Tuesday, 16 June 2026

Leopold and Loeb

 Nathan Leopold aged 19 and Richard Loeb aged 18 killed a 14-year-old boy in Chicago in 1924. Both were from rich families and both were very intelligent. They excelled academically. Loeb graduated from the University of Michigan aged 17. Leopold was studying law at the University of Chicago and planned to study at Harvard Law School. Both seemed to believe they were superior beings, above ethics and the law. The two committed petty theft just for thrills before progressing to murder. They planned to commit the perfect murder. They didn’t. In fact, it was an incompetent crime and they were easily caught.


The unfortunate victim was Bobby Franks, aged 14. On 21 May 1924 Leopold and Loeb hired a car. They chose a victim at random. Driving along they saw a boy walking home from an after-school baseball game. Bobby didn’t know Leopold but he knew the Loeb family. The murderers lured him into the car. They gagged him then hit him, repeatedly over the head with a chisel. Bobby suffocated on the gag.


They threw the chisel out of the car. It was found and handed in to the police. Leopold and Loeb then stripped the body and hid it in a culvert by a railroad. They poured acid over his face to make identification harder.

They sent a letter to the family of Bobby Franks saying he had been kidnapped and demanding a ransom of $10,000. In fact, Bobby was already dead. 


The body of Bobby Franks was discovered the next day, 22 May. Nearby the police found a pair of glasses. They had an unusual hinge which allowed them to be traced to a certain optometrist. He had only made three prescriptions for that type of glasses. One of them was Nathan Leopold. He claimed he must have dropped them from his jacket pocket in the area when he was bird watching some days before. But it had been raining for days before the body was found and the glasses were dry. The police asked Leopold to demonstrate how the glasses could have fallen from his jacket pocket but no matter how he bent over the glasses did not fall out. 


At first Leopold claimed he had driven with his friend Loeb to Lincoln Park, Chicago. Loeb confirmed his alibi. However, Leopold had typed notes for students at his law school. One still had the notes and the typeface was found to match the type on the ransom note sent to Bobby Frank’s family. Also the Leopold family chauffeur made a statement that the car the murderers claimed they had driven around all day on 21 May, had not left the garage that day.


Faced with the evidence, Loeb broke down and confessed. When he was told that Loeb had confessed, Leopold confessed too. They both blamed each other for the actual killing. Both denied any sexual assault took place.


The two were interviewed by ‘alienists’ as psychiatrists were then called. Neither showed any remorse for the crime.


The trial began on 21 July 1924. The killers were defended by the famous lawyer Clarence Darrow. They pleaded guilty but Darrow pleaded with the judge not to impose the death penalty. 

He made a speech lasting two days. In the end, the judge did not sentence the two to death on the grounds of their youth. Instead, he sentenced them to life imprisonment plus 99 years for the kidnapping.


Richard Loeb was killed by another inmate in 1936. Leopold was paroled in 1958. He died of a heart attack in 1971, aged 66.


Monday, 15 June 2026

Styllou Christofi

 Styllou Christofi was the second-to-last woman to be hanged in Britain. She was born in Cyprus about 1900. In 1925 she was accused of murdering her mother-in-law by shoving a burning piece of wood down her throat. However, she was acquitted.

Her son Stavros moved to Britain. He worked as a wine waiter. He married a German girl called Hella and they lived in Hampstead, London. The couple had three children. In 1953 her Styllou went to live with her son and daughter-in-law. 

However, the two women did not get on at all. They argued constantly. Matters came to a head in 1954. Hella announced that she was going to take her three children on a holiday in Germany. She made it clear to Styllou that she wanted her gone by the time she returned to Britain. 

But Styllou had other plans. In the evening of 29 July 1954 she walked up to Hella and hit her over the head with a heavy ash pan from a boiler. She then strangled Hella with a scarf. Christofi removed Hella’s wedding ring. She then dragged the dead body into the back garden. In a futile attempt to destroy the evidence, she poured paraffin over it and set it on fire.

