemed worth deliberating. On Saturday, January 7, 1928, three years before Julia's murder, William noted that he had fallen out with his wife. The cause she was buying too many newspapers. This was the only recorded instance of a conflict between them. The rest of his entries depicted a content, if mundane, married life. He expressed genuine concern for Julia on multiple occasions, such as when she arrived home late one evening after being delayed by a train derailment. He wrote, it was a relief to know she was safe and sound. Faria was getting apprehensive, fearing that she might have been run over by a motorcar or something. In one of the final entries before Julia's death, William described persuading her to take a night walk in a local park. He wrote in detailed prose about the wintery atmosphere, including the heavy fog and the frost covered trees, describing the scene as well, wonderfully beautiful. He noted that Julia was equally charmed. On Wednesday, January 21, 1931, the morning after Julia Wallace's murder, William attended the police station again to answer further questions. By this point, investigators believed they had a promising lead. Overnight, they had received an anonymous but unsubstantiated call accusing William of infidelity with the housemaid. William denied the claim, stating he had never employed a full time domestic helper. For the past nine months, however, a cleaner had been coming to help Julia with household chores on Wednesdays. The arrangement had been William's idea as Julia's strength had been waning. He claimed he didn't even know the cleaner's name. As she worked a half day while he was at work, the police tracked the woman down. Her name was Sarah Drabar. Sarah denied any romantic relationship with William and explained that she had not visited the Wallace home for two weeks due to her husband's recent death. During her previous visits, she said she cleaned the house thoroughly with Julia assisting as best she could. Because Sarah knew the Wallace home intimately, she was asked to inspect it for anything missing. She identified two items, a metal poker from the kitchen and a large piece of iron from the parlour where Julia had been killed. The iron was roughly a foot long and as thick as a candle, typically used to rake cigarette ends and spent matches from beneath the gas fire. Sarah recalled seeing it during her last visit, having used it to retrieve a screw that had rolled under the fireplace. Following this discovery, William Wallis was escorted back to his home to conduct his own search. He made no mention of the missing poker or iron piece. When asked directly, he suggested the poker might have been misplaced or discarded during the police search and claimed to know nothing about the iron. Medical examiner Professor John McFall, who had by then carried out Julia's autopsy, was asked whether the iron piece could have been the murder weapon. He had amended his previous findings, now stating that Julia had been struck upwards of 12 times instead of 4. After consideration, McFall concluded that given its size and shape, the piece of iron could have been capable of delivering the blows that killed Julia Wallace. However, Sarah Draper had described the object as heavily rusted. This raised doubts about whether it could have withstood 12 intense strikes to Julia's skull. Even if it had, no traces of rust were found in her wounds. Nevertheless, finding the iron piece became a top priority for the police. They reasoned that a random intruder would have no reason to remove or dispose of the weapon, whereas William Wallace might. The search focused on the areas William had travelled that night. From Wolverton street to Menlove Gardens. A nearby park frequently visited by William was highlighted as the most likely disposal site since it seemed unlikely he would have carried a large blood stained piece of iron any farther, even if concealed beneath his coat or up his sleeve. For days, scores of policemen, aided by sanitation department workers combed these areas, including bins, drains and sewers. Neither the iron piece, the kitchen poker, nor any other object that could plausibly serve as the murder weapon was found. As the police worked to locate and interview everyone William Wallace had come into contact with before the murder, one person remained elusive. Rmqualtra, the one individual who could make or break the case. Investigators were convinced of one thing. Whoever had placed the Quatra call to Cottles City Cafe was responsible for Julia Wallace's murder. According to William, it was Julia who had convinced him to meet Qualtra, as he was initially unsure about it. Based on the little information Qualtra had provided, it appeared he wanted to arrange an endowment policy for his daughter as some sort of coming of age gift. If so, successfully securing such a deal would have earned William a decent commission. Assuming William was innocent. The quatrecorps appeared designed to lure him from the house, leaving it vulnerable. The Wallaces were financially comfortable, but not wealthy. Julia was a modest woman who wore mostly handmade clothes and many of the artworks displayed in her home were watercolours she herself had painted or needlework she had crafted. Still, she was known to walk around with her handbag wide open. This absent minded habit might have caught the attention of an opportunistic thief who perceived the Wallace home as an easy target. Perhaps the intruder hadn't expected