Morbid - Episode 222: The Mysterious Murder of Julia Wallace Part 1

Episode Date: April 5, 2021

It’s Alaina-centric and it’s old timey!! We’re heading back to England in the 1930’s. William Herbert Wallace is quite a character, and to be honest so is his wife Julia. When Julia t...urns up dead in their home, people start taking a closer look at Wallace and his idiosyncratic tendencies. Why doesn’t he seem to be emotional, why is he just petting the cat so nonchalantly, what is this dude's deal? Is he telling the truth about not being involved? Just when you think you know, another shady character steps on the scene!!  HelloFresh: Get twelve free meals—including free shipping!—when you use code morbid12 at HelloFresh.com/morbid12. FirstLeaf: Join today and you’ll get 6 bottles of wine for $29.95 and free shipping! Just go to TRYFirstleaf.com/morbid. Candid Co: Right now, you can save seventy-five dollars on Candid’s starter kit. Go to CandidCO.com/morbid and use code morbid. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:52 That's W-O-N-D-E-R-Y-P-O-D. Audible.com slash wonderypod or text wonderypod to 500-500 to try audible for free for 30 days. Angie's list is now Angie, and we've heard a lot of theories about why. I thought it was an eco-move. For your worst, guess paper. It was so you could say it faster. No way. It's to be more iconic.
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Starting point is 00:01:28 That's ANGI, or download the app today. Hey, weirdos. I'm Elena. I'm Ash. And this is morbid. And we're sitting closer to each other. We are. I'm like, hey, Leye. Don't touch me.
Starting point is 00:02:08 We can high five if we want. Here you go. We can fist bump. Oh, no, you have a big ring. Oh, I have a big ring. Sorry. There we go. Big cocktail ring was about to fuck up my knuckles.
Starting point is 00:02:17 Usually I have rings on everything you're doing. I know. I just have that one ring that I've got for like, it's one of those rings that I saw. I saw on like TikTok. Wait, is it one of them that like coming to candle? No, it didn't come in a candle, but I think it's like, jamandier something like that.
Starting point is 00:02:33 That's fine, it's cool. They have cute rings and they're like pretty cheap. That's fine. It didn't turn my finger green. So. I got us a present that is a ring, but I'm not gonna tell you what kind it is. Oh, I'm excited.
Starting point is 00:02:42 I got it on Etsy. Did you get one for everyone else? No. What? Sorry, guys. Oh. I was like, what? No.
Starting point is 00:02:53 No. It was like, who's everyone? All of them. Yeah, guys, check your mouth. I got you a ring. I got you a ring. You guys want to marry me? Who doesn't?
Starting point is 00:03:01 I, I, I, probably, probably someone. I probably someone probably someone. Probably someone for my past. That was like, don't dodge that bullet. Oh yeah, trust me, I got a couple of those two. To like, Welp. Guys, it's, because we always have to tell you the time of the day, more of it at night.
Starting point is 00:03:18 If you couldn't tell, you can always tell the difference between the morning. Late night, nationally, my voice sounds a little different in the morning. Yeah, it's, you know, it's the end tell the difference. The three of us are getting more. The three of us are getting more. My voice sounds a little different in the morning. Yeah, it's, you know, it's the end of the week. We are catching up with ourselves. We're getting ahead of ourselves a little bit this coming week and we're excited about it.
Starting point is 00:03:35 So we won't be like, we're just crambling to get episodes out in time. So it's getting ready. It's going to be great, guys. You're ready. You're going to see a lot more of us. Yeah, we're feeling good. Not going anywhere. So this was originally going to be a one part,
Starting point is 00:03:50 and I was like, oh, fun, fun case, like cool. I'm gonna do that for one episode. Okay. And then I did what I do, and I looked, and I was like, oh, it's probably gonna be eight parts. I can make this an entire season. So season 82 of morbid. So this story is often referred to as the impossible murder.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Oh, sorry, I had to clear my throat, let me. Clea-mouth, bro. You don't even know how excited you just made me. Yeah, so this is the impossible murder. It's been covered by a ton of like TV shows and movies and people have been having and hawing and trying to figure this mystery out for decades. That's weird, because I never heard of it.
Starting point is 00:04:34 For decades, I have heard of it, but I never looked super into it. Now that I have them, I'm like, I get it. Okay, I totally get it. All right, I don't get what happened. No, but I get it. I get the fascination What are you looking at? I was trying to figure out which knob was mine because I was gonna turn down my headphones without asking you to
Starting point is 00:04:50 I was like she keeps like What is crawling up the side of my chair that you're looking at? Don't want to tell me no I was actually just trying not to interrupt the podcast ask you an annoying question, but I guess you're gonna make me Can you tear my headphones down? Just a smidgen. Just a smidgen. Sometimes? That's so much better.
Starting point is 00:05:12 Sometimes I ask Alina to turn down my headphones and she pretends that she does and she does it and I'll go, that's better. And she's like, I didn't change that. I do that so much, but you didn't. But I did do it this time. You saw that. That's like so much better. Okay. Cool. We I did do it this time. You saw that. Yeah, right. That's like so much better.
Starting point is 00:05:26 Okay, cool. We were like screaming in my ears. Here you are, guys. Sorry to interrupt. So, this takes place in England. So, hello, England. Hello! Oh, boy.
Starting point is 00:05:35 That wasn't me. I just want you to know that. I should really take it back. So, again, it's a weird night. It's Easter. It's Easter. I didn't even, oh, I had a brownie. No, no, like I was saying, I was gonna say,
Starting point is 00:05:55 like I didn't need a lot of candy. Like I don't know why I'm so hyper. And then I was like, oh, I had a brownie. I didn't know what that was. I was like, what is the connection? And like a regular brownie before anybody tweets up me. Yeah, just a regular brownie. Yeah, there's kids.
Starting point is 00:06:07 There's kids, yes, fucking kids, man. All right, so we're gonna talk about, are we? We're gonna talk about a man named William Herbert Wallace. Yes, William Wallace. I was just saying William Wallace from Brave Hat, Brave Hat, but a William Wallace. William Herbert Wallace. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:06:24 And he was 52 years old. All right. He was born off. He felt like I accused you. He was like 52 years old. You're like, all right. I shit. I believe you would be podcasted right now. I feel like, you know, with this in the last list in her tails, I feel like we're killing it. All right. I always worry that like my giggling is gonna win away. I like your giggling. Oh my god. Thanks mom
Starting point is 00:06:49 You're welcome. So he was born on August 29th 1878. Okay, he lived in Anfield or Anfields. Uh-oh. Oh no Pause yeah Anfield Anfield Wow, it's like, um, like, jeeps took over your body. It did ask jeez. You know, I think somebody like described it in more detail in Twitter and I was like, I actually think I do remember that.
Starting point is 00:07:14 I don't know. All right. Maybe I don't. I don't know. So will you? All right. So will you? So anfield. Yeah. I didn't just forget that. Oh, honestly, I have no recollection. Anne failed.
Starting point is 00:07:28 All right, he was a prudential assurance company employee. So he sold insurance. Okay. He had done a ton of jobs growing up and he had actually landed this job because his dad got him this job. It wasn't what he really wanted to do. But he did it. And he did it well, and it did him well.
Starting point is 00:07:48 You know, that sounds dirty, but it wasn't. It did him well. It just didn't really sound dirty. It's maybe I just painted that way. But William was known to dress like very fancy. Well, yeah, you're selling insurance. You got to look the part of insurance. Well, and he went with. You got to look the part of insurance. Well, and he kind of like, he went with like the old fashioned look.
Starting point is 00:08:07 Like he liked to have a bowler hat. He had like the raglan shirt. And he was always dressed in a dapper, dapper blazer. Oh, I love a dapper, dapper blazer. Yeah, and I imagine he always had like a pocket watch somewhere. Or like even just like a flowered pocket square. Yeah, very very Carson Cressley. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:08:28 That's exactly how I would describe it. I mean, he was also he was tall, he was slim. And he looked kind of like what we all think Jack the Ripper looks like almost. Do you have a moustache? He did he had a moustache. And that's not a commentary on whether he's guilty of this crime or not But he looks like Jack the Ripper, but I'm just saying okay But he loved to play the violin and he would play the violin while his wife Julia played the piano bitch
Starting point is 00:08:54 Yeah, love seems adorable to me. I'm just saying so I want to say so scenic But that's not the right thing to say I meant wholesome so scen So scenic. So scenic. So awesome. And they would often have people over to their home, their flat in England. And they would play together. They would do at music for them. Yeah, but all will show. A little number. A little folk number.
Starting point is 00:09:16 Unfortunately, he was sick a lot. He had a lot of kidney issues. At one point, he had gone on a business trip. I believe to India. And while he was there, he ended up having like severe kidney issues. At one point, he had gone on a business trip, I believed to India, and while he was there, he ended up having like severe kidney issues. Oh, no. He ended up having one kidney removed, and the other kidney like never really picked up the slack.
Starting point is 00:09:35 So he had a lot of issues throughout his life with the kidneys. Kidney issues, I feel like must hurt a lot, because like you've had a kidney infection. Oh my God. Kidney infections hurt so bad. And they're real bad. They make you so sick.
Starting point is 00:09:48 Oh, I feel for them. So he was married to a woman named Julia. Yes. Julia's maiden name was Dennis. Julia Dennis. She was born April 28th, 1861. Now, this would remember, he was 52. This would make her 69 when she died. The only reason I
Starting point is 00:10:08 point that out is because her grave stone says that she was 52 when she died. Oh that's weird. Even weirder, she married William in 1914 and the marriage certificate says she was 37, but she was 53 in real life. Oh, so her grave zone shows her as being one year younger than she was when she actually married William. She was lying about 17 years. What? She was literally saying that she was 17 years younger
Starting point is 00:10:39 than she actually was. Oh, what a bad bitch. And there's like so many at any time I've read anything, people are like, I cannot figure out why. Or if she didn't want to age. Or if William knew, which it doesn't seem like he did because on his on her gravestone, she would have had to say the great thing.