A neighbour saw Christofi standing by the fire but he thought it must be a mannequin. Later, Christofi ran into the street and approached a couple in a parked car. She said ‘Please come. Fire burning. Children sleeping’. The couple found the fire. The fire brigade were called and when they saw the burning body they called the police. 

Christofi claimed she was woken by male voices and had seen a man in the garden by the fire. She claimed she attempted to douse the fire with water. Not surprisingly, police did not believe her and they arrested her for murder.

While she was awaiting trial a doctor examined her and stated that in his opinion, she was insane. The defence team urged Christofi to plead not guilty because of insanity but she refused. Perhaps she was too proud. 

Christofi went on trial on 25 October 1954. She was found guilty and she was sentenced to death. Styllou Christofi was hanged on 15 December 1954. 


Saturday, 13 June 2026

Belle Gunness

 Belle Gunness was a Norwegian-American murderer of the early 20th century. It’s not certain how many people she killed but the motive for murder was financial gain.


She was born in Norway on 11 November 1859. She was one of 8 siblings. Her father was a stonemason. 


Belle migrated to the USA in 1881. Her birth name was Brynhild but she began calling herself Belle. In 1884, she married a man named Sorenson. The two ran a candy store, which was not successful. It burned down and they claimed insurance money. The couple had four children. Sadly, two of them died, supposedly of acute colitis, although they may have been poisoned. Both children had life insurance. As well as her two surviving children, Belle had an adopted daughter called Jennie Olsen. 


Sorenson died in 1900 and Belle collected a large amount of insurance money. His death was ascribed to natural causes but he may have been poisoned.


Belle moved to La Porte, Indiana. In April 1902 she married a man named Peter Gunness. The two had a son. Unfortunately, Peter died in December 1902, supposedly, when a meat grinder fell off a shelf onto his head. At the time, it was decided that his death was an accident. However, Belle gained a large amount of insurance money after his death.


Belle began advertising in newspapers. She described herself as a ‘rich, good-looking widow’. She claimed she owned a large farm and she was looking for a man to marry.


The advert was soon answered. A number of men travelled to Belle’s farm, where they disappeared.  Belle persuaded them to hand over their savings to her. It’s not known how Belle killed her victims. She probably poisoned them. The bodies were buried on the farm.


In 1906, Belle murdered her adopted daughter, Jennie Olsen, aged 16, and buried her body on the farm. Jennie was probably killed because she suspected the truth. Belle told her neighbours that the girl had gone away to school. 


In 1907, Belle employed a farmhand named Ray Lamphere. She later fired him. Belle claimed that Lamphere threatened her life. 


Then, on 28 April 1908 Belle’s farmhouse burned down, killing her three children. The body of a woman was found in the burned ruins, but it was missing its skull. It’s not certain if the dead woman was Belle Gunness.


The farmhand, Ray Lamphere, was arrested for the murder of Belle Gunness and the three children. He was acquitted of murder but convicted of arson. Lamphere was sentenced to 21 years in prison. He died in December 1909.


The relatives of missing people told the sheriff of their suspicions that Belle had killed them. Digging began and the searchers found the body of Belle’s adopted daughter, Jennie Olsen. The bodies of 11 people were found buried on the Gunness farm. Unfortunately, most were too badly decomposed to be identified.


What happened to Belle Gunness is not known. Did she perish in the fire or did she fake her own death?


Friday, 12 June 2026

Anne Frank

 Anne Frank was born on 12 June 1929. I found this picture by a person on Pixabay:  


Wednesday, 10 June 2026

John Reginald Christie

 Christie was a notorious serial killer of the 1940s and 1950s. He was born near the town of Halifax in Yorkshire on 8 April 1899. He was one of seven children. His father was a carpet designer. 

According to Christie, his father was a severe disciplinarian. At the same time, his mother was overprotective. John was a rather effeminate boy, and he was not very popular. 

Christie had four older sisters who, he said, were always bossing him around. Christie appears to have developed a resentment towards women.

In 1916, he attempted to have sex with a local girl but was unable to manage it. (Christie suffered from impotence all his life). 

The girl and her friends called him ‘Reggie-no-dick’ or ‘Can’t-do-it-Christie’. It was, of course, a deeply humiliating experience and seems to have worsened his resentment of women. 