Julia to be home that evening. Or the decision to Kill her arose spontaneously, driven by panic or self preservation rather than premeditation. If Julia had been the intended target and someone close to her harboured a motive, the police were unable to uncover it. Fourteen families with the Cualtra surname were identified in the Liverpool area, yet none had any knowledge of the call that triggered the events leading to Julia Wallace's murder. The call assumed that Qualtra knew William would attend the chess club on Monday, January 19th. This was a crucial detail, since William didn't always go to club meetings and had been absent for about a month. On the night of the call, he had been booked for a tournament match that had been arranged two months earlier. The schedule had been publicly displayed on a notice board at the cafe. During that time. William was also recorded as playing on Mondays, roughly every fortnight, which could have led someone to safely assume he would attend the Monday night before the murder. Still, William insisted that no one could have known for certain that he would be there. He also said he almost didn't go, as he was still recovering from influenza. Was it merely a coincidence that everything aligned perfectly for Qualtra that evening? Or had it all been masterfully orchestrated? After checking with the local telephone Exchange, which in 1931 manually connected calls via switchboard operators, the Qualtra call was traced to a public telephone box in the Wallaces neighbourhood of Anfield, roughly a two minute walk from their home. The call had been made at 7.15pm, roughly 45 minutes before William appeared at the cafe, opening the possibility that he could have placed it himself and then hurried to appear unaware. Curiously, two calls had been made. The first reached the switchboard operators, but, due to an indiscernible error, failed to connect to Cottle City Cafe. Qualtra called back minutes later and this second call, placed at around 7:20, successfully went through. William provided a detailed timeline of his movements that evening, stating he left home at 7:15pm and walked to a tram that carried him to the cafe. This meant he was still at, or just leaving home when the first unsuccessful call from Qualtra was placed. The police made no effort to seek independent verification of this account. They did, however, interview those who had direct contact with Qualtra, including cafe waitress Gladys Harley and Samuel Beattie, captain of Liverpool's Central Chess Club. Gladys described the man as sounding quite ordinary and, aside from seeming elderly, had nothing further to add. He didn't sound nervous or agitated and his voice bore no unusual accent or impediment. Though he pronounced the word cafe in a slightly distinctive way, Samuel characterised the voice as strong and gruff, ready of utterance, confident, definite in knowing what to say, peremptory. Having known William Wallace personally for eight years, Samuel didn't believe it was him on the line. The police considered that William could have disguised his voice when making the call. When this possibility was put to Samuel Beattie, he responded. It would take a great stretch of the imagination. In an attempt to unsettle William and provoke him into incriminating himself, police divulged that the call from Qualtra had been traced to a public telephone box in Anfield and was placed around pm. William listened intently but remained composed. He seemed oblivious to the implications the police were drawing that he might have made the call himself. After this, William walked to a tram stop, where he unexpectedly encountered three members of Liverpool's Central Chess Club, including the club's Captain, Samuel Beatty. William appeared rattled, his lips quivered and he barely responded to their greetings. As a friend, Samuel cautioned William not to discuss his troubles, warning that anything he said might be misconstrued. William ignored the advice and asked if Samuel could remember anything about the call from Qualtra, specifically the time it was placed. Samuel guessed around 7pm or shortly after. William pressed for a more precise time, but Samuel apologised. I can't. Well, it's important to me, William insisted, persisting for a concrete time. Samuel remained unwilling to commit. After an awkward silence, William remarked. I've just left the police. They've cleared me. The other men expressed their relief and the conversation shifted to Julia's funeral. I don't want any fuss, william said of the service. The men then boarded a tram together before ultimately going their separate ways. Unbeknownst to William, an undercover police officer had followed him to the tram stopped and overheard the entire conversation. All of the men involved, including William, were interviewed and confirmed what had been said. Notably, William offered a cryptic remark about why he pressed Samuel Beatty for the time of the Qualtracall. I have an idea. We all have ideas. It was indiscreet of me. The tram stop conversation yielded what the police interpreted as three damning findings against William Wall. First, his insistence for a precise time of the quatracall appeared suspiciously defensive, as though he sensed danger. Second was his remark. I've just left the police. They've cleared me. The police had never suggested to William that he was a suspect, nor implied he faced any charges. Yet he was far from naive. Even without explicit warnings, he would have realised