Starting point is 00:10:57 She wrote that she was 37 when they got married and she was 52. She was 52 when they got married. Yeah, wow. 17 years older than what she was 52. She was 52 and they got married. Yeah, wow. 17 years older than when she was actually saying she was. She must have looked great. It's bonkers to me. Botox before Botox.
Starting point is 00:11:15 Botox before Botox. Well, the thing was, she was having a lot of ailments as well. Like she was always sick as well. Because she was old. Because she was 17 years older than you. Yeah. But it's just really weird. It's, I don't understand it.
Starting point is 00:11:29 The thing is, like, William was an understanding why she was sick all the time. Because he didn't know that she was old. Well, that's why I assume he did. He didn't know her really. Yeah. And that sounds like to me. That's a pretty big secret to hide from your literal partner for life. Maybe she thought at some point
Starting point is 00:11:45 she would start like Benjamin buttoning it. Maybe. She didn't, unfortunately. Maybe she thought that she was gonna find the fountain of youth like in Tucker lasting. There you go. Deep cut. Maybe.
Starting point is 00:11:54 I think that's what she was thinking. You can't rule it out. You don't mean 30. You don't know? Yeah. Well, either way, she was described as gentle, shy at times, brilliant, artistic, well-kept. She was also raised pretty well to do, and it showed.
Starting point is 00:12:11 They lived a modest life, but they had money. They had enough money. They were definitely comfortable. In a time when a lot of people were not comfortable, like, hello, great depression. Did they not live beyond their means? I don't think they did. It didn't seem like they did. It's the best thing you can do.
Starting point is 00:12:28 And she dressed very premon proper like her husband, and she also dressed old-fashioned, like her husband, kind of eccentric. Well, also, like, she was old. Well, I was just gonna say, but was it really old-fashioned? It was kind of from her era, to be real. So I think, like, people were like,
Starting point is 00:12:44 wow, you're dressed in so much older for your age? And she's like, oh, she's like, I'm so stupid. I'm almost two decades older than I'm saying I am. You're much getting away with that. Like it's one thing to be like, oh, that would be like me. No, I'm not even shitting you right now. That would be like me saying I was four years old right now.
Starting point is 00:13:00 Oh, I am four. Like that would be a problem. I'd be the orphan. You know, do I do know? I would be like you saying that you were 14. Yeah, that was quick as well. That was, I was like, I'm not doing that. I know you'd be 15 actually, so that works.
Starting point is 00:13:21 But honestly, it makes sense if I was like, you know, hey, I'm 30. Yeah, that makes sense. Honestly, you could probably trick someone to think that you were 15. No, the more I think about it, I don't think. Well, there's been times where you get caught. I get carted and you don't. Or the other way around.
Starting point is 00:13:41 No, I get carted and you don't. But that would mean that you're like young. Looking and I'm not. If you're getting carted, that would be the other way around. I was real. I was like, no. You were so confident. I said what I said. You were so confident.
Starting point is 00:13:58 I was like, no. Do I let this go? Or do I fight to the death? Finish it, bully us? Oh, either way. But Julia was, I don't know what it is. You look at a picture of her and you get it, Julia. Yeah, was she pretty?
Starting point is 00:14:18 She was and she was eccentric. She just didn't give a fuck when it came to that. I'm obsessed with Julia. Julia, with her. She just like it didn't give a fuck when it came to that. I'm obsessed with Julia. Julia. With her. She knew several languages. She was a painter. She loved literature. Music, obviously her and her hubby there. She just liked to learn and experience things. That's awesome. But she was also kind of shy. So she didn't like like social things kind of freaked her out a little bit, which like I get it. She kind of sounds a lot like you other than lying about her age. Well Julia, you would. Well, Julia, you and me.
Starting point is 00:14:45 Well, you don't dress old either. I try not to. I think she just sounded smart, so I was thinking you're smart. Oh, thank you. Yeah, yeah. She sounded pretty cool, though, to be honest. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:53 Like you. Like I said, shit, where is definitely rough at this time because you know, like that large depression, the great one, but that really great one. Massive depression. But again, he had a good job as an insurance salesman and together they had their flat I think it was like a three-bedroom flat like it was a nice it was a nice place Like she had a room in the flat that was like just for her like handbags and hats goals
Starting point is 00:15:17 Yeah, I was like wow, that's great. She had a walk-in closet before they were walking in closets There you go now what's weird is the conflicting ideas of what people say about them as a married couple. Okay. Now some people will say that they were very happy. They seemed very normal together as a couple. Others describe their marriage as like kind of cold. Haters. And tension-filled.
Starting point is 00:15:40 That's what I'm saying. It's weird. So the age thing kind of is like weird later on too, because like if you're lying about 17 years, what else are you lying about? Oh yeah. That's a big lie. I just, I wanna know why she was lying.
Starting point is 00:15:55 And no one can figure it out. Do you think it's because she loved him so much and she didn't think that he would want to marry an older woman? Which like, that's sad. Yeah. But then there were people that later said that it seemed like she thought she, like,
Starting point is 00:16:08 kind of married down. Well, she was, because she was like, well, to do. Yeah. So I think, I don't know. Well, maybe she, maybe it was like what I said, like she lied, because she really wanted to marry him. And then maybe she realized that it wasn't what she wanted, but you couldn't get to more respect them.
Starting point is 00:16:23 Maybe. So maybe the marriage and the love fizzled out. Because like maybe people were lying. Well, people around them would say different things, but like their neighbors, the Johnson's, who figure very heavily into this story. Okay. They were around them all the time,
Starting point is 00:16:37 and they said like they were very affectionate with each other, like a normal affectionate couple, like not over the top, but by no means were they cold with one another. Well, I believe the Johnson's. I believe the Johnson's to be honest. I don't know on the top, but by no means were they cold with one another. Well, I believe the Johnson's. I believe the Johnson's to be honest. I don't know on what basis, but I believe them. But with the age thing and how she lied about that, later we will see that William was asked
Starting point is 00:16:54 whether his wife had her own money stashed in the house at all or like, do you know if she had her own money? And he said he didn't know if she had her own money. And if she did, he didn't know where it was. It was like, it's a weird question. Huh. But I was like, that's weird that like, you wouldn't know if she had her own money.
Starting point is 00:17:11 You know what I mean? Because like back then, it's not like she was like going off to work, you know what I mean? Right. You don't know if she did, like that to me says there was more secrets in this marriage than, or they were letting on.
Starting point is 00:17:21 Well unless they were like, oh did she like hide money and he was like, I don't know, I don't think so. And he's like, I don't know. Like, maybe. Maybe he's like, I never thought about it. Like, I don't know. It just seems like it was like one of those things that they are definitely.
Starting point is 00:17:34 It's weird. Hiding more from each other than a normal, or like a seemingly normal couple, you know what I mean? Yeah, it's strange. Just strange. And especially now, after you know you have the case, you're like, that's a little weird. Okay.
Starting point is 00:17:46 So one other thing that was just interesting to me is like they're like me and John because she was five two and he was six two. Oh shit. So she was very short and he was very tall. I like that you gave yourself a couple extra inches there. I gave me a couple of extra inches and I took an inch away from him.
Starting point is 00:18:00 Because John is six three and I 5'1 and a half. You're 5. So they would also, like I said, they were both pretty sickly. Yeah. But what was funny is people would say that they would like switch off ailments. Like, one of them was always sick. I think that's like a phenomenon. Well, this was more... This wasn't one of those things like, oh, like, I get the cold
Starting point is 00:18:24 and then he gets the cold. Well, I just't one of those things, like, oh, I get the cold and then he gets the cold. It was like, one of them would be down and out sick and bed for a week and then when that one was better, immediately she would get sick and down and out and that was something different. Yeah, that's weird. And what people said was it wasn't one of this, like, oh, funny things, it was like a competition almost.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Like, I'm sicker than you. Do you think one of them had like, munchowsons? I don't think so. I mean because William was definitely sickly. Like he had sick. The kidneys. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Like the kidney thing really probably would take him on. She was like competing. I think she was actually what we will find out later. She had a lot more ailments than people like real ailments than people were letting on too. All right. But it's just people were
Starting point is 00:19:02 saying like they were just always sick and it seemed like they were always like People kept describing it as a tit for tat with sicknesses Which is very weird. Yeah, and actually William kept a diary Which figures heavily into the court case later? Oh fun they really go into it and he would say sometimes like he was kind of annoyed with how she was always sick Well because even when you're getting over, like even when he wasn't sick anymore and it was her turn, he was probably still getting over it.
Starting point is 00:19:29 So it's kind of like, I don't want to fucking take care of you right now. And it just is one of those things where you're like, can you just like, give me a minute. Just give me a minute. Just let me have my set of time. No, I have to care of you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:38 But they did have a housekeeper that came by the house every Wednesday, her name was Sarah. All right. She commented later that it did seem like William was not happy, like I said, being in the Sharon Salisman. He felt kind of saddled with the gig, and he really, he was making money out of it. It was fine. It was good work. But he really loved and wanted to pursue science. Oh. And we'll see that later. I'll explain it. And he couldn't, and I think it was kind of depressing him.
Starting point is 00:20:07 Like he did say in his diary that, you know, they poured over that he said he would feel depressed at times and down and like not happy with his life. But then he would, you know, gush about his wife sometimes. He would talk about how much he loved her cared for her. And then other times he would be like, she's really annoying and sick all the time. It's kind of like, so it's like a normal stream of consciousness, I think, for somebody going through a lot of shit. Yeah. Because it's not like this is like a very constant,
Starting point is 00:20:34 economical, you know, like there's no, there's nothing that's comfortable right now. No. Because everything was in flux. So it's not only is like the economy in flux, but like their health is in flux. Maybe their love situation is in flux. So it's not only is like the economy in flux, but like their health is in flux. Maybe their love situation is in flux. Yeah, it just seems like there's a lot going on
Starting point is 00:20:50 and he's not happy about his job, but he still has a job. So I'm sure he really feels good days. He feels bad days. Yeah, so it sucks. Yeah, so that's who they are as people. All right, let's take you to January 19th, 1931. All right, let's go. Now, we're gonna take you to the Central Chess Club, that city cafe on North John Street.