Christie later claimed that a defining moment in his life happened when he was 8 years old. He hated and feared his grandfather. However, the old man died. As was common in those days, the body was laid out for the family to see. 

Christie said that on seeing his dead grandfather, he experienced pleasurable feelings. He later described it as ‘a strange peaceful thrill’. He realised his grandfather could never hurt him again. In his mind, dead bodies became intertwined with feelings of pleasure. Afterward, he developed an unhealthy interest in dead bodies. It’s very likely that, as an adult, Christie was a necrophiliac.

Christie was intelligent. He left school at the age of 15 and got a job as a cinema projectionist assistant. In 1917, Christie was conscripted into the army. In 1918, he was wounded in a gas attack. He later claimed that the gas made him blind for 5 months and unable to speak for three and a half years. His voice never fully returned, and he spoke very softly for the rest of his life.

However, although Christie certainly was gassed, there is no record of him being blinded for months or unable to speak for years. He was, no doubt, greatly exaggerating the effects of the gas attack. 

There was nothing physically wrong with his larynx, and speaking in a quiet voice was almost certainly psychological. His voice sometimes returned during times of stress. Christie was a hypochondriac, and all his life, he exaggerated symptoms of illness. 

Christie returned to civilian life in 1919, and in 1920, he married Ethel Simpson. However, Christie suffered from impotence. However, both before and after his marriage to Ethel, he visited sex workers. In 1921, Christie became a postman, but he was dismissed for stealing postal orders. For this crime, he served a 3-month prison sentence. Like many murderers, Christie had a record of petty crime. 

In 1924, he separated from his wife and moved to London. For years, Christie drifted from job to job. 

In 1929, he was living with a woman, and during an argument, he hit her with a cricket bat. He was sentenced to 6 months in prison. Ominously, the judge called it ‘a murderous attack’. In 1933, he was sentenced to 3 months for stealing a car. On his release, he persuaded his wife to return to live with him.

For her, it was, literally, a fatal mistake. In 1938, the couple moved into a flat at 10 Rillington Place, an address that was to become infamous.

When the Second World War began in 1939, he applied to become a war reserve constable. Notably, they did not verify his criminal record before offering him a position. 

Christie appears to have enjoyed wearing a uniform and having authority over others. He became known as the Himmler of Rillington Place. 

Christie committed his first murder in August 1943. Why he turned to murder is not known. However, in the summer of 1943, he was having an affair with a married woman. When the woman’s husband was home on leave, he beat up Christie and threw him out of the house. The writer Ludovic Kennedy suggested this might have been the trigger for murder. Christie was humiliated, and he sought to ‘take it out’ on someone weaker than himself. Sometimes serial killers begin murdering people when something causes them to lose self-esteem, and they decide to ‘take it out’ on someone. 

At any rate, Christie killed a 21-year-old girl named Ruth Fuerst. Ruth came from Austria. She was a part-time sex worker. Unfortunately, she met Christie, and he paid for her services. 

While his wife was away visiting relatives, Ruth went to Christie’s home. She undressed, and Christie strangled her with a rope. Christie said he strangled her while he was having sex with her, although it’s possible he had sex with her after she was dead. Christie said later that he felt pleasurable feelings when he saw the dead body, which he later described as a ‘strange peaceful thrill’. It was similar to the pleasurable feelings he had when he saw the dead body of his grandfather.

At first, he hid Ruth under the floorboards of his living room. Later, when his wife was out, he buried her in the garden. 

Ruth Fuerst was reported missing, but her disappearance did not cause alarm because she came from a ‘twilight world’, where people often disappeared. Christie said that after murdering Ruth, he ‘never gave it a thought’. Christie could simply avoid thinking about unpleasant subjects when it suited him. 

Sooner or later, Christie was bound to kill again. In December 1943, he left his job as a war reserve constable and took a position at Ultra Radio Works in Acton. There, he met a 31-year-old woman named Muriel Eady. Muriel was not married, but she had a boyfriend. 

She became friendly with Christie. The two used to chat in the works canteen during their lunch breaks. Muriel also visited Mr and Mrs Christie at their home.