the extent of the investigation and that his story was under scrutiny. After all, he had Said to them, I have an idea. We all have ideas. Implying that people were drawing conclusions about him, William explained that his cleared me remark arose from his interpretation of the call's timing. After being told it had been traced to around 7pm, he was led to believe the police knew he couldn't have made it since he had left home at 7:15. The third red flag was William's remark. It was indiscreet of me. When referring to questioning Samuel about the call, William admitted that his line of questioning could appear suspicious, but and from that moment refrained from discussing the case in casual conversation. If William had been the killer, the Qualtracall offered a convenient alibi by giving him a reason to leave home on the evening of January 20th. It created a window in which the murder could plausibly have been carried out while he was ostensibly away. Despite the mounting suspicion against William, the scientific evidence seemed to actually detract from the case against him. Julia's time of death, as initially reported by Medical Examiner Professor John McFall in his first report, was 7.50pm, when William was seen wandering around Menlove Gardens. From a medical standpoint, this ruled him out as the killer. However, among the several alterations Professor McFall made to his initial report was a revision of Julia's estimated time of death. He had since changed it from 7:50 to 6:00pm this was hugely damning for William Wallace, suggesting that Julia had been murdered before his trip to Menlove Gardens. He insisted that Julia was alive when he left, stating they had eaten scones for dinner together beforehand. The kitchen's dirty plates and cutlery supported his account. Yet Professor McFall never examined Julia's stomach contents during the autopsy. Had he done so, the presence of the Sconz would have confirmed or contradicted William's story, providing the investigation with proof if he was lying or not. There were also gaps in William's movements before he reached the tram stop at the junction of Smithdown Road and Lodge Lane, where the first witnesses saw him that evening. The stop was roughly two miles from the Wallace home, a 40 minute walk at a moderate pace, leading police to suspect William disposed of the murder weapon. Along this stretch, he denied walking altogether, stating that he had reached Smithdown Road by boarding a tram near his home. Investigators were either unable or unwilling to find anyone who could corroborate this trip. However, they did locate someone who confirmed that William often walked long distances to save money on tram fares. Police tracked down witnesses who had encountered William Wallace from Smithdown Road onwards, including tram conductors, passersby and even the police constable he spoke to in Menlove Gardens and the manager of the news agency he visited, seeking directions. After reviewing their accounts, the police grew increasingly convinced that William had deliberately made the journey to Menlove Gardens to establish an alibi. Their suspicion rested on three key observations. William repeatedly reminded the tram conductors of his intention to go to Menlove Gardens east, almost as if imprinting the detail on their memory. He approached multiple people, including a police officer, even after being told the address didn't exist, seemingly to secure as many witnesses as possible. And when walking away from the officer, he deliberately mentioned the time as a quarter to wait and had the officer confirm it, as though trying to establish a precise record of his presence in the area. William explained that he only inquired about the time because the officer had given him directions to a post office and he believed the business would be closed by 8pm William also claimed that he had mostly followed the same route home, but no witnesses, including tram conductors or passengers, came forward to report having seen him. One woman claimed she had seen William in the alley by the back entry of Wolverton street, talking to another figure in a dark overcoat and cap, whom she described as being about 5 foot 8 inches tall and of stocky build. Maybe William didn't kill Julia but had conspired with someone else to carry out the crime. William denied this encounter, asserting that he hadn't spoken to a single person on his journey home, aside from the tram conductors from whom he purchased tickets. If the stocky person did indeed exist, they never came forward to rule themselves out of the investigation. To the police, it seemed logical that William's neighbours, the Johnstons, had been unwittingly incorporated into his plan. He likely timed his return to coincide with their departure, ensuring he would encounter them and use their presence to stage the discovery of his wife's body. However, the Johnstons made it clear that their decision to go out that evening was last minute. There was no way William could have known, as they hadn't discussed their plans with him beforehand. The notion that William had masterfully orchestrated the elaborate crime appealed to the image of him as a cunning, strategic chess player, intuitive, calculating and cautious. This perception ignored a simple fact about William. Despite being well educated and studious, he was notoriously bad at chess. He lost far more often than he won, and his victory on the night of the Qualtra call was unexpected and rare. Fellow club