Starting point is 00:21:11 Chess is kind of a big thing in this case, which is interesting. Weird. What makes a person a murderer? Are they born to kill? Or are they made to kill? I'm Candice DeLong and on my podcast Killer Psychie Daily, which you can find exclusively on Amazon Music. I share a quick 10-minute run down every weekday on the motivations and behaviors of the criminal masterminds you read about in the news. I have decades of experience as a psychiatric nurse, FBI agent, and a criminal profiler.
Starting point is 00:21:46 On Killer Psychie Daily, I'll give you my expert perspective on cases like the mysterious New York City drugings, Raking Down Lori Valow, a.k.a. Mommy Doom stays motives, and what drove Caitlin Armstrong to murder? I'll also bring on expert guests who add even more insight into these criminal minds. I promise you won't regret adding these 10 minutes to your morning routine. Hey, prime members, listen to the Amazon Music exclusive podcast Killer Psychie Daily in the Amazon Music app. Download the app today. Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wondery's podcast American scandal. We bring to life some
Starting point is 00:22:23 of the biggest controversies in U.S. history, presidential lies, environmental disasters, corporate fraud. In our newest series, we look at the Kids for Cash scandal, a story about corruption inside America's system of juvenile justice. In Northeastern Pennsylvania, residents had begun noticing an alarming trend. Children were being sent away to jail in high numbers, and often for committing only minor offenses. The FBI began looking at two local judges, and when the full picture emerged, it made national headlines. The judges were earning a fortune, carrying out a brazen criminal scheme, one that would shatter the lives of countless
Starting point is 00:23:00 children, and force a heated debate about punishment, an America's criminal justice system. Follow American scandal wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad free on the Amazon Music or Wonder App. So William did join a chess club. He was part of a chess club for a while. And it was literally like they would meet like two times a week. And they would all like play against each other. You had like matches, they would have tournaments, if you had a thing and it, you know, it keeps your mind working. It's cool.
Starting point is 00:23:30 Do you know what a play chest? I don't. I used to know very loosely how to play chest. I have not even the biggest. I've always wanted to sit down and really learn chest. Maybe we should do that. We should do it together. Yeah. I feel like it's such a good mind work out.
Starting point is 00:23:47 I just, I don't even give a fuck about that. I just want to say, checkmate. And like, and then I want to- I don't even want to play. I just want to say checkmate. No, I want to play and I want to throw the board when I win at the end. I love that, like overturn it.
Starting point is 00:24:00 Yes. Flip it up. Like Teresa. I would love to get a really beautiful chess set. Oh, yes. But I don't want to be one of those people that has one and doesn't know how to play chest. I need to know how to play chest first.
Starting point is 00:24:10 Yeah, that'd be stupid. I want to earn my beautiful chest set. Oh, and you could get really like, like, like, um, like, um, pieces. Really, um, like cool, gothic. Yeah, like a gothic castle chest set. Yes. That's all I want to write. Or we could get one of those giant ones
Starting point is 00:24:26 like in Harry Potter and we could explode at the end if we lost and There we are as people That right there. Yeah, I love it. Yeah, that's why I love you. I love you. I love you So captain Samuel Beady that guy he is the guy that he would run the chess club. He sounds like he would. Yeah, and he was a cool guy. He's the guy that originally gets a phone message this night, January 19, 1931, which is four William Wallace at the chess club before he arrived, and it set this whole thing
Starting point is 00:25:03 into motion. All right, so we're going to see Sam. Now Samuel Beatty, according to the killing of Julia Wallace by Jonathan Goodman, yes she dies, boy. The killing of Julia Wallace is a great book. They go into like massive detail about every single second of this case and I could not put it down. So I highly recommend it. Kendall. It is on Kendall. All right. So go get it. All right.
Starting point is 00:25:30 So they said that Beatty would come straight from work and go to the cafe on Mondays and Thursdays to set the chess club up. He knew William Wallace for about eight years. They were very friendly. They played chess together a lot. You know, all that fun stuff. That's a chess club, whoa.
Starting point is 00:25:46 He said he was a very nice man. Like very nice. At most, I could not find anybody that was like William Wallace was a dick or anything less than like he was so pleasant. He doesn't really sound like a dick. He seemed like a nice guy. Yeah. He did say that he could be a little flaky. And he said because he was sick a lot. Same. and he said because he was sick a lot Same. Well, he said he's sick a lot so he doesn't show up for matches. He's at chess club one week He's not there for three years. That's not flaky. That's just somebody going through illness Yeah, and I think he also was just like he just wouldn't show up sometime like he was just kind of like whatever
Starting point is 00:26:18 I feel that so hard, but he didn't hold it against him But he said he did only show up here and there for chess club He was definitely not like a regularly attending person. He hadn't been there since December at this point in January 19th. So he had once told them that he just didn't like leaving his wife at home at night alone, bitch.
Starting point is 00:26:37 Which, like my heart. The deeper we're getting into this, this is starting to sound familiar to me. Is it? Yeah, look at that. Well, around 7.20pm on January 19th, the waitress at the city cafe named Gladys Harley. Of course. She answered the phone, Gladys.
Starting point is 00:26:53 Gladys. I don't know what I am. What's that? What the fuck? What's that? I just feel like, don't do it someone in your body. Just come over for a second. I feel like even-
Starting point is 00:27:14 Sorry that was Patricia. Even if I can go into it, I feel like she's like, hey it's glad I said don't think so. I just feel glad. Even if you're whole entire face. I was honestly a little scary. Oh, guys. Oh, guys. Sorry, I had a possession moment.
Starting point is 00:27:34 I almost took over my body from a laughful gladist. I answered the phone. It's gladist. It's gladist. Okay. We took a breather to collect ourselves. And I'm ready to talk about Gladys everybody. I'm ready to talk about it. Gladys. She answered the phone and it was the operator who was telling her someone's on the line
Starting point is 00:27:54 for you. What the fuck is that all about? And she's so she waited because that's what you do in 1931. You wait. And she just heard a couple of voices on the other end and she said she was like, it sounded like they were just talking to each other. So she was like, do you need something? Can I help you?
Starting point is 00:28:11 Because Gladys is not fucking around. She's got waiting to do. She doesn't have time for this. So she heard a man's voice and she said it sounded kind of like a little fancy, a little upper crusty, you know? It was asking if she was on the line with the Central Chess Club. And then she was like, yes, I am. And this person said, is Mr. Wallace there?
Starting point is 00:28:34 And she was like, I don't really know who that is. So she was like, I will ask, because she was waitressing there, but she didn't know everybody's names. So it kind of felt like a chess club. So she went to Beatty and she asked him. And he said that Wallace wasn't there yet, but he was due to play to play a match later that night. So he was expecting him to show up, but he told her, you know what? I'll just talk to the guy on the phone for you and see what he wants. He was like, why should
Starting point is 00:28:59 you relay all this? So he tells the guy, hi, Wallace isn't here, but he may be arriving shortly, but it's kind of a crapshoot because like Wallace on my right. And so the guy on the other end says, can you give him a message for me? And he's like, sure. So he says, can you tell him to call me tomorrow at 7.30 p.m. and or or come see me tomorrow at 7.30 p.m. at 25 men love gardens each east men love gardens men love gardens east so he said it's business related it's insurance related he'll know what it means so he's like sure dude what's your name and I got that's what he said yeah and he says it's RM Qualtrou. No, it's not. Yeah. Qualtrou. Qualtrou.
Starting point is 00:29:47 That's what it is. And he wrote it down for him because he was like, how the fuck do you spell Qualtrou? How the fuck? How the fuck? I was trying to be fancy and I was like, fuck. That's what he said. How the fuck can he spell that? I can't think of any other fancy, that's the only word I could come up with.
Starting point is 00:30:04 Oh, God, screener our dance, bell that. So Qualtra. So we wrote it down for him, and that was that. Sure. The call came right before Wallace arrived, because he arrived right after that. Weird timing. A little bit.
Starting point is 00:30:16 He had apparently been recovering from the flu. He said he had the flu the week before. Oh man. And he said Julia, his wife had also been recovering from a nasty cold. Oh, Julia. So when Wall has got there, he's started catching up on some matches with other players. And because he's so flaky, flaky, he was kind of behind. And there are rules that you have to like do so many matches to get into a tournament. So he was trying to get a shit together. You know what I mean, man? Yeah. So he's playing chess and Bady comes and tells him about this
Starting point is 00:30:46 Qualtra call. I'm probably saying the name wrong, but I don't know. Q-U-A-L-T-R-O-U-G-H. Qualtra. Or Qualtra. Qualtra, either one. He doesn't exist. Spoiler alerts, it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:31:00 I kind of felt like he didn't. So he's like, what? Qualtra? Qualtra? What is that? He's like, what? Qualtra, Qualtra? What is that? He was like, I don't know anyone named that. And he was like, I've never even heard that name. Yeah, that's weird. But he's like, well, he wants you to meet him
Starting point is 00:31:12 or call him tomorrow and he gives him all the information. So he made it clear. Wallace made it clear right there. He was like, I don't know this address. I've never heard of this address. I don't know this guy. It sounds made up all of it. Like he was like, this whole thing is weird.