Unfortunately, she suffered from catarrh. Christie persuaded her that he could treat the illness. He had, he told her, a glass jar into which he poured a special mixture. The lid had a hole in it through which a rubber tube was threaded. It ended in a rectangular mask that could be held over the face, and the patient inhaled fumes. Muriel agreed to try the treatment, and she went to Christie’s flat while his wife was away. 

What Christie did not tell Muriel was that another rubber tube was threaded through the lid. This one led to a gas tap. The rubber tube was pinched shut with a bulldog clip. When Christie removed the clip, carbon monoxide gas flowed through, rendering Muriel unconscious. Christie then strangled her with a rope. 

It is believed that Christie raped Muriel either when she was unconscious or dead. Once again, Christie said he had pleasurable feelings when he looked down at the dead body. 

He described it as ‘a strange peaceful thrill’. He added, ‘I had no regrets’. Christie hid the body in a wash house behind the house, and later he buried the unfortunate woman in the back garden. 

Muriel’s disappearance was, of course, noticed. However, Christie was lucky. She never told anyone that she was going to his house. If she did, he would have come under suspicion. 

Yet, there was no reason, as far as anyone could see, why he should want to kill her. The two had been on friendly terms. 

It was also a time when the Germans were firing V2 missiles at London. Some people were blown to pieces and never identified. It was eventually assumed that it must have happened to Muriel. 

Years later, Christie accidentally unearthed Muriel’s thigh bone while digging in the garden. He used it to prop up his garden fence. 

Christie continued to live an outwardly normal life until 1949. His next victim was Beryl Evans. She was married to Timothy Evans, a van driver. They had a baby girl, Geraldine. The marriage was not happy. They were short of money, and they frequently argued. Timothy Evans was a man of low intelligence (he had an IQ of 68), and he was illiterate. He was also a very impressionable man. And he was a fantasist. He often told ridiculous stories. 

The couple lived in a flat above Christie’s. In 1949, Beryl became pregnant for a second time. She did not want the child, as they could not afford it, and she made attempts to abort. (Abortion was illegal at that time).

Unfortunately, she made the mistake of telling Christie. He persuaded her that he knew how to carry out abortions (whether he did or not is uncertain; maybe he just claimed he did to kill her). Beryl Evans was keen to get rid of the child. 

Her husband, Timothy, was reluctant, but Christie persuaded him. Christie claimed that he was training to be a doctor before the war, but he had to give it up after an accident. It was a lie that he ever trained to be a doctor, but it was true that he did have an accident. He was hit by a car in 1934. 

Christie showed Evans a first-aid book leftover from his days as a policeman. Evans could not read, but he was impressed by the diagrams and became convinced that Christie did have some medical knowledge.

However, Christie did say that there was one chance in ten that the operation would be fatal. 

That was plausible, as women did indeed die from abortions. At the time, workmen were working in the house, but when they were on their lunch break, Christie went upstairs. 

He may have persuaded Beryl to inhale gas, but she struggled. Christie hit her in the face and strangled her. It’s possible he had sex with her dead body.

When Timothy Evans came home, Christie convinced him that Beryl had died during the abortion. He told Evans that her stomach was ‘septic poisoned’ as a result of the pills she had taken in an attempt to abort herself. Unfortunately, Evans believed Christie’s lies.

Evans wanted to tell the police, but Christie persuaded him not to. Christie said, truthfully, that he had been in the police and knew how they operated. He told Evans the police would ‘knock him about’ until he confessed. Unfortunately, Evans was a man of low intelligence, and he was easily influenced. Christie was able to dominate him. 

Christie persuaded him to help him move the body of Beryl Evans to an empty flat between his and the Evans flat. He told Evans he would hide Beryl’s body in a drain where it would decompose. But he told Timothy to sell his wife’s wedding ring, otherwise it could be used to identify the body.

That left the problem of the baby girl, Geraldine. At first, Christie said he would look after the child while Timothy went to work. But he couldn’t do that forever. He told Evans that he knew a childless couple who would adopt the child. Of course, no such people existed. Christie persuaded Evans to go to Wales, where he stayed with relatives. 