members described William as a chess vandalist, an enthusiastic duffer, and insisted he ought to be hanged for being such a bad Player. The police went to exhaustive lengths to implicate William Wallace, including compiling a detailed dossier on his life, repeatedly testing the timings of his Menlove Gardens journey for themselves and placing him under covert surveillance. Locals, eager to pin down a motive, speculated wildly. Some focused on William's profession as an insurance provider, imagining he might have killed Julia to claim a payout. Yet Julia's life was insured for only £20, just enough for funeral expenses. Her personal savings amounted to a meagre £90, while William had 152. Some entertained the idea that the murder might have been a mercy killing, reasoning that Julia's recent illness could have driven William to end her suffering. But if that had been the case, then others questioned why it was carried out with such brutality. William maintained a laboratory stocked with various chemicals and had extensive knowledge of poisons, providing far less violent alternatives to sympathetically end his wife's life. Others speculated darker possibilities. Perhaps Julia's illness was the result of his experiments. Maybe William harboured a hidden cruelty, taking perverse satisfaction in making her suffer before ultimately ending her life. But then why make the final act so violent that the police would inevitably get involved? Some went even further, believing that William's fascination with science might conceal an illicit opium den or perhaps a secret interest in black magic. A rumour spread that William had plotted with a lover to remove Julia so that they could finally be together. Another claimed that Julia was the one having an affair and had met her lover that night, which might explain the dishevelled bed in the spare room, only for William to discover it and lash out. One of the stranger theories suggested that William had grown too happy with Julia and killed her out of boredom with their contented life. As time wore on, the prospect of solving Julia Wallace's murder seemed increasingly remote. The case against William Wallace was built on speculation and conjecture and his story held firm, corroborated by the accounts of multiple witnesses. In the words of one investigator, the Wallace case was challenging and it only became more convoluted as news of the murder spread. When 14 year old Alan Close learned of the crime, he quickly realised he might be the missing link in determining William's guilt. Alan had been delivering milk along Wolverton street for nearly three years, including on the night of Tuesday, January 20th. Alan remembered arriving at the Wallace home at around 6:45pm, which was corroborated by the timing of the other deliveries he made that evening. Julia answered the door looking unwell. She mentioned having a cough before urging Alan to hurry along. A Jug of fresh milk in the Wallace kitchen confirmed that Alan Close had made a delivery that evening. When asked, William Wallace said he couldn't recall the delivery occurring before he left for Menlove Gardens, but acknowledged it might have happened while he was upstairs preparing to go out. Sightings of William on the trams to Menlove Gardens established that he could not have left the house any later than 6.49pm While this meant it was theoretically possible that William was home when Alan Close delivered the milk at 6:45, it left him with fewer than five minutes to carry out the brutal murder, clean himself, stage a burglary, dispose of the weapon and reach the Smithdown Road tram stop two miles away. Given William's distinctive appearance with his lean, tall frame, sprinting through Anfield to catch the tram would have been almost impossible for witnesses to overlook. This scenario was made even more questionable given that William was an ailing, slow moving 52 year old man recovering from the flu. Alan Close's account was relayed to Medical Examiner Professor John McFall, who was immediately dismissive and firmly maintained his latest conclusion that Julia had been killed around 6pm as detectives pondered this dilemma, a younger officer suggested expanding the investigation to other potential suspects. After a brief pause, a senior detective remarked, no, the milk boy must be mistaken. Alan Close was brought in for another police interview. Who conducted it, what was said and for how long remains unclear. Whatever happened, Alan emerged with a different story. He now claimed that he didn't see or speak to Julia Wallace on January 20, but only saw her arm collect the milk jugs he left on her doorstep. As expected, this dramatic revelation led to more wild speculation. Most of it centred on the possibility that the person Alan witnessed wasn't Julia at all. Maybe it was William in disguise, wearing his wife's clothes. But that wasn't all. Alan Close also admitted that his original time of 6.45pm was mistaken. He asserted that he had actually delivered the milk to the Wallace home at 6:31pm While this would have required him to move astonishingly fast while carrying a heavy crate of milk cans and bottles, it significantly strengthened the case against William Wallace. This adjustment expanded the available window for William to commit the murder, clean up, stage the scene and depart for Menlove Gardens from four to roughly 18 minutes. In the eyes of the police, that was more than sufficient and a warrant was promptly issued for his arrest.
