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Harry DOBKIN
Simpson immediately suspected foul play. In trying to
raise the bones, the skull had become detached and Simpson realized that
the head had already been cut from the body. In addition to this, the
limbs had been severed at the elbows and knees, flesh had been removed
from the face, the lower jaw was missing and the bones were partially
burnt. An obvious attempt had been made to disguise the identity of the
corpse.
Dr Simpson obtained the permission of the coroner to
take the remains back to his laboratory at Guy's Hospital for a more
detailed inspection. Returning to the crypt of the church in a vain
attempt to find the missing limbs, Simpson noticed a yellowish deposit
in the earth, subsequently analysed as slaked lime. This had been used
to suppress the smell of putrefaction, but it also had the effect of
preventing maggots from destroying the body.
Examining the throat and voice box, Simpson detected
a blood clot, strongly indicating death due to strangulation. The next
task was to discover the identity of the victim. The body was that of a
woman aged between forty and fifty, with dark greying hair, was five
feet one inch tall, and had suffered from a fibroid tumour.
Time of death was estimated at between twelve and
fifteen months prior to discovery. Meanwhile the police had been
checking the lists of missing persons, and noted that fifteen months
previously Mrs Rachel Dobkin, estranged wife of Harry Dobkin, the fire
watcher at the firm of solicitors next door to the Baptist Chapel at 302
Vauxhall Road, had disappeared.
An interview with her sister elicited the information
that she was about the right age, with dark greying hair, was about five
feet one tall, and had a fibroid tumour. She also gave police the name
of Mrs Dobkin's dentist, Barnett Kopkin of Stoke Newington, who kept
meticulous records and was able to describe exactly the residual roots
and fillings in her mouth. They matched the upper jaw of the skull.
Finally, Miss Mary Newman, the head of the
Photography Department at Guy's, super- imposed a photograph of the
skull on to a photograph of Rachel Dobkin, a technique first used six
years earlier in the Buck Ruxton case. The fit was uncanny. The bones
found in the crypt were the mortal remains of Mrs Rachel Dobkin.
Rachel Dubinski had married Harry Dobkin in September
1920, through the traditional Jewish custom of a marriage broker. Within
three days they had separated, but unhappily nine months later a baby
boy was born. In 1923 Mrs Dobkin obtained a maintenance order obliging
her husband to pay for the upkeep of their child. Dobkin was always a
spasmodic payer, and over the years had been imprisoned several times
for defaulting. In addition, Mrs Dobkin had unsuccessfully summonsed him
four times for assault.
However, it must be said in mitigation of Dobkin's
actions that she habitually pestered him in the street to get her money,
and it should be remembered that she was still demanding cash in 1941
when the 'child' was twenty years old and hardly a dependant. Dobkin was
to hint later that she was also blackmailing him over some undisclosed
indiscretion at work.
On Good Friday, the 11th of April 1941, Dobkin and
his wife had met in a cafe in Kingsland Road, Shoreditch, near to where
he lived in Navarino Road, Dalston, E8. They left at 6.30 and she was
never seen alive again, though he claimed that she had boarded a No.22
bus to visit her mother. Next day Rachel's sister reported her missing
to the police, implicating Harry Dobkin in the process. Because of the
priorities of war, Dobkin was not interviewed about the disappearance
until April the 16th.
On the night of the 14th a small fire had broken out
in the ruined cellar of the Baptist Church. This was peculiar, because
there had been no air raids and the blaze was only noticed at 3.23am by
a passing policeman. When the fire brigade arrived Harry Dobkin was
there, pretending to put it out. He told the constable that the fire had
started at 1.30am and that he hadn't bothered to inform the authorities
because there was little danger of the fire spreading. There was a
serious air raid on the next night, so the incident was quickly
forgotten. Dobkin was interviewed twice more about his wife's
disappearance and a description and photograph were circulated by the
police but no further action was taken.
On the 26th of August 1942, Dobkin was interviewed
for the first time by Chief Inspector Hat ton, and escorted to the
church cellar, where he vehemently denied any involvement in his wife's
death. He was then arrested for her murder.
The trial of Harry Dobkin opened at the Old Bailey on
the 17th of November 1942, with Mr Justice Wrottesley presiding and Mr
L.A. Byrne prosecuting. Dobkin's counsel, Mr F.H. Lawton, spent most of
his efforts trying vainly to challenge the identification evidence. The
prisoner's appearance in the witness box left the jury unimpressed, and
it took them only twenty minutes to arrive at a verdict of guilty.
Before his execution Dobkin confessed to his wife's
murder, claiming that she was always pestering him for money and he
wanted to be rid of her for good. On the 7th of January, 1943, Harry
Dobkin was hanged behind the walls of Wandsworth Prison.