Starting point is 00:31:25 So after the matches, he walked and took the tram with a couple of the other men from the club. And he walked home partially with a very good friend of his and a fellow chess player named James Caird, who said they spoke about the mystery collar, like as they walked home. And he said Wallace was genuinely confused by this person. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:44 And said he had never heard of him and he said, what a funny sounding name. Yeah. He was genuinely like, what the fuck? Like, why was he calling me at chess club? It's weird. Well, that's the thing, because it's like, can you have them call me?
Starting point is 00:31:54 And it's like, well, then he has a phone, so. Well, that's why, and by all accounts that talk to him that night, he did seem genuinely like, what the fuck? Yeah, so there's that. But a weird little tidbit about the street that Julia and William lived on. It was Wolverton Street.
Starting point is 00:32:11 And according to that book, the killing of Julia Wallace and a couple of other articles I read, it had a lot of death attached to it. Oh, like weirdly. So almost cursed. People would say it was cursed, and I kind of believe them. Fuck them. So in the year before Julia's death,
Starting point is 00:32:27 three people had killed themselves on the street. Five women lost their husbands in weird, like, tragic ways. Oh, that's weird. Another person who lived on the street died while watching a soccer match, and another fell to their death on vacation off a building. In England, that would actually be a football match. I almost said a football match, but then I was like,
Starting point is 00:32:48 no, it's soccer here. So I'm just going to stay in my lane. But yeah, you would say football. Football. I don't know what. I was like, football. Kind of sounded like you said, football. Football. Football match. You know, a football match over there. There's a soccer match over here.
Starting point is 00:33:04 You all get it. So lots of people dying on the street. There's a soccer match over here. You all get it. So lots of people dying on the street is the moral of that story. So again, people were thinking it was cursed. So on top of this, on top of all that gnarly situation, there was a creep and he was creepin' on this street. During this time, there was a guy or gal referred to as the on field house breaker. Bitch!
Starting point is 00:33:28 And he had broken your house. He's gonna break the shit out of your house. And he had broken into upwards of 30 homes recently in the area. And I'm saying he, because I'm just generalizing here. He would usually do it when no one was home, but the strange thing about this is they used a key Whoever it was all right, um, these are are they like apartment buildings? No, these are like flats like I'm home. Yeah, and either he would either use a key that was copied Mm-hmm or he would use or they thought maybe like a skeleton key that he could get into everywhere
Starting point is 00:34:02 That's and they didn't catch him. Oh, man. Or whoever it was, because we don't know. Never. Yeah. We have no idea. Maybe it was Qualtrol. And this was all happening as this is going on. So that's something to keep in mind.
Starting point is 00:34:16 Now, that night he had dinner with Juliet at home. Juliet had made a nice dinner. Always well that evening, she was getting over this cold. She still wasn't feeling that great. Apparently though, she was upset because her black cat was missing. No, I'm not even talking about it. Yeah. Nothing bad happens to the cats, so don't worry. No, I know. It's just like my worst fear is losing for I go in her locks. Yeah, I think about it every day. I feel that. So that was that night. The next day, January 20th, 1931, Wallace worked all day.
Starting point is 00:34:45 He would go around collecting insurance payments all around the area. I was like a very tiring job. I was going to say something like bullshit. Yeah, and at lunch, he would come home and he had lunch with Julia, and then he did a little bit of work on his own. Because like I said, he loved science. This is when it comes back. He had a very big interest in science,
Starting point is 00:35:05 particularly biology and chemistry. His prized possession was a microscope that he spent a pretty penny on, but he had once actually tried to build his own microscope. Damn. Yeah, like what about us? He had actually gone to school early on for science. He had gone to technical school,
Starting point is 00:35:21 and after he got his certificates in biology, chemistry, and I think electrical science, yeah. He went on to become a part-time professor of sorts at the Liverpool Technical College. Wow. And under why he stopped. I think because he just needed more, he needed the money, more money. I think it was really just like trying to make ends meet. He spent about an hour there doing some experimenting
Starting point is 00:35:45 in his makeshift lab that he made in one of the like the three bedrooms. She had a hat room, he had a laptop. I had a microscope room. I love that. I love it. And then he left again around three to get back to his insurance work.
Starting point is 00:35:58 Okay. Now sometimes, sometimes, sometime before four, a friend and a client of his named James Rothwell saw him walking, and he noted that he appeared like he had been crying to him. Well, it's like he had been crying. Yeah, and he described to him as, quote, haggard and drawn, very distressed looking,
Starting point is 00:36:17 which is interesting. And he was a very good friend of his, like he, in a client, he saw him all the time. So we knew what he would look like usually. And he said he was like wiping his eye with like his shirt. Oh, so that was interesting. Yeah, it's weird. But then another client, however, said that he was his normal self that day and said she saw him often wiping
Starting point is 00:36:36 his eyes or nose with a kerchief because she said he always seemed to have the sniffles or cold. Because he was sickly. Exactly. So I just want to make sure all of these get said, because this is what makes this case nuts. It's like a he said she said. Nothing adds up.
Starting point is 00:36:51 One person says this, another person says this, and they both make sense. It's like, what is the truth here? So there was actually a boy named Neil Norbury, and he delivered baked goods, and he went to the Wallace home that day. Well, why does no one deliver baked drinks anymore? I know, I think that sounds so lovely.
Starting point is 00:37:10 But this was when William was out doing his insurance thing, and he said that Julia answered the door, and she was very sweet and nice, but she did appear sick to him, not feeling well. And she was just getting over the flu. Yeah, and I think it was getting worse almost. Yeah, I think she was just getting over the flu. Yeah, and I think it was like kind of getting, like it was getting worse almost. Yeah, I think she wasn't getting that much better. So pneumonia?
Starting point is 00:37:29 And perhaps. Now his last appointment that day was a woman named Margaret Martin, and she was actually going to be ending her insurance policy. So there was like a lot of paperwork for that one. She was fuzzy on the time that he came by at trial later. They believe he was with her at 545 and it's between 6 to about 705 PM that no one can really account to where he was. So he just kind of like disappears. No one can say where he was, no one can say that they saw Julia, right? She was at home supposedly, but like no one can really say anything.
Starting point is 00:38:05 they saw Julia, right? She was at home, supposedly, but like no one can really say anything. He spoke to many people once he popped back up. Once he popped back up. Which seems a little weird. It does. He popped back up around 706. Now, this is the night he's supposed to meet Qualtra, remember, at 730. So he was on his way to meet Qualtra. I was going to say, I'm going to go meet him. He's a prospective client. They got to make the money.
Starting point is 00:38:27 That makes me nervous. So he said he asked conductors of the tram about which tram to take to this specific address. He talked to ticket takers about this important meeting that he had. He kept talking to people. He talked to the people in the tram and kept saying how he was lost and he didn't live here. And so he didn't know his way around here. And if somebody could tell him where this
Starting point is 00:38:48 address was, and he kept saying, I'm just like the new guy in town. I don't know where I'm going. And he just kept talking to people. And what people think later is that this could have been him being like, hi, hello, here's my alibi. I'm here. What's going on everybody? You'll remember my face, right? I'm the guy talking about not knowing where I'm going. I'm not new in town. Hey, I'm here. What's going on everybody? You'll remember my face, right? I'm the guy talking about not knowing where I'm going. I'm not new in town. Hey, I'm supposed to be going to this address. Make sure you tell the police that later. Again, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:39:12 Nobody knows. I'm just saying. That's a possibility. I really like Wallace so far, so I don't want to hate him. I know, I'm saying. So he changed from the four-traim, a train. I say, I almost said train.
Starting point is 00:39:24 I said, tram, and then it turned into train. So, tramtrem, a train. I almost said train. I said tram and then it turned into train. So tram. It was a tram. He changed from the four-trem and took the five-trem from, was it Anfield? I'll never say that. I have no recollection.
Starting point is 00:39:37 Anfield to Men Love Gardens. Now, the first stop was Men Love Avenue. And a conductor pointed him in the direction of Men Love Gardens West and said it was likely around there that he would find Men Love Gardens East, but he said, I've actually never heard of Men Love Gardens East only West. So he was like, but I imagine it's near the West. I don't know. Yeah. So at 7.45, so he's going to look for it. He can't find it. So at 7.45, he actually stopped a police constable and asked him for directions.
Starting point is 00:40:07 Now, the police constable was like, yeah, I've never heard of that. I don't think that exists. Yeah, he was like, I'm not really sure. And during this time, he actually talked to at least four different people for directions. He said he talked to seven different people later. That would be a lot of people to ask for directions.
Starting point is 00:40:23 But they only brought four, and they were able to bring four, four trials to say he did talk to them. The first one was a guy named Sydney Green, and he told him the whole thing, and he said, okay, I don't know about East, but I know there's a West. And he said, maybe this person gave you East and meant West. So why don't you go to that address 25 men love garden West West and see if that's the person. So he did and it was actually the lady that was living there was a late an elderly lady named Katie Mather and she said yeah I don't know who Qualtra is and
Starting point is 00:40:57 it wasn't me who called she was so yeah I don't know what to tell you I've never heard of that one so the constable he spoke to was James Sargent. And he said, yeah, that address doesn't exist. And so he said after that, Wallace just told him the whole story. Like it was just like, well, you know, I go to chess and I was at chess and the sky name Qualtra called my chess captain.
Starting point is 00:41:21 And he told me that he went through the whole detailed story and the constable was like, that sucks. Like, I don't know what to tell you. So you could see that as weird, but have you ever met somebody that just continues to tell you things that don't matter and you're like, uh-huh. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:41:36 So it's like, you can look at this as, he's really trying to establish an alibi and he's trying to tell the constable every detail of this. So it's like really in there. Yeah. So later this constable will be like, oh yeah. Right. Or he's just frustrated.
Starting point is 00:41:50 He can't find this fucking address. He doesn't know who this guy is and do you ever get frustrated and you're just like, can I just tell you why I'm frustrated? Yeah. I'm pissed and this is what happened today. You know, you're- Or he maybe didn't want like the constable to think he was like a crazy person. Yeah. I, sorry to like bother you like, this is what happened.
