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George BRAIN
o make the
death appear accidental
Two days later the police has a bit of good luck.
George Brain was reported to the police on suspicion of embezzlement by
his employers. Brain was 27-year-old driver working for a firm of boot-repairers
and drove the firm's green Morris van. Brain had vanished after leaving
the van in a work-mate's garage.
As soon as the police discovered the van they were
very interested. The first thing they discovered were bloodstains, and
in case that wasn't enough they found Rose Atkin's handbag with Brain's
fingerprints on it in the vehicle. Although a nationwide hunt was
launched Brain was not apprehended until July when he was recognised in
Sheerness and arrested.
George Brain told police that he had picked up Rose
Atkins in Wimbledon late at night and she had demanded money,
threatening to tell his employers that he was using the van after hours.
He also said that without thinking he had hit her with the van's
starting handle. This did not tie in with the fact that she had been
stabbed to death. The knife had already been found hidden in the garage.
He had stolen four shillings from the woman's handbag,
a small amount to kill for even in 1938. He was tried at the Old Bailey
and it took the jury just fifteen minutes to find him guilty and he was
hanged on 1st November 1938 at Wandsworth Prison.
Real-Crime.co.uk
George Brain
On 14th July 1938 a motorist driving through Somerset Road, Wimbledon
spotted a woman's body lying in the road. At first it looked as though
she had been the victim of a hit-and-run accident. On closer inspection
the police decided that the woman had been killed elsewhere and dumped
to make the death appear accidental. Tyre-marks on the woman's legs were
identified as having come from a Morris Minor or Austin Seven car. The
woman was identified as thirty-year-old prostitute Mrs Rose Muriel
Atkins, also known as 'Irish Rose'.
Two days later Brain's employers
reported him to the police on suspicion of embezzlement. Brain was 27-year-old
driver working for a firm of boot-repairers in Pancras Street and drove
the firm's green Morris van. He had vanished after leaving the van in a
workmate's garage. Police inspecting the van discovered bloodstains and
Rose Atkin's handbag with Brain's fingerprints on it.
Brain stayed at large until 27th
July when he was recognised on Minster Cliffs, Sheerness and arrested.
He told police that he had picked up Rose Atkins in Wimbledon late at
night and she had demanded money, threatening to tell his employers that
he was using the van after hours. Brain had hit her with the van's
starting handle, which was at odds with the fact that the girl had been
killed with a knife. The knife had been found hidden in the van's garage.
He had stolen four shillings from the woman's handbag.
At Brain's Old Bailey trial it took
the jury just fifteen minutes to find him guilty and Mr Justice
Wrottesley sentenced him to death. He was hanged on 1st November 1938 at
Wandsworth Prison.