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Books:

Chloroform

Essex Murders

Whiteley's Folly

Gloucestershire Murders

Notorious Blasted Rascal

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The Crooks Who Conned Millions    Published by Sutton Publishing on 19 October 2006

The ten cases are described below

 

The Price of Omnium: 1814

 An elaborate masquerade fooled the public into thinking that Napoleon had been defeated sending the price of Government Stocks soaring. The resulting trial found one of Britain’s greatest naval heroes guilty of fraud.  But was this a miscarriage of justice?

 

The Princess of Javasu: 1817

 Mary Baker, the poorly-educated daughter of a shoemaker was able to fool many intellectuals of the day into believing she was an Oriental princess, unable to speak English. For a few weeks she was the darling of society.

 

The Viscount of Canada: 1824-39

Alexander Humphreys, assisted by a notorious French fortune teller, claimed the extinct title of Earl of Stirling, and with it vast territories in Canada, which he offered for sale to the public, producing elaborately forged documents in support of his claim.

 

The Sting: 1841

International crook, the Marquis de Bourbel, planned a huge coup, forging letters of credit worth £1,000,000 to be presented simultaneously all over Europe by a gang of associates, but the plan did not go as smoothly as expected.

 

The Bank with No Scruples: 1856

John Sadleir MP used his directorship of the Tipperary Bank to finance his stock exchange losses. Many small investors lost their life savings. There was widespread misery, and the Times denounced him as a national calamity. Unable to face the consequences of his actions, he took Prussic acid.

 

 A Racing Certainty: 1877

Harry Benson and William Kurr, used their combined talents to operate a series of fraudulent betting companies, bribing the senior detectives of Scotland Yard to warn them of possible discovery. The eventual scandal led directly to a re-organisation of the police force and the formation of the CID.

 

 The Greatest Liar on Earth: 1898