Starting point is 00:42:09 That's why I thought this address was real. There's many, there's so many... Options. ...of the reason for this. And you could go in any direction based on which one you feel like you want to lean on. I don't. I want to be on Walla's side if he's a murderer. I don't know. Oh, fuck.
Starting point is 00:42:24 You won't know. That's the sad part. Great. So he directed him. The constable did direct him to the post office and the police station was either one of those. You can go for a directory and see if somebody can help you there.
Starting point is 00:42:38 So he ran into a woman named Lily Pinches at the post office where the directory was. And again, she was like, no, that address doesn't exist. So after this, he was like, fucking definitely. Definitely. So he gave us. He was like, I'm not doing this. So 835 PM, a woman named Lillian Hall, who is a 20 year old typist. She said she saw Wallace with a man on Richmond road and they were chatting. And it was close to Wolverton Street, which is where he lived and where the murder occurs. And this was at 8.35 p.m. This will come back later, obviously like Lillian just came forward afterwards. But that's
Starting point is 00:43:18 just interesting that she said, she couldn't say who it was, a man, just a man. So 845, that's when he was seen by his neighbors, John and Florence Johnston. But they saw him, he was outside of his home. And they said he looked kind of flustered and they said he appeared a little nervous and like, you know, weird. And so they were like, okay, William, like what's going on? And he said, I'm trying to get in my house, but all my doors won't open.
Starting point is 00:43:47 He was like, they're all locked, but my key won't work. That's weird. And they were like, what? Like, that's weird. So they were like, are you sure? Like, are you sure you're not using the wrong key? And he was like, no, I'm not. And then he said, did you hear anything weird tonight? That's a little bit weird. And they were like, no. But like, let us help. Because they, again, they have no reason to see. He's little bit weird. And they were like, no. But like let us help. Because again, they have no reason to see, he's never been weird, he's never been violent, he's never been somebody they would have to like, raise an eyebrow at before.
Starting point is 00:44:13 Well, and I say that's weird, but then it's like, it's not that weird because he's like, did you hear someone like fucking with my locks? Exactly, it's not that weird actually. Upon first listen, you're like, oh, that's weird. And then when you think about, you're like, well, you might ask's weird. And then when you think about it, you're like, well, you might ask that actually.
Starting point is 00:44:27 Yeah, like I might be like, did you see any of my locks aren't working? Did you hear weird shit happening out here? Like my wife's in there. I'm a little nervous. Yeah. So yeah, so it's like, that's weird. So he said, so he told them I arrived after being out
Starting point is 00:44:41 since 6.45. I left Julia and here the doors were locked and he said, I couldn't open them with my key when I came home. And he said he had tried them all, the back and the front. So they suggested, you know what, let's try again. Let's, I will help you. Well, we'll try to see what's going on here. And they walked towards the back door and he just randomly said to them, she won't be out. She had such a bad cold. And they were like, okay. But maybe he said that like something has happened here and she's still home.
Starting point is 00:45:11 And I'm saying. Like I think again, upon first listening, you're like, that's weird. And then we were like, no, I think maybe he's running through it and it said and he's like, she's not answering the door, but there's no way she's out. She has a bad cold. So he's trying to reason it and it said like, why the fuck isn't she answering the door She has a bad cold. So he's trying to reason it
Starting point is 00:45:25 and it's had like, why the fuck isn't she answering the door? She's in there. So it's not weird, at least to me. So they both walk around back and they try the door. Click, it opens. With the key. With the key. Okay. Now they said he found out that's pretty well. Well, then they see that he seemed very like flustered and shocked by this. Okay. Like that he was like, it didn't open before. He's having some kind of mental break. And he wasn't, he was very with it. They said he was very clear, but they said the door opened and he was like, it wouldn't
Starting point is 00:45:57 do that before. He was like, I swear to you, it didn't open before. He was like, what the fuck? They said he looked genuinely shocked that the door opened. So it was pitch black in the house. Spooky. So he does what you do in the 30s, which is light a fancy lantern. And he walked in his home. So what do you do? He called for Julia a couple of times. And then he came out a minute later. And they said he was white as a sheet. And he said, Oh, come and see.
Starting point is 00:46:22 She's been killed. Well, you really can't control like if you lose color from your face. white as a sheet and he said, oh, come and see she's been killed. Well, you really can't control like if you lose color from your face. So you really can't, um, of course, that could be that he's like, oh, shit, they're here now. And I have to deal with this and like put on a show. So it's like, you would definitely go a little white because you'd be like, fuck, yeah. Uh, and also it could be that he is genuinely upset that he found his, what is frustrating.
Starting point is 00:46:46 It's also a little weird that like, come and see. Yeah, that's a weird way to say that. That's all like, who knows? Yeah. Again, we're also going to be dealing a lot with somebody who is in a strange position. And it's like, you can't really say what you would say in this situation. No. Come and see is a little weird.
Starting point is 00:47:05 I don't know. Like come and see. Wouldn't she just be like, oh my god, I found her and they're like, don't go in there. I'd be like, oh, shit, don't go in there. Yeah. I don't know though. So they went and they saw. They found Julia on the floor in front of the fireplace face down and she had very clearly
Starting point is 00:47:23 been beaten to death very violently. Oh no. Her skull was, Which seems personal. Certainly does. Her skull was bashed in, like caved in, there was blood sprayed all over the entire room,
Starting point is 00:47:38 some as high as seven feet up. Holy shit. She was laying on a coat and in a large pool of her own blood, her eyes were wide open and staring, and her right arm was outstretched above her. Okay. And her other arm was to her side, down by her side.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Her dress had been partially burned, and it looked like the coat had also been partially burned. Almost like she must have like maybe fallen into like close fire. The fire was, and then maybe she was moved or rolled over there. Her brains were exposed on the floor. Get the fuck out of here. Along with pieces of skull.
Starting point is 00:48:12 And William turned to his neighbors and said they finished her. Look at her brains. Oh, okay. What's again? But, okay, then the other thing is like a lot of times people who like love science, I don't know why I think of like Sheldon from the big-ass theory, but like you say things in like a way that like maybe I wouldn't. You know? Well, maybe I'm thinking of like, I don't, like, I don't know how to respond correctly in a highly emotional situation. And I probably sound very like weird. Off-putting sometimes, like I'm sure that can happen,
Starting point is 00:48:50 but it's just because like my brain doesn't function well in these like very high-emotional, and I feel like that's a very like science-y, like right brain kind of thing. I think it's just like some people, like that would be a lot for me. Like it would be a lot for anybody, but obviously, but like that would be, lot for me. Yeah, it would be a lot for anybody But obviously, but like that would be you're not good at it. I'm not saying it in a mean way
Starting point is 00:49:09 You're not good at emotions. No in my brain just wouldn't compute what's the correct thing to say and that's situate like socially It wouldn't right and I and I I feel like a lot of science people like when you say something like it's a little bit like Harsh and you're like somebody else would be like, oh, okay, that's very likely. It's almost like a doctor. Sometimes doctors will say something to you. That's a side manner. Okay. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:32 And that's because that obviously has happened a lot in my life that people will be like, oh shit, okay. Yeah. That's very blunt. And I'm like, no, I didn't mean for that to come out that way, but I don't know how else to say this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:43 And it's frustrating, trust me, it's frustrating for the person being that way. Yeah. But I'm sure it's frustrating for everybody around the middle. It's a, it's a very, like I just had right brain, right? Yeah. Right brain versus left. So again, you're right.
Starting point is 00:49:55 That's one of those things where that might just be he doesn't know what else to say, but the obvious, which is look her brains are on the floor, like they really killed her. Yeah. That's who knows. And he might be, if he didn't do this, then he's completely stricken with grief and shock. I will say, it is weird that he said they. That's, and he does say, he says it, he says it a few things like they've finished her. Yeah. But I don't know if that's just again.
Starting point is 00:50:23 Right. It's one of those, yeah, like they does imply that like he might know something else, but it can also just be him being like, I don't know what else to say. Yeah, you know, yeah. So they said he, again, they said he was absolutely white as a sheet and clearly in shock. He just kept saying over and over, they finished her. Over and over. Yeah weird thing to say. Yeah, I'm just saying because if we're gonna Strat alone over to this side. That's a weird fucking thing to say. Yeah
Starting point is 00:50:52 Well, and he's keep saying it over and over. That's weird if I was there. I'd be like you should probably stop saying hey Hey, stop saying that. I'd be like maybe talk about how much you loved her. Well, like how sad you are Maybe like we get it. Yeah, they finished her. It's cool I like to maybe like no, my beautiful life. You know, or you know what? Or just shut up. Yeah, be sure to learn in the corner. Be quiet.
Starting point is 00:51:12 William. Don't be suspicious. Don't be suspicious. That's what you need to say to him. Yeah, don't be suspicious. Don't be suspicious. Because you're being suspicious. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:51:34 So John Johnson, Johnston, he and Florence brought Wallace out of the parlor and away from Julie's mutilated body. In the kitchen, they noticed that a cabinet had literally been torn, like the door had been torn off of it. And it was laying in pieces on the floor. And it was a walless, who actually first noticed it and pointed it out, and was literally like, hey, look what they did. Like, my cabin is so nice. Like, literally, they did that.
Starting point is 00:51:55 I didn't do that. Like, what is that? And so, there was a few coins on the floor as well around it. And he said, he looked in there, because they were like, you should check and see if anything's been stolen. And he said that about four pounds had been stolen out of the cash box that was headed in there. So they were like, okay, cool, they stole stuff. So they had him look upstairs,
Starting point is 00:52:16 which is a bad plan, but like go off, Johnston's. Yeah, I suppose. Like they were like, hey, you should go upstairs and go check more and it's like, guys, there could still be someone up there. You don't know if this person's still in the house and also like, I don't know, just why don't you get the police here?