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thank you for listening to this episode's ads. By supporting our sponsors, you support Casefile to continue to deliver quality content. William Wallace sat in silence as the police informed him he was under arrest for the wilful murder of his wife. After a moment he responded, what can I say in answer to a charge of which I am absolutely innocent? No reply was given. He repeated a similar statement when he first appeared in court, telling the judge he had nothing to say except that he was absolutely innocent. Lawyer Hector Munro, a fellow member of Liverpool's Central Chess Club, agreed to represent William in court. The prosecution's case relied on the abundance of circumstantial evidence. The crux of their case was the timing of the murder, specifically when Julia Wallace was last seen alive. It was therefore crucial for Hector to reaffirm Allan Close's original sighting at 6:45pm Alan had originally been encouraged to go to the police after admitting to several friends that he had seen Julia on the night of her murder. Hector spoke with those friends, four of whom independently confirmed that Alan had told them he saw Julia at 6:45. Another boy, who had also been delivering milk that evening, recalled having crossed paths with Alan at 6:40pm at which point he said he was heading to the Wallace home on Wolverton Street. Hector also located another two witnesses whose recollections supported Allen's original suspect statement. Taken together, these accounts strongly suggested that Alan hadn't arrived at the Wallace house as early as 6:31pm as his amended statement claimed. These witnesses provided statements to the police, but when Hector munro checked the 35 witnesses to be called by the prosecution for William Wallace's committal hearing. They were conspicuously absent. The second major pillar of the prosecution's case was the blood stain found in the Wallaces toilet bowl, which they argued supported the theory that William had washed himself immediately after killing Julia. In response, Hector Munro arranged a series of experiments, 118 in total, using drops of blood at varying stages of freshness. These were released onto porcelain from different heights to examine how fresh blood behaved in terms of consistency and moisture. To strengthen the credibility of the findings, a professor of pathology independently replicated the tests. The results were clear. The bloodstain in the Wallace's toilet bowl was not fresh blood. The bloodstain had originally been discovered by medical examiner Professor John McFall during his in situ examination of Julia's body. In some expert opinions, this was far from the only questionable aspect of his findings. They challenged the various times of death he supposedly drew from the presence of rigor mortis and the blood staining on the rug. Specifically, his most recent claim was that she had been killed at least three hours before her body was found. Neither could support his assertions with any real certainty given the many variables involved. Most notably, environmental factors such as room temperature can significantly accelerate or delay post mortem changes. Florence Johnston, the Wallace's neighbour, recalled touching Julia's hand as her body lay in the parlour. It felt warm and had only slightly cooled when she touched it again minutes later, suggesting that Julia had died recently. Crucially, Professor McFall had failed to record Julia's body temperature using a rectal thermometer, widely regarded by medico legal experts as the most reliable indicator of the time elapsed since death. Without this key measurement, any estimation of her time of death couldn't be considered precise. McFall himself didn't seem very confident in his own findings, given he had altered the estimated time of death without justification, but in a way that implicated William. Hector Munro questioned whether the issues he was uncovering in the case were merely a series of coincidental oversights. He found it far more likely that the police were bending the rules by disregarding established facts in their determination to secure a conviction. This was made especially clear to Hector during the committal hearing, where he noticed police witnesses were omitting key details that were favourable to William, most notably his meticulously kept personal diaries which portrayed his marriage to Julia in a positive light. When the defence read passages from the diary aloud in court, William's usually unshakeable composure gave way. He covered his eyes with his hands and began to tremble. Before the judge delivered his decision on whether William would stand trial for Julia's murder, he was asked if there was anything he wished to say. William stood and said quietly but firmly, I would like to say that my wife and I lived together on the very happiest terms during the period of some 18 years of our married life. Our relations were of complete confidence in and affection for each other. The suggestion that I murdered my wife is monstrous. That I should attack and kill her is to all who know me unthinkable. And the more so when it must be realised that I could not possibly obtain one advantage by committing such a deed. Nor so the police suggest that I gained any advantage. On the contrary, in actual fact, I have lost a devoted and loving comrade. My home life is completely broken up and everything that I hold dear has been ruthlessly