After he went, Christie strangled the baby girl. Even Christie, horrible as he was, must have balked at the idea of killing a baby. 

But for him, it was a matter of survival. He could not go on looking after the child indefinitely, and if he tried sooner or later, someone was certain to find out. 

Some workmen had been doing work in the house. Christie asked if he could have some semi-rotten floorboards they had removed. They agreed. 

After the workmen left, Christie placed the bodies of Beryl and Geraldine in a wash house behind the house and hid them behind boards of wood.

But Evans was worried about Geraldine, and he returned to London for a short time. He told Christie he wanted to see the baby. Christie said it was too soon. Sadly, the child was already dead. 

Naturally, Evan’s family noticed that Beryl and the child were missing, and they grew concerned. His mother wrote to her relatives in Wales, wanting to know what was going on. 

Eventually, Evans decided to go to the police. Unfortunately, he did not tell them the truth. He was trying to protect Christie, whom he still thought was his friend. Evans told the police that he met a man in a cafe. He told the man his wife was pregnant and did not want the child. 

The man helpfully gave him some tablets, which would cause his wife to abort. Unfortunately, his wife died as a result of taking the tablets, and he hid the body in a drain. 

Christie said he was going to hide the body of Beryl Evans in a drain, so Timothy assumed the police would find it there. Of course, they did not. The police found that one man on his own could not lift the drain lid, and it was empty. 

It must have been a shock to Timothy to find out that Christie had lied to him, and he made a new statement. This time, he told the police that Christie had offered to perform an abortion, and Beryl had died as a result. But Timothy had lost all credibility by lying to the police. They would naturally think, ‘if he lied once, he might lie again’.

Evans made another statement. This time he told the truth. He told the police how Christie had offered to give his wife an operation, and she had supposedly died during the operation.  

The police in London were contacted, and they decided to search 10 Rillington Place. They found the bodies of Beryl Evans and the baby hidden behind wood in the wash house. 

Unfortunately, the police did not dig in the garden at that time. If they did, they would have found the bodies of Ruth Fuerst and Muriel Eady. They also did not notice a human femur holding up the garden fence. 

The police interviewed Christie, who did everything he could to incriminate Evans. That, of course, was a despicable thing to do, but Christie was an odious man. He knew that if Evans was not blamed for the two murders, then he would be. 

He was the only other possible suspect. Christie had been a policeman himself, and he knew how the police operated. He lost no time telling them he had been a War Volunteer Constable and he had been given two commendations.

He also tried to blacken Evan’s reputation. He said that Evans was ‘very well known locally as a liar’. That was true, Evans was always telling tall tales, but so was Christie a liar. 

Christie also told the police that he and his wife were both of the opinion that Evans was ‘a bit mental’, which wasn’t true. If anyone was ‘a bit mental,’ it was Christie. Unfortunately, Christie was able to turn the police against Evans. 

The police took Evans to London, where he was informed that his wife and his child were dead. Until that moment, Timothy thought his daughter was alive. He was devastated when she found out she was dead and said he no longer cared whether he lived or died. Evans was told the bodies had been found in the wash house.

The police questioned Evans into the early hours of the morning. He eventually broke down and confessed to both murders. 

However, the police put words in his mouth. He was an inarticulate man with a low IQ, and the ‘confession’ included words he simply would not have used.

It might seem hard to believe that anyone would confess to a murder they did not commit, but people do. 

There have been many cases where an innocent person confessed to murder but was later proven to be innocent by forensic evidence. 

Today, we have a much better understanding of false confessions. In the 1950s, people were much less likely to believe that an innocent person would confess to murder.

But there was a problem with the confession. Evans confessed that he put the bodies in the wash house before he went to stay with relatives in Wales. However, there were workmen in the house at the time. 

Two of them, a plasterer and a plasterer’s mate, made statements to the police that they finished working in the wash house and cleaned it out on the day after Timothy Evans arrived in Wales. That meant his confession could not be true. 

But the police had made up their minds that the confession was genuine. So they interviewed the two men again and persuaded them to change their statements. This time, they said they left the wash house empty before Evans went to Wales. (One of them was shown a picture of a dead baby, which had nothing to do with the case). 

So, instead of changing their theory to fit the evidence, the police changed the evidence to fit their theory. A chance to save an innocent man was missed, and so was a chance to stop a serial killer. 

Timothy Evans went on trial for murder on 11 January 1950. Christie was a cautious but convincing prosecution witness. He told the court he had been blinded for five months after a gas attack during the First World War. (He was indeed injured in a gas attack, but his claim that he was blinded for months was a gross exaggeration. He claimed that he was unable to speak for three and a half years, which was also a lie. Unfortunately, he gained sympathy from the court by telling that story.

He also told the court he had been a War Reserve policeman during the Second World two and he had been given two commendations. That was true, but no doubt it impressed the court.

Christie claimed that he had been ill with fibrositis (musculoskeletal pain) at the time of the murders. 

(The truth is, he was ill after they were committed). Christie also told the court all about the rows Mr and Mrs Evans had. 

The defence lawyer brought to light the fact that Christie had several convictions. 

But the prosecution lawyer pointed out that Christie had not been in trouble with the law for 17 years. He persuaded the jury that Christie was a changed man.

In contrast, Timothy Evans made a poor showing. He was unintelligent and inarticulate. 

He also seems to have become confused during the trial. He was no match for the prosecution lawyer. Worse, Evans had confessed to killing his wife. Inevitably, the jury found him guilty. 

Timothy Evans was hanged on 9 March 1950. 

Christie’s life then returned to normal for nearly three years. His next victim was his wife, Ethel. The motive for this murder is not certain. 

Christie hid his wife’s body under the floorboards of his home, but not before he removed her wedding ring. He sold it. He told the neighbours that his wife was away visiting relatives in Sheffield. When she was killed, Ethel was in the middle of writing a letter to relatives. 

Christie cunningly finished it, claiming Ethel had rheumatism and could not do so herself. 

With his wife out of the way, Christie was free to kill more women. Christie killed two women in January 1953. One of them was 25-year-old Kathleen Maloney from Plymouth. Kathleen was the mother of five children. She was a sex worker. 

Kathleen lived in Southampton for several years, but in 1952 she moved to London. She met Christie in a pub. Witnesses saw them leaving together.

It’s not certain how Christie killed her. He later claimed that he had a rubber tube attached to a gas tap. The end of the tube was hung over a chair that he asked the woman to sit in. A bulldog clipped onto the tube stopped the flow of gas. When he removed it, the woman would inhale the gas and become unconscious. He then strangled her with a rope. Christie likely had sex with the dead bodies. He never admitted to necrophilia, but that is not saying much. He was a habitual liar.

Christie also murdered 25-year-old Rita Nelson from Northern Ireland. Rita was a former sex worker who had obtained a job working in a Lyons Tea room. At the time of her death, she was 6 months pregnant. 

It’s not certain how Christie killed her. It’s thought Christie may have met her in a cafe. 

He may have offered to give her an abortion and persuaded her to inhale gas, then strangled her when she was unconscious. At any rate, she was certainly gassed and strangled. 

His last victim was Hectorina MacLellan, aged 26. Hectorina was aged 26. She was originally from the Hebrides, and she was the mother of two children. Christie claimed that he persuaded her to sit in a chair. 

Hung over it was a rubber tube connected to a gas tap. A bulldog clip stopped the flow of gas. Christie said he removed the bulldog clip, but Hectorina saw him and attempted to leave. Christie claimed he grabbed her by the neck and squeezed until she went limp. He then placed her in the chair and waited until she had inhaled some gas and become completely unconscious. He then strangled her with a rope.

On 24 March 1953, a man named Beresford Brown, who lived in a flat above Christie’s. Peeling back wallpaper, he saw a woman’s back. The police were called, and they found three dead women inside a kitchen alcove. 

Post mortems showed that all three had been gassed, but not fatally, and then strangled with a ligature. 

The police also discovered the decomposing body of Ethel Christie under the floorboards. Later, they found the bodies of Ruth Fuerst and Muriel Eady.

The police also found a tobacco tin in the garden. Inside were four pieces of pubic hair, but none came from the victims. It seems Christie had a pubic hair fetish, and he liked collecting samples from women. 

On 31 March 1953, a policeman saw a man standing by the embankment of the River Thames. He asked the man his name. Christie replied he was John Waddington. 

The policeman asked the man to remove his hat. When he did so, the policeman recognised him as John Reginald Christie. 

Christie was taken to a police station where he was informed that the body of his wife, Ethel, had been found under the floorboards of his home. Christie admitted to killing her, but he claimed it was a mercy killing. 

He said that on the morning of 14 December 1942, he woke up and his wife was having a fit. There was a bottle of phenobarbital tablets on the bedside furniture, and it was empty, suggesting Ethel had tried to commit suicide by taking an overdose. As usual, Christie was lying; an autopsy found no trace of phenobarbital in Ethel’s body. Christie claimed he could not bear to see his wife suffering like that, so he ‘put her to sleep’ by strangling her with a stocking. 

Christie eventually confessed to the murders of Ruth Fuerst, Muriel Eady, Rita Nelson, Kathleen Maloney, and Hectorina McLellan. Christie later also confessed to the murder of Beryl Evans. 

The psychiatrists who examined Christie found him to be obnoxious. He was a habitual liar who claimed he could not remember what happened whenever it suited him. One psychiatrist described him as ‘a crashing bore’. Another said Christie was ‘full of snivelling hypocrisy’.

Christie went on trial on 22 June 1953. He pleaded not guilty because of insanity. One psychiatrist testified that he was insane, but two others testified that he was not.

Christie had a personality disorder, but that did not mean he was insane. The prosecution pointed out his calculated behaviour after he murdered his wife, such as selling her wedding ring and his attempts to deceive people into thinking she was still alive. The prosecution lawyer also asked Christie if he would have strangled his wife if there had been a policeman standing in the room at that time. Christie admitted he would not. He effectively admitted that he knew he was doing wrong.

In 1953, English law said that to be found insane, the defence had to show that an accused person was not aware of the nature and quality of their acts. Christie did not meet that criterion. 

Christie was found guilty and sentenced to death. John Reginald Christie was hanged on 15 July 1953. 

In 1966, Timothy Evans was given a posthumous free pardon. In 2003, the Home Office awarded his family compensation.


Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Edward Leonski - the Brownout Killer

 Edward Leonski murdered three women in Melbourne, Australia, in 1942. He was born in New Jersey on 12 December 1917. 

His parents were Russian immigrants. It’s said that both parents abused alcohol. It’s said his mother was overprotective and controlling. Edward was called a ‘mummy’s boy’, and later it was suggested that he killed women because he hated his mother. He was really killing her.


Leonski was conscripted into the army in February 1941. In February 1942, he was sent to Australia. At that time, there was a ‘brownout’ of reduced lighting, which made it easier for Leonski to kill people. 

He prepared breakfast on a military base, but after he finished, he was free to wander the streets of Melbourne. 


The first victim was Ivy McLeod. She was found dead in a shop doorway in Melbourne on 3 May 1942. She had been strangled, and the killer had removed some of her clothes. He left the body in a degrading position. Two more victims followed; Pauline Thompson was strangled outside a boarding house on 9 May, and Gladys Hosking was strangled on 18 May. 


This time, when he returned to his military base, Leonski was challenged by a sentry because he was dishevelled and had mud on him. 

When news of the murder of Gladys Hosking broke, the sentry informed the police. He identified Leonski at a line-up. Several witnesses who had seen Leonski also identified him. 


Leonski confessed to the murders. When he was asked why he killed women, he replied, ‘it was to get their voices’. (It has been suggested that their voices reminded Leonski of his mother). Leonski also drank heavily, and that may have lowered his inhibitions.


Although the murders happened in Australia, Leonski was tried under American military law. He pleaded not guilty because of insanity. However, his plea was rejected. On 17 July 1942, he was found guilty of murder. 


Edward Leonski was hanged on 9 November 1942. He was buried in a military cemetery in Hawaii.


Monday, 8 June 2026