Starting point is 00:52:34 Or something? Maybe just call another constable. Like I think they were all in a little bit of a shock, but like, but that's the thing. You do silly things when you're like, but like just don't send him upstairs. Yeah, don't do that. I just didn't think that was a great idea.
Starting point is 00:52:46 Um, um, hindsight. It's like 2020. Yeah. So he, he went up there and he said he hadn't seen anything at like strange up there and he said there was actually a jar upstairs that was sitting right in the open with money in it and it was still there. And that's weird.
Starting point is 00:53:00 So that's strange. Yeah. Well, unless they just didn't go up there. Yeah. Exactly. So Wallace was shocked clearly and said something also to them about like the dishes in the sink and how he said something like off-handedly, she didn't even have a chance to clean up after tea.
Starting point is 00:53:17 Which, like, why would you wrap up that? Could be looked at as strange, but it could be looked at as somebody who is literally like careening off the edge of like grief and just horror being like you didn't even get to clean up after tea. You know, you like you think of weird shit. So again. Now, John decided Mr. Johnston, he left to get the police and a doctor. Good call. Florence checked Julia again because she was like I need to make sure but this is she's definitely out
Starting point is 00:53:46 Florence is I've fallen Florence seems like she like really has her shit together Okay, like I appreciate Florence. I feel like she was trying to hold everyone down. She's the machine So she she is And she was she said that she was still warm But she said she was getting cooler like she she had felt her when they first went in there and she was warm and she said she was getting slightly cooler. But Wallace inquired about what they could have used to hit her. He was like, what could they have used to do this? The fire poker.
Starting point is 00:54:16 And there was nothing that they could see that was used or could have been used, like nothing had blood on it. There was nothing there. So they were like, okay, they must had blood on it. There was nothing there. So they were like, okay, they must have taken it with them or put it somewhere. What they did find was spent match sticks next to her and in the kitchen.
Starting point is 00:54:33 So that's interesting. Wallace then noticed the coat under her was actually his coat. And when he noticed that, she, Florence said he started to sob uncontrollably. So he really loved that coat? I don't know. So she tended to the fire Florence did to keep Wallace warm and it was in the kitchen,
Starting point is 00:54:52 because it was another fire in the kitchen. And she tried to keep him comfortable. Oh, Florence. Just tried to, you know, Florence everybody. Trying to ease the pressure. He's the pressure. Florence. She's Florence Nightingale, so she is.
Starting point is 00:55:03 Oh. Look at that. So the Liverpool City Police Force finally showed up. They were known at this time as a little bumbling. There was, I'm going to be nice. There were as police strikes in 1919 and like that kind of really through a wrench into their like effectiveness. For 11 years. Well, they just couldn't get their shit together because like the police strike happened. Then people were starting to get jobs on this force that probably had no business.
Starting point is 00:55:32 And then the state's there. Then you can't just, you're not going to get rid of them. It just becomes a problem. It really does. It really does. It's like you've dealt with it. It really does, guys. Let me tell you.
Starting point is 00:55:43 It really becomes a problem. So they were bumbling as fuck. Okay. It really does, it's like you've dealt with it. It really does, guys. Let me tell you. It really becomes a problem. So they were bumbling as fuck. So luckily the cop who showed up first here was at least like passable. So that's good. Officer Fred Williams, or Constable Fred Williams,
Starting point is 00:55:56 he checked that, he came, he checked that Julia was dead, and then he asked for a statement. But the problem was he didn't record this statement right away from William. He didn't record it until an hour and a half later. Mind might be a little fuzzy. There's that.
Starting point is 00:56:11 Now this is the statement that he recorded. That William said, look, perhaps. At 6.45 I left the house in order to go to Men Love Gardens and my wife accompanied me to the backyard door. She walked a little way down the alley with me and then she returned and bolted the backyard door. She walked a little way down the alley with me, and then she returned and bolted the backyard door. She would then be alone in the house. I then went to Men Love Gardens to find the address that had been given to me was wrong.
Starting point is 00:56:34 Becoming suspicious, I returned home, then went to the front door. I inserted my key to find I could not open it. I went round to the backyard door, It was closed, but not bolted. I went up the backyard and tried the door, but it would not open. I again went to the front door, but this time found the door to be bolted. So now he's saying that he went to the front. Did it wouldn't work? Went to the back. It wasn't bolted, but he couldn't open it. Went to the front. Now it's bolted. Okay. So like, what the fuck? Like someone bolted the door between you going from the back to the front? And you didn't see any of them.
Starting point is 00:57:08 And you didn't say that to anyone before? Like, that's a little strange. So he said- But also did the constable just fuck that up because it was an hour and a half later? Well, it becomes a weird thing. That will it. So this is William's statement. He did say this.
Starting point is 00:57:21 Okay. He said, I hurried round to the back and up the back backyard and tried the back door. And this time found it would open. I entered the house and this is what I found. Okay. This is very like, um, like knives out. It really, right? It is. This is a straight up murder mystery game. It is. Like this is, this doesn't sound real, but it's real. I know. That, like, astounded me about this. Yeah. That's why you're getting a part two because I can't stop, won't stop. I can't quit you.
Starting point is 00:57:49 I could hurt him. I'm only gonna get you as far as him being like questioned. Bitch. And then we got so much more after that, but I just couldn't jam it into one episode. It would be rushed. So Florence did say that while he was being questioned here in the kitchen that the cat appeared, just walked in the door. The cat came. Isn't that weird? That is weird. So two more cops
Starting point is 00:58:10 showed up and Williams had Wallace search the home with him. And he did note that the money was missing and that there was money undisturbed upstairs. So he put that down in his report. He said there was also handbags up there and a handbag down stairs of Julius That had not been touched not been rifled through right and that no drawers were open Which he thought was weird if someone was going to be like rifling around they usually leave the drawers open Yeah, so at this time Constable Williams seems to take Wallace as calm and emotionless, he said.
Starting point is 00:58:46 But, but, you know, he said he was very cool, very composed, very with it. But, you know, sometimes people in these situations snap to it and get where they need to be when they need to talk to an authority figure or, or that's just how they or you might just be like really fucking shocked. So you're just kind of like, let me go through the motions. And then later when everybody leaves, it hits you. Exactly. And he's sobbed.
Starting point is 00:59:14 He's coming up. He's going to be on like a roller coaster. But the other side of that could be that he's only sobbing about his jacket because maybe he realized, fuck, I left that jacket there and that's really going to pin me to this. Right. So who knows? Not me. Too much.
Starting point is 00:59:32 So when they asked him if he thought it was strange that the thief had taken money from the cash box and then put the lid back on the cash box and placed it back on the shelf, but left the door on the floor, He didn't have anything to say. But he said, sure, like it's strange. Yeah, but he didn't have any like answer for it. And of course, you wouldn't if it wasn't you. At around 10 p.m., this is where things get really cookie. So at around 10 p.m., Professor John Edward Whitley McFall came to do some Emmy work. Yes he did. Now this dude is a legend in his own mind. But in reality, he's a big bowl of what the fuck?
Starting point is 01:00:13 Oh, I love that expression, you just said. He really is. He's a giant, giant bowl of what the fuck. He was a weird dude, apparently, who smoked opium, but was well known. He had various reviews about him. Some people thought he was like brilliant, other people were like, what the fuck? Like, there's just one of those things.
Starting point is 01:00:35 Maybe he used to be brilliant. Yeah, people who worked with him thought he was brash, very eccentric, but he was pretty smart, just a lot. All right, he was the chair forensic medicine at the University of Liverpool and was an examiner of medical jurisprudence at four other universities. So he did have a lot of credits to his name. This is when she gets weirder.
Starting point is 01:00:57 He just basically walked in, looked at her, touched her for a minute, noted the rigor, looked at the blood, and then he was like, yeah, she's been dead for like four hours. Excuse me, sir. It's 1931. 2021, you couldn't walk into a room and be like, she's been dead for this many hours. Like, no, no, no, that's not how it works. CSI Miami didn't look at Levitity, no observing that, no temp checking nothing.
Starting point is 01:01:26 Just boom, four hours because of the appearance of Rigger. She has a Rigger interface. Oh, right. So I'm going to say four hours and then you were like, yeah, the blood's clotting. So that works for me. Okay, dokey. That's not enough, my friend. That's not enough.
Starting point is 01:01:38 So at the very least, you take the temp of the room and take her rectal or liver temp to get a core temp for her. That way you can use the formula that they definitely knew back then. They knew this formula for body temp and like checking how long it takes your body to cool to ambient temperature. So you would use that formula to determine the cooling time and where the body has reached the temperature of his or her surroundings. Because your body starts cooling or heating depending on where you are, the second you stop breathing. So it's trying basically your body wants to make its way to ambient temperature, which in this case would have been the
Starting point is 01:02:16 temp in the room she was found in. It goes about that by like you lose like 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit every hour until you kind of plateau where the ambient temperature is. Or if you're in a really hot place, your body will warm to that temperature. So you take that rectal or liver, liver temp, liver is a little harder, especially if there's a lot of wounds, you can't go into an existing wound to take the temp and you'd have to make an incision. Yeah. So a lot of times they will take the rectal temp for that core temp, but you don't care because you're dead. And they'll take that and you subtract it by the normal body temp, which is about 98.6
Starting point is 01:02:57 degrees for most of us, but that can vary. And you get that number and then you divide it by the 1.5, which is how your body cools or warms. That number that you get usually can give a decent estimate of time of death. Right. How many hours? Particularly in this scenario where the environment is pretty temp controlled because it's indoors and we're not in the forest where the temp is like constantly changing and fluctuating.