parted and torn from me. I am now to face the torture of this nerve wracking ordeal. I protest once more that I am entirely innocent of this terrible crime. In his response, the judge insisted that he had followed the evidence very clearly before committing William Wallace to stand trial for murder. Hector Munro was prepared to defend William with a team convinced of his innocence. But a more immediate problem loomed. William couldn't afford the cost. Relief came from an unexpected source. The union of his employer of 16 years, the Prudential Assurance Company. In an unprecedented move, they agreed to fully fund William's defence on one condition. That a secret mock trial be held. Under this arrangement, Hector would present the case as he intended to at trial, after which union officials would cast anonymous votes. If an overwhelming majority supported the defence, the union would cover their cost. The votes were sorted into two piles. Guilty and not guilty. In the end, only one pile existed. Every single vote declared William not guilty. William's actual trial commenced in April 1931, two months after Julia's murder. The real jury deliberated for an hour before returning with their verdict. Guilty. The silence in the court following the verdict was eventually broken by someone at the back, whistling in surprise. Several gasps arose from elsewhere in the crowd and soon the entire courtroom erupted into a mix of chill cheers and shocked exclamations. The only two women on the jury began to cry. William Wallace was asked if he had anything to say. He paused for a moment before replying. I am not guilty. I cannot say anything else. The judge immediately pronounced, for the crime of murder, by the law of this country there is only one sentence. That sentence I now pass upon you. It is that you be taken from hence to a place of lawful execution and you be there hanged by the neck until you be dead, and that your body be afterwards buried within the precincts of the prison in which you shall last have been confined. May the Lord have mercy on your soul. William was led from the court, still projecting his calm and collected demeanour to those who believed in his innocence. It was this extraordinary composure that seemingly worked against him. His stoicism was interpreted in numerous negative ways, from overconfidence to callousness. It wasn't until he was taken into prison and made to strip naked to receive his grey uniform that he finally began to cry. He was led to the cell where he would remain until his untimely death, scheduled just two weeks later. William spent his final isolated days mostly confined to his small cell. He was allowed minor comforts, including a few cigarettes, a violin he couldn't bring himself to play and a chessboard. For the first time, he found himself winning games consistently. He believed this was only because the guards, who agreed to be his opponents, took pity on him. For an hour each day, he was permitted to stand alone in a small enclosed garden filled with irises and lupins. William wrote about the flowers during his imprisonment. They became an obsession with me, he noted. In fact, my sole remaining interest in life. The plants were in bud. Almost unceasingly, I propounded to myself the question would they be in flower before I died? It wasn't until the guilty verdict was handed down that public perception of William Wallace began to shift. As details of the trial spread, people started to realise just how much of the prosecution's case was circumstantial. Even those who remained convinced of William's guilt began to question how he could have been found guilty. In a letter to a Liverpool newspaper, a local. In my reading of the Wallace trial, I could not for the life of me discern in the evidence any what I might term major points against the accused man. I feel that in such a serious matter, especially when there is no apparent motive, circumstantial evidence should be much more convincing. It was this belief that the verdict was unreasonable and unsupported by the evidence that formed the basis of William Wallace's appeal. Yet his attorney, Hector Munro, remained quite quietly pessimistic. For the appeal to succeed, the judges would have to overturn the jury's decision, a feat that had never occurred since the Court of Criminal Appeal was established in 1907. There was no possibility of a reduced sentence, such as a conviction for manslaughter or a substitution to life imprisonment. Julia Wallace's murder had been far too cold blooded and brutal. The outcome was stark. Either William would be released as a free man or he would be condemned to die. The decision was left to three judges. Unlike the trial, which had descended into something of a mockery, with the jurors falling asleep, people shouting expletives, laughter at the word menstrual, a judge who did nothing to curb the misbehaviour, and allegations that jury members threatened others to vote guilty. The appeal judges approached their roles with the utmost seriousness and sincerity. They had thoroughly prepared and were well versed in the facts of the case. The hearing took place over two days, after which the judges retired to deliberate. When they returned, William appeared tired, sullenly and swayed slightly as he listened. He endured a 14 minute judgement speech, delivered slowly, with deliberate dramatic pauses that seemed designed to prolong it. Witnesses later described it as completely sadistic. We are not concerned here with suspicion, however grave, or with theories, however ingenious. The judge finally announced. The conclusion to which we have arrived is that the case against the appellant, which we have carefully and anxiously considered and discussed, was not proved with that certainty which is necessary in order to justify a verdict of guilty. The result is that this appeal will be allowed. With that, William Wallace walked from court a free man. It had cost £1,500 to save his life, over £130,000 in today's money. He wouldn't receive any form of monetary compensation, as the Home Secretary ruled that his case did not fall under the category of a miscarriage of justice, despite it being studied in law schools as a classic example. To this day, while William was ultimately relieved by the outcome, the ordeal had taken a severe toll on his body and health. He recalled the days leading up to his appeal as both the longest and shortest of his life, saying, I have no wish to remember them, but the agony of those days is impossible to forget. They were a nightmare. Reflecting on the moment he awaited the appeal judge's verdict, he added, nothing that ever happened to me in the hours of my blackest humiliation was ever half as hateful and horrible as the 14 minutes when I waited to hear the judge's decision. The result was not without controversy. Those convinced of William's guilt argued that the appeal didn't prove he wasn't a murderer. It only showed that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction. To them, the outcome reinforced the notion that William was cunning and diabolical. Some felt that if he had gotten away with murder once, what was to stop him from doing it again? Rumours continue to follow him, painting him as an adulterer, a sadist, even a mad scientist. Yet even after being advised against it, William chose to continue living in Liverpool Post Release, unwilling to let the opinions of others dictate his life. He even remained at his Wolverton street home and returned to his old job. But by then the townsfolk had decided to shun him. People retreated into their homes, clutched their children tightly or lowered their heads as he walked past. His chess club abandoned him. Neighbours avoided him and he received scathing letters. Children played cruel pranks on his home and adults were equally mean spirited, calling him Killy Willy and visiting the Wallace house in the middle of the night to taunt him with menacing chants. Julia. Julia. What's happened to Julia? Julia. She's all chopped up. Chop, chop, chop. Morbid onlookers pressed their faces to the parlour windows, attempted to break in through the kitchen door to test their own theories, and even damaged the property to take pieces as macabre souvenirs. William lasted a little over a month before moving away permanently. Seeking some measure of justice from his ordeal, he settled out of court with several printers and publishers who he claimed had exposed him to public scandal, hatred and contempt. Through their greatly prejudiced reporting. All parties agreed to a settlement of £200. William's life thereafter was, in his own words, one marked by apprehension, nervousness, depression, loneliness, grief and anguish. He continued to keep a personal diary, at one point writing, Julia, Julia, my dear, why were you taken from me? Why? Why should this have been so? It is a question to which I can get no answer. The same question plagued investigators when the inquiry into Julia Wallace's murder was reopened, opened. But the case went nowhere, ultimately being described as infinitely unbeatable and the perfect murder. While many still believed that William got away with it, others, especially those who knew him best, maintained that he was completely innocent. Whatever side of the argument one takes, the central question endured. If not William, then who? In the second statement William gave to police following his wife's murder, he was asked to list the names of men whom his wife would allow into their house without question. The first name he provided was Richard Parry, better known as Gordon, and the second was Joseph Marsden. William described both young men as friends of himself and Julia. Both had previously worked for the Prudential Assurance Company, where William had acted as their supervisor. He had allegedly caught each of them cooking the books, which was basically stealing, but there was no record of him reporting the issue. The men were nevertheless fired or left of their own accord. Parry and Marsden knew each other well. While working under William, they had entered the Wallace home and William had shown them the location of the cashbox where he stored the insurance payments, the very same spot it occupied on the night Julia was murdered. They were aware that Prudential's pay in day was Wednesday, meaning William's cash box typically contained the most money on a Tuesday night. It is important to note that the cash box would have held substantially more on the night of 20 Tuesday, January 20, 1931 had William not skipped collections that week due to illness. Gordon Parry himself admitted to police that he knew William was a regular at Cottles City Cafe, which Parry also attended every Thursday evening for a drama club. During their investigation into various Qualtres living in Liverpool, the police encountered an RJ Qualtrain who had been a client of Joseph Marsden's. Marsden's