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What precipitated these stories was a missing person's report two
weeks earlier. On February 20, a man and woman came to the
police station in Chelsea to report that Mrs. Olive Durand-Deacon,
aged 69, seemed to have disappeared.
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| John George Haigh |
This woman was a resident of the Onslow Court Hotel in South
Kensington, where she had lived for the past two years. She
had made an appointment with the man who was now reporting her
missing--Mr. John Haigh--to visit his place of business in Sussex.
According to him, she had failed to show up. He had gone to
her friend, Constance Lane, to ask what had become of her. He
claimed that Mrs. Durand-Deacon had asked him to pick her up at the
Army and Navy surplus store, which he had gone to do. After an
hour, she had not come. Mrs. Lane had noticed that Mrs.
Durand-Deacon had not been at her usual seat at dinner or breakfast
the following morning, and this had worried her. She
approached the chambermaid, who told her that the missing woman had
been out all night and had not returned. After Haigh's
account, Lane decided that she must report this incident to the
police. It was not like her friend to just be out without
telling anyone. Olive was a woman of strict routine.
Something was amiss. Constance had to report it. Haigh
said that he himself would drive her over. |
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| Mrs. Olive Durand-Deacon |
A photo and description of the missing woman was issued to all
police departments, the press and to the hotel personnel.
Sergeant Lambourne, the policewoman assigned to take interviews at
the hotel, queried the manager, who offered an uncomplimentary
description of Haigh and a record of his debts to the hotel.
Lambourne thought Haigh had been rather slick in his responses and
looked suspicious there as a middle-aged man among all these wealthy
older women, so she decided to do a background check. Within
an hour, Scotland Yard reported that according to the Criminal
Records Office, Haigh had been arrested several times for swindling
and had spent three separate terms in prison for conspiracy to
defraud, forgery, obtaining money by false pretences, and theft.
He was immediately placed under suspicion. |
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Haigh tried to be helpful. Blue-eyed and handsome, his
polished manner, obvious cleanliness, and stylish dress made a good
impression on reporters. He answered all questions with
apparent concern over the missing woman. Some people noticed
that he wore gloves and it was not long before it became known that
Haigh was a compulsive hand-washer who always wore gloves, summer or
winter. He detested dirt.
Even as Haigh gave interviews to reporters at the hotel,
stressing his hope that Mrs. Durand-Deacon would be found safe and
sound, the West Sussex constables were checking out his place of
business, Hurstlea Products in Crawley.
Haigh had claimed to be the director, which was soon proven to be
a fabrication. In fact, from this company he had rented a
two-story brick storefront, surrounded by a six-foot fence, for what
he called "experimental work." He had told the
managing director of Hurstlea Products, from whom he recently had
borrowed money, that he was doing "a conversion job."
Conversion work was a normal industrial practice, primarily used to
break down materials in strong acid. People willing to do it
could make good money.
The police, led by Horsham detective Pat Heslin, forced their way
into the building to examine the contents of the room. They
found tools, trays, wires, a sheet of red cellophane paper and a wad
of cotton near a bench. Three carboys--narrow-necked,
ten-gallon glass bottles used for acid--stood in a row, packed in
straw. One was empty, another half empty. Nearby lay a
new stirrup-pump with a part removed, and from a hook on the door
hung a rubber apron stained by chemicals. There was also a
pair of rubber boots and rubber gloves. Inside an army bag was
a gas mask.
The police team also found a man's hatbox and an attaché case
that bore the initials, J. G. H. Leaving a guard at the
storehouse, Heslin reported these items to Inspector Shelley Symes,
who authorized their seizure for a search.
They found papers relating to someone named Archibald Henderson,
Rose Henderson, and three people named McSwan. There was a
marriage certificate, several passports, identity cards, and
driver's licenses. Deep inside the hatbox lay a .38 Enfield revolver
and eight rounds of ammunition. The revolver had been fired recently.
It was not long before they discovered a cleaner's receipt for a
Persian lamb coat. They traced the coat back to one that had
belonged to Mrs. Durand-Deacon. Back at the hotel, they found
a workbasket in her room with scraps of material that matched
patches on the Persian lamb coat. This was sent to the police
laboratory.
Then a press report brought Mr. Bull of Horsham forward to report
that jewelry had been brought into his jewelry shop to be pawned the
day after the woman had been reported missing. Symes collected
the jewelry and had it identified by a relative as that belonging to
Mrs. Durand-Deacon. The person who had sold it had signed his
name, "J. McLean" at "32 St. George's Drove,
S.W." The jeweler's assistant recognized Haigh as
"McLean." In previous visits, when he had also
pawned jewelry, he had called himself John George Haigh.
Not surprisingly, he was arrested. When Detective-Inspector
Webb approached Haigh and asked him to come along to the police
station, he reportedly said, "Certainly. I will do
anything to help you, as you know."
It was not long before they not only had found out where Mrs.
Durand-Deacon had gone, but other missing persons as well.
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