Starting point is 01:03:26 But unfortunately her temp may not have been 98.6 because remember she was sick so she could have had a higher temp and was there a fire going? There was a fire going at some point. So it's like this is going to fluctuate slightly. Yeah. And oh she was partially burned. Right. So it's like that temp could definitely mess that, but he didn't even try any of this. He just knew. Not only did he not even give it a shot, but like the amount of variables would have even made it hard if he had done it,
Starting point is 01:03:54 but he didn't even bother. So for him to claim four hours based on rigor, which is also very variable on temperature, like colder hot, how long it's gonna set, how hard it's gonna set, how long it's going to set, how hard it's going to set, how long it's going to take to break, it's insane. Yeah. Because this room is a hot room. Of course, it's going to be different.
Starting point is 01:04:12 You don't even take that into consideration. He didn't even get a range. He just said four hours. Boom. Now, 2021, they still are going to give you a range. It is so hard to pinpoint time of death. That's insane. Now that would mean also that she was dead way before Wallace claimed to have said good bye to her
Starting point is 01:04:31 and watched her walk back into the house. Yes, so this motherfucker's wrong. Because he was saying that that was at 645 that he said bye to her. I mean, unless he killed her before that. And he saying she's already been dead. But then he claimed that the blood that that was clotting around her body in her head, he said that clotting indicated to him about two to three hours before that she was killed. Okay, so which one was it? Is it four hours?
Starting point is 01:04:58 Or two? Or two? Or two? Or two to three hours, which is gonna make a... Yeah, like kind of a big variable here. Pretty big thing here. But he's just like, yeah, that makes sense. Kind of like one of the biggest pieces of the pie
Starting point is 01:05:13 that we need to solve the crime. And it seems like you just took that like two to three or four. I'm gonna go with four. Like that's just, and he said at least four. That was his thing, at least four. It could have been more. He said at least four, but then said two or three.
Starting point is 01:05:26 So at least one, motherfucker, it doesn't make sense. And he also, he becomes an issue two with blood spatter soon. We'll see. He didn't do a good job. Now, the detective superintendent was supposed to be on scene at this point of the police. And he was nowhere to be found. And by nowhere to be found, I mean, not only was he not in the scene,
Starting point is 01:05:46 but when they called him, we're like, hey, can he come here? His name was Hubert Rory Moore. They were like, yeah, we don't know where he is. We haven't heard from him. So it's standard of finding him in a pub. Oh, no. And they dragged him to the scene.
Starting point is 01:06:00 Oh, man, I feel like you should just like give him a cold shower first, at least. Oh, yeah, the people that were there were like he was clearly drinking. He smelled the scene. Oh man, I feel like you should just give him a cold shower first at least. Oh yeah, the people that were there were like, he was clearly drinking. He smelled the vibe. He'd be brawling. And he's like, wow, that was up. And they were like, he definitely shouldn't have been
Starting point is 01:06:13 dealing with this murder scene. That's for sure. So imagine seeing a murder scene. And I mean, ever, but in that state. But in that state, it's like, and imagine being like, in charge of that murder scene in that state. I mean, maybe that would sober you up. Yeah, I hope it would hope it did. Slightly at least.
Starting point is 01:06:27 But he came and was basically came and it was like, shit. And he just looked at William Wallace and was like, did you see anyone? Is he literally looked at him and said, did you see anyone when you got here? I mean, like that was him literally being like, I'm gonna give this a shot.
Starting point is 01:06:43 Did you see the murder when you got here? And maybe you just haven't said that to anybody yet. I'm gonna go out on a limb and hope that you just didn't say that you saw the murder when you got here. I mean, but is that a crazy question? Because he was like, the door was bolted, then it wasn't, then it was, then it wasn't. Well, and he was like, did you see anyone? And he was like, no, and the Johnston's were like, nope, we didn't see anyone either. And he was like, okay, cool, cool. He was like, now we got back. He was like, I think of my second question. He's like, I'll be right back.
Starting point is 01:07:11 So he goes back to the police station. And this is when he sent me where he makes himself a hot cup of Joe. I'm pretty sure he was like, I need to take a cold shower right now. I need some coffee. But he sends a bunch of investigators to rooming houses, all night cafes, tram stations, like lodging of any kind. And he
Starting point is 01:07:29 says, look for people that are just hanging out with bloodstained clothing as they do after murders. Which I love that kind of police work. I love it. All right. Look for some people. I want you to fan out. I want you to look for a guy that is Absolutely, so in blood. And if you see that guy, I want you to bring me like, okay, okay, sir Who would stay on their bloody clothes? So then he was like, all right, I gotta go back to the scene. So he's like, well shit. This is when our wonderful at me is looking at the blood in the parlour and he's like, okay, there's a lot of blood here.
Starting point is 01:08:14 And at this point, they were like, blood stain analysis is happening. So they were like, okay, we can do this. And they determined that she was likely sitting with her head. He said to her head, with her head to the side talking to someone. Sure. Which, wowie, you got all that. Yeah. So he said he was sitting. They think that he was sitting, she was sitting on a chair, which was next to the fireplace. Okay. This is insane to deduce, but he did so because the marks, they looked at were only about four feet in height, and they looked like what he referred to, they are not actually referred to as these,
Starting point is 01:08:50 but in his report he referred to these marks, these blood stains, as soda water bottle marks. What? That's, apparently that's what he thought they looked like. So what does that mean? So what are that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean?
Starting point is 01:09:08 So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean?
Starting point is 01:09:16 So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean?
Starting point is 01:09:24 So what does that mean? So what does that mean? So what does that mean? it looks like. I don't know. I don't know what that means. Like it's a very interesting way to say. I've never read it said that way otherwise, but who knows? The opium is telling him things. So these particular little like exclamation point kind of marks, they will help to show what direction the motion is moving in because the tails of those marks will point in the direction of the motion. So the marks they saw were pointing to the easy chair, which had not a lot of blood on it. So that's kind of a void pattern, which does indicate that somebody was in that chair when it all happened. Okay. Because that's a void where there had to have been something there to
Starting point is 01:10:00 stop it to stop the blood from spreading there. They said she was likely sitting in it or on the arm of it. Okay. Or at least near it or standing in front of it. And then do they look like exclamation points because when you pull back, that's so unfortunately that's a problem. He didn't account for cast off marks from blood flying off the weapon used. And those tales can help determine the motion again in that case. And you can count the amount of, like the amount of arc,
Starting point is 01:10:29 which is when like they swing a, a weapon and it gets covered in blood and then it keeps swinging, I just like slamming it. Yeah. And then it keeps swinging and when they keep swinging back and forth, hitting the person, collecting blood on the weapon and then drawing back, it forms arcs, an arc pattern. And you can count how many arcs there are and see how many times that person was hit.
Starting point is 01:10:52 But blood to say that, that's really fucking cool. It is cool. I love blood. You always have. You always say an analysis like fascinates. It is really, I mean, it's crazy that you can do all that. I used to want to get like really into that. At one point, I was like, I want to be a bloodanner for the analysis and you probably will be like in the couple weeks I said analysis analyst
Starting point is 01:11:10 But blunt objects can also cause like a pretty varied size pool of blood drops So they think a blunt object was used to hit her So that's gonna change the kind of blood drop. Let's, and he wasn't accounting for any of this. And so the angle of blood spray matters too. So like a 90 degree angle hit will almost look circular. And as the angle decreases, it becomes more like it spines out. Like the circle will look like spiny. Okay. Outside. And eventually the circle on the wall. Yeah, like the circle splatter the blood splatter and As you move like so and then it kind of like as you decrease that angle It's gonna keep elongating into those exclamation mark kinds of splatter sounds like so that is what I can tell
Starting point is 01:11:59 That's how you can tell But if it hit the wall at a certain angle and then dripped That's how you could tell. But if it hit the wall at a certain angle and then dripped, that can mess with the appearance and make it look like a different type of blood spatter or that it was a different impact location or angle, he just didn't account for any of this and just went and was like exclamation point. That means one thing and one thing only. At that point did they know that it meant more things than that?
Starting point is 01:12:25 They could definitely, they knew more. And it was more just a matter of like, you can't just look at that and be like, that's it. Like you would know, and especially in the 30s, they knew that forensics and that this kind of science was highly variable and that you can't just look at something and be like, that's 100% of the time. That's what this means.
Starting point is 01:12:44 So he worked super quick. He sketched some of these stains and like droplets. He like sat there and drew them. But I guess he drew them like really shitty and you can't even tell what they look like. Well at that point why didn't he just take a picture? Yeah. And then he just that's when he drops like all right. So she's been dead for four hours. Boom nailed. Like, that's it. He also said Wallace was too calm at this point, too. He also mentioned that. So it's like, this dude, I'm like, get out of here. Yeah, like shut up.
Starting point is 01:13:12 I don't know. He's definitely, he has like, small dick energy. Yeah, I mean, just, I don't like him. He also at trials said that he described Wallace as, quote, two collected. And then he said, whilst I was in the room examining the body and the blood, he came and smoking a cigarette, and he leaned over in front of the sideboard and flicked the ash into a bowl on the sideboard.
Starting point is 01:13:34 It struck me at the time as being unnatural. Why is that unnatural? So like, because he's smoking, like he's chain smoking, probably because he's having a fucking nervous breakdown. Yeah. And the dude smoked. So it's chain smoking probably because he's having a fucking nervous breakdown. Yeah. And the dude smoked. So it's like, I imagine that's just something he would do.
Starting point is 01:13:49 Very normal thing to do in a stressful situation as fucking pull out of square. Why is flicking ash unnatural to do when someone dies? Right. I had no idea that once someone sees his living, that your ash has to just remain attached to your cigarettes. Why was that? What is he saying? It's the way he leaned over him and ash. I guess.
Starting point is 01:14:10 But it's like, where the fuck else was he gonna ash? And it's just like, can we just stop judging this guy's reactions? People's reactions. People's reactions. His wife with her hat. Bled her open. I agree that when it's like coupled with other things,
Starting point is 01:14:22 you can definitely take things from it. You can deduce, you know, judgment from it. How do you say something weird? I feel like it's like he's getting shit on. Yeah. But, you know, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Now, more cops said that they were shocked by his behavior as well.
Starting point is 01:14:38 One said he was just sitting, stroking the cat at one point, and he said, quote, I didn't see any sign of emotion in him at all at the death of his wife. But again, right, sometimes you're unemotioned because you're so, you're in shock. I literally laugh at fiend rolls. Like I will burst into laughing.
Starting point is 01:14:54 I have seen that with my own eyes. I'm so incredibly uncomfortable. And it's because I don't know what to do with the other kinds of emotions. So laughing is just the easiest thing. Well, and everyone can get, and I can imagine if it was like, so when you love so much. I can't even put myself in that position.
Starting point is 01:15:08 No, fuck that, I can't even think about that. I don't know how I do. He also, like, you're comforting an animal and he's comforting her animal. That makes sense that he was sitting there petting the cat. It would make sense and she was very upset about the cat.
Starting point is 01:15:20 Right. So it makes sense that he would just be like, I'm just gonna pet this cat because it came back. Well, that's also very comforting to pet a cat when you're just out. Now meanwhile, they're all judgein' him, but they're all just like a bunch of bumble-in crazies walking around this house.
Starting point is 01:15:34 I know, I love that they're not judging the fucking police chief who was at the bar. Now, no officer was really in charge at the time. Like the superintendent was, but like he wasn't taking charge. No one is communicating what they're doing. So they're all just touching things and not recording things or recording things that the last one just disturbed
Starting point is 01:15:53 and it's now in a different position. There's no chain of evidence. Absolutely none. It's mayhem in there. Bonkers. And in fact, the cash box that was, that had money missing out of it, had police fingerprints all over it
Starting point is 01:16:06 So they couldn't even pull any other police they couldn't pull any other fingerprints off of it Well shit, so immediately Wallace they're all looking at him like he's the main suspect husband did it So they start asking about the doors and the locks to him again They're like go go over that one more time. Yeah, cuz like that like, that is weird. And he had said in that statement that the front door wouldn't open. So he went to the back and the back door wasn't bolted, but wouldn't open either. So he went back to the front and he said,
Starting point is 01:16:32 the front was now bolted. When they asked him about it now, they said that he tried the key in the front lock and it was a defective lock. So they tried it and they said, yeah, it is a defective lock. It's like broken. they said, yeah, it is a defective lock. It's like broken. So the key works, but you have to like,
Starting point is 01:16:48 you're shit. Sometimes it doesn't. It makes it wonky. So he never said again that that door was bolted. He never mentioned that again. Okay. So they were like, well, you said before that's, and he just wouldn't,
Starting point is 01:17:01 he just like wouldn't acknowledge that again. Okay. So that's weird that he's not being like, no, what's weird is I came back around and that door was bolted when it wasn't a second ago. Right, he never said that again. And he just had no explanation for that, which is weird.
Starting point is 01:17:15 Yeah. Definitely weird. Because they were like, well, if that door was bolted when you came back around the front, you wouldn't have been able to unlock it either way if it wasn't wonky. Yeah, no matter what. That's an important piece of information.
Starting point is 01:17:28 But again, maybe he was just in shock, who knows? So then they asked him about the coat that she is lying on, because they said earlier you mentioned that that was your coat. And they were, so they wanted to kind of like, coax more information out of them. So they were like, is this your coat? That's here, and he didn't answer them. He just sat there. And so they were like, is it her coat? And he wouldn't say anything.
Starting point is 01:17:55 That's weird. And they were like, okay. So they took this immediately. As he knew he fucked up by using that coat and leaving it there, and that he didn't want to incriminate himself. It's really not that weird for your own coat to be in your house on the floor though.
Starting point is 01:18:08 It's not, but I think maybe he was like, they're thinking that he's sitting there going, oh shit, like I've admitted multiple times that that's my coat that she's lying on. Like who wouldn't think that that might like come back to buy you in the ass. Yeah, yeah. Then they just picked up the coat
Starting point is 01:18:24 before it was photographed. Also added to her app. Yeah, yeah. Then they just picked up the coat before it was photographed. All of that. And it turned out to be so total sad. Cool, cool, cool. And when they were done looking at it, they just placed it back down as where it was. And that's where it was. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:35 He admitted again, finally, that it was his. And he said he left it on a hook in the hallway when he left that day. And he said, what happened was he said, I was wearing that code initially, but it's actually nice out today. So I changed into a lighter coat and I put that on the hook. Okay, makes sense. Yeah. Now around 11 p.m. are good old Emmy. All of a sudden was like, wait a second. Hold on. And he said, I'm in the upstairs bathroom and I found a small clout of blood on the upstairs bathroom toilet room.
Starting point is 01:19:05 Bitch, like she could have had her period of material. Well, and it was slightly streaked and he said he was sure. It was because the murderer had gone upstairs to wash up. This would obviously mean it was either Wallace because he would be comfortable in his own home. Yep. Or a really stupid murderer who hung out, hung around for a while, washed up upstairs, but didn't steal any of the goodies up there that were all stood in that, like right in front of them.
Starting point is 01:19:30 So, likely Wallace, that's what it's really pointing to. It seems like everybody's trying to be like, wait a second. Totally Wallace. So, this could be true because these cops were bumbling as hell and could have missed this. Right. Because the Emmy said that the dim light in the bathroom may have caused a shadow on that clot and the clot was really dark, so it could have been obscured in that shadow and they wouldn't have seen it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:54 But multiple, like a dozen cops were in and out of that bathroom over the course of the last couple hours. They could have easily accidentally transferred it there because there was no protocol that they were following. And they're all touching shit. And the Emmy could have transferred it up there. Who knows?
Starting point is 01:20:10 Yeah. There was no other blood in the house anywhere else. Right. So it's very unlikely that they traveled around the home after the murder and didn't get blood anywhere else. It just seemed like one little speck. It doesn't make a lot of sense. So at near midnight, the police, the police medical officer
Starting point is 01:20:27 Dr. Hugh Pierce came and he was gonna be kind of a second set of eyes. He examined the body and he said she had been dead for six hours So now he's tacked on a couple more hours. So it agreed with the idea that she was dead when Wallace said he had spoken to her And said goodbye to her and said goodbye to her. So both of these are just trying to do that to make the investigation easier. I don't know. That's the thing. So now he is brought to the police station to make another statement.
Starting point is 01:20:56 He is not under arrest, but of course everyone is outside now. They're seeing all the commotion. So now everyone's seeing the scene and they're seeing him being let away. So their rumors are starting to happen. Gossip is starting. People are saying they saw him in handcuffs. He wasn't in handcuffs. He was just coming to go on out. He was not detained. He was not arrested. Yeah. So during his interrogation at the police station, he said that Julia would not have opened the door to someone unless she knew them personally. Right. He was like, I know that 100%. And she said she always entertained people we knew in the parlor.
Starting point is 01:21:31 And when he was asked if anyone could have gained entry into the house forcibly, they were like, do you know anyone that would have wanted to hurt you or hurt her? He said, you know what? I do know someone that could have done this. And they were like, whooo. And he said it was a guy I used to work with at the insurance company named Richard Gordon Perry. And he said, Perry, the motive that he was thinking of was he said, Wallace had confronted him several times about coming up short on his insurance collections. Like,
Starting point is 01:22:00 you would write down one thing and his money would be short like he was stealing. Yeah. And this happened a bunch of times. And he said Wallace had informed their boss and Terry was fired because of it. Okay, so that's a pretty good fucking modus. So he said Perry had been in his house before, so he knew the layout. And he said that he had actually been inside the house because when Wallace was sick with kidney issues, he kind of took over his route. And so he was in the house to kind of give him all the lay of the land. And then he said he's actually been inside that cash box because he had to put the money in there after his rounds.
Starting point is 01:22:38 So he said he's deposited money in that cash box. He knew it was there. And it would make sense that he didn't go in like her purse or upstairs. He's just going straight to that cash box. You knew it makes sense. That does make sense. So Perry was brought in for questioning and without prompting, gave an alibi of being with his girlfriend
Starting point is 01:22:57 the night the phone call was made to the chess club. And had he also been told about the phone call exactly. He also gave an alibi for the night of the murders But it didn't ring weird to anybody in the police station that he just offered up an alibi for the night before without anyone asking him Well, what is the night before I have to do with anything exactly? Perry so he's trying to say I couldn't have made that phone call wasn't me. I wasn't Qualtra, right? But it's like nobody knew that so it doesn't make make sense. The police are probably like, what phone call? And at this point, Alibis are kind of moot, at least for the murder time, because this Emmy was pulling out.
Starting point is 01:23:29 I don't even know what it is. This Emmy was playing real fast and loose with forensics. Yeah. So yeah, I don't think we need to rely on that time of death so much. But remember, Perry later, because we are not done with him yet. And you are not done with him either. Do you know we are done with the episode of this new episode? Who boy?
Starting point is 01:23:52 I don't know what to think. Let me tell you, it's only going to get weirder and it's only going to confuse you more. Because in the next episode we are going to talk a little bit more about Perry and what's going on with him. It's going to make you think a little bit more about Perry, and what's going on with him. It's gonna make you think a little bit more about him, being suspicious. Oh yeah. We're gonna talk about the trial and everything after.
Starting point is 01:24:11 Obsessed. Woo, all right. This case. Guys, that was quite a case. In case. We hope you keep listening because we're gonna go over part two this week. We are, we're gonna come over and we're gonna go over. Part this week. We are we're gonna come over and we're gonna go over part two
Starting point is 01:24:26 Part two so yeah, we do we hope you keep listening and we help you keep it But not so weird that you don't know who killed your wife and you don't know what you're doing as a medical examiner Or up at least guns to ball Bye Take the rectal temperature. Everyone, do always do it. Always put the thermometer in your booty hole. Bye. Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen ad-free with Wondery Plus and Apple podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.

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