alibi for the night of the murder was that he was home in bed with the flu. Gordon Parry claimed he spent the night with others who could only loosely place him at their home between 7:30 and 8:30pm that night. He also took his car to a garage for cleaning where a witness reportedly saw a blood stained glove inside the vehicle. Regarding the night of the Qualtra phone call, Parry asserted that he had spent the day and evening with his girlfriend Lily. However, both Lily and her mother stated that he didn't arrive at her House until 7:35pm Partway through a piano lesson Lily was giving. He then left on his own before returning much later. The evidence against Gordon Perry and Joseph Marsden was largely suppressed by the police during the original investigation. Investigation the spotlight on both men emerged decades after the crime as armchair sleuths and authors took interest in the puzzling case. One witness came forward claiming to have confronted Gordon Parry on his doorstep in 1966, 35 years after Julia's murder. Parry allegedly displayed an astonishingly detailed knowledge of the crime and was aware of the deaths of several obscure witnesses connected to it. He also boasted that he would never speak about it even if offered a large sum of money. Both Parry and Marsden died without ever admitting any involvement in the crime. The Wallace case, though seemingly straightforward, is often compared to a real life Agatha Christie novel. A whodunit murder mystery featuring intricate puzzles, a closed circle of suspects and detectives who solve crime using psychology rather than forensics. The police's theory of how the crime occurred, portraying a suited gentleman turned sadistic killer wielding a blunt instrument and wearing a waterproof coat to avoid getting soaked in blood, evokes imagery reminiscent of Patrick Bateman, the protagonist of Brad Easton Ellis Controversial 1991 cult classic horror novel American Psycho, which some believe might have been inspired by the Wallace murder. To this day, the case is still scrutinised in search of answers, with numerous new theories put forward, such as Julia harbouring a secret double life or the possibility that the Quatre calls was a red herring. Perhaps it was simply a prank call and William did in fact murder Julia. William then leveraged the existence of the call to his advantage, complicating what might otherwise have been a relatively straightforward case of domestic homicide. On Saturday, February 25, 1933, just over two years after Julia Wallace was murdered, William Wallace died from the kidney disease that had troubled him for most of his life. His last words, spoken to his nephew before slipping into the coma from which he never awoke, were do good with your life. William was buried in the same plot as Julia, with their shared headstone describing her as his beloved wife. It is said that in Anfield Cemetery, Qualtra's two victims share a common grave. In the words of English crime novelist and playwright Dorothy Sayers, the Wallace murder had no key move and ended, in fact, in stalemate. SA.
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Podcast: Casefile True Crime
Episode: Case 342: Julia Wallace
Date: June 13, 2026
This episode unpacks one of the most enigmatic murder cases in British history: the 1931 killing of Julia Wallace in Liverpool. The story unfolds as a seemingly classic locked-room mystery with a convoluted web of clues, suspects, police missteps, and an infamous trial. The central question persists to this day: Did William Wallace, a reserved insurance agent and avid chess player, murder his wife or was he a hapless pawn in a murder orchestrated by someone else? The case explores issues of evidence, the reliability of memory, the limitations of forensic science of the time, and the compounding effects of a biased investigation—all with the chilling refrain that sometimes fact is scarier than fiction.
Quote [08:45, William Wallace]: “Qualtrough? Qualtrough? Who is Qualtrough?”
Quote [46:15, William Wallace]: “They’ve finished her.”
Quote [47:00, William Wallace, at the scene of the body]: “I wonder what they have used… whatever have they used?”
Quote [1:21:00, William Wallace]: “What can I say in answer to a charge of which I am absolutely innocent?”
Quote [1:44:30, William Wallace – Defense Statement]:
“Our relations were of complete confidence in and affection for each other. The suggestion that I murdered my wife is monstrous... I protest once more that I am entirely innocent of this terrible crime.”
Quote [2:12:50, William Wallace]:
“Julia, Julia, my dear, why were you taken from me? Why?... It is a question to which I can get no answer.”
Quote [2:16:30, Dorothy Sayers, paraphrased]: “The Wallace murder had no key move and ended, in fact, in stalemate.”
Casefile’s signature restrained, factual narration deepens the sense of mystery and unease, underlining the humanity of all involved. The tone remains somber, reflective, and laced with empathy—leaving the listener unsettled by the lack of resolution, and aware of the far-reaching impact of one “perfect” murder on an entire community.
Julia Wallace’s murder remains “infinitely unbeatable and the perfect murder,” a haunting puzzle at the intersection of possibility, probability, and uncertainty. The episode ends as it began: with the central question unsolved—if not William Wallace, then who? The mystery lingers, unresolved, echoing through the decades.