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Richard
Clifford BRINKLEY
Richard Brinkley was a man who befriended a 77 year
old widow Mrs Johanna Blume with a view to cheating her out of her money.
She owned a house in Fulham and he had designs upon her estate. He drew
up a will in which he was the sole beneficiary of all the old lady's
property and savings By folding a piece of paper he managed to entice
her to sign it thinking it was a list of people wishing to go to the
seaside. He obtained the signatures of Henry Heard and Reginald Parker,
who were to be the witnesses in the same way. It was in fact a will made
out in his favour.
When the lady died her grand-daughter contested the
will. Knowing that this meant the witnesses would be questioned he
decided to eliminate them. He started with a Mr Parker, visiting him on
the pretext of buying a dog. He had a bottle of stout laced with prussic
acid to give to Mr Parker. While they were looking at the dog, Mr
Parkers landlord, Mr and Mrs Beck and their daughter came in to see him.
Seeing the stout they both sampled it and promptly died. The daughter
was very ill but recovered.
Brinkley was promptly arrested and tried for murder
at Guildford Assizes where he was convicted of murder and sentenced to
death. He was hanged at Wandsworth on 13 August 1907 by Henry
Pierrepoint.
Real-Crime.co.uk
Richard Brinkley
Brinkley was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 13th August 1907. Brinkley
was a carpenter who cultivated the friendship of Johanna Maria Louisa
Blume, a 77-year-old widow. She owned a house in Fulham and he had
designs upon her estate. He drew up a will in which he was the sole
beneficiary of all the old lady's property and savings. He induced her
to sign the will by means of telling her that he was collecting names
for a seaside outing. By using a similar ruse he collected the
signatures of two witnesses, Henry Heard and Reginald Parker.
Mrs Blume died two days later and Brinkley promptly
produced the will and claimed his inheritance. Mrs Blume's grand-daughter,
who had lived with the old lady, disputed the signature and, with the
help of a solicitor, demanded that Brinkley prove the validity of the
will. As this meant that the witnesses would be questioned Brinkley
decided that the best way forward would be to eliminate them.
He visited Parker saying that he was interested in
buying a dog that Parker had for sale. He brought with him a bottle of
stout. The bottle was left unattended on the kitchen table while the two
men went to look at the dog. Mr Beck, Parker's landlord, with his wife
and daughter entered the kitchen and, spotting the bottle, decided to
sample it. All three collapsed with Mr and Mrs Beck dying. The bottle
was found to have been laced with prussic acid.
Brinkley was tried at Guildford Assizes, with
forensic evidence being given on the use of various inks used in the
signatures on the wills. Mrs Blume's body was exhumed and no trace of
poison was found.
DerekBentley.com
Richard Clifford Brinkley
Henry Pierrepoint and John Ellis
hanged Brinkley at Wandsworth Prison on 13th August 1907. Brinkley was a
53-year-old carpenter who cultivated the friendship of Johanna Maria
Louisa Blume, a 77-year-old widow. She owned a house in Fulham and he
had designs upon her estate. Brinkley drew up a will in which he was the
sole beneficiary of all the old lady's property and savings. On 17th
December 1906 he induced her to sign the will by means of telling her
that he was collecting names for a seaside outing. By using a similar
ruse he collected the signatures of two witnesses, Henry Heard and
Reginald Parker.
Mrs Blume died two days later of a
cerebral haemorrhage and Brinkley promptly produced the will and claimed
his inheritance. Mrs Blume's granddaughter, who had lived with the old
lady, disputed the signature and, with the help of a solicitor, demanded
that Brinkley prove the validity of the will. As this meant that the
witnesses would be questioned Brinkley decided that the best way forward
would be to eliminate them.
Brinkley visited Parker at his
lodgings in Croydon saying that he was interested in buying a dog that
Parker had for sale. He brought with him a bottle of oatmeal stout. The
bottle was left unattended on the kitchen table while the two men went
to take the dog for a walk. Mr Richard Beck, Parker's landlord, with his
wife, Elizabeth, and daughter entered the kitchen and, spotting the
bottle, decided to sample it. All three collapsed with Mr and Mrs Beck
dying. The bottle was found to have been laced with prussic acid.
Brinkley was arrested in the street in Fulham on the following day.
Brinkley was tried at Guildford
Assizes, with forensic evidence being given on the use of various inks
used in the signatures on the wills. A railway inspector remembered
Brinkley buying a ticket to Croydon on the evening of the Beck's deaths
and a chemist in Manor Road, South Norwood, told of having sold prussic
acid to Brinkley. Mrs Blume's body was exhumed and no trace of poison
was found.
Murder-UK.com
Bottle Of Stout Was Fatal
Mrs. Johanna Blume, a 77-year-old
widow, owned a house in Fulham, London, where she lived with her
granddaughter. Getting to know her, Richard Brinkley, a 53-year-old
carpenter, fancied her home and devised a scheme to obtain its
possession.
First he cultivated Mrs. Blume’s acquaintance. Then
he drew up a will in her name, in which she left him her entire estate.
To obtain her signature on the document, he folded it so that it
appeared to be a blank piece of paper. Then he told Mrs. Blume he was
collecting signatures for a seaside outing. “It’s going to be a
wonderful day out,” he told her. “You’ll enjoy every minute of it.”
She peered at the piece of paper and signed it
between the two crosses Brinkley had thoughtfully added in pencil. In
the same way he then obtained the signatures of two witnesses, Reginald
Parker and Henry Heard, who signed their names below Mrs. Blume’s.
Her death followed two days later, and Brinkley
promptly produced the will and claimed her property. Her 21-year-old
granddaughter accepted that the will bore Mrs. Blume’s signature, but
she decided to challenge it, and went to a solicitor. He wrote asking
Brinkley to prove the document’s validity, adding that he wished to see
the will’s witnesses.
The solicitor subsequently saw Reginald Parker, who
said he had no recollection of witnessing a will, let alone seeing Mrs.
Blume sign any document.
Informed that the will was to be contested, Brinkley
went to see Mrs. Blume’s granddaughter, offering to marry her if she
would accept the will’s terms and drop her solicitor. But the
granddaughter wasn’t interested in marriage, least of all to a man more
than twice her age.
His proposal rejected, Brinkley decided to eliminate
his two witnesses, starting with Parker. On the pretext of buying a
bulldog Parker had for sale, on APRIL 20th, 1907, he went to see him at
his lodgings in Croydon, taking along a bottle of stout which he placed
on a table while they went out to look at the animal.
In their absence Parker’s landlord Richard Beck
entered the room with his wife and daughter. Seeing the bottle of stout,
they decided to sample it. Moments later they collapsed, Beck and his
wife dying shortly afterwards, their daughter recovering in hospital.
The stout was found to be laced with prussic acid,
and when Parker told the police that the bottle had been brought by
Brinkley he was arrested on suspicion of causing the Becks’ deaths.
Detectives found a vet who had supplied Brinkley with prussic acid to
destroy a dog. They also found the off-licence assistant who had sold
Brinkley the bottle of stout.
Convicted at Guildford Assizes of the Becks’ murder
and the attempted murder of their daughter and Parker, Richard Brinkley
was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on August 13th, 1907.
And Mrs. Blume? When she was exhumed, the police were
confident that prussic acid would be found. But there was no trace of
any poison. So her death was either an extraordinary coincidence or
Brinkley somehow outwitted the pathologist Bernard Spilsbury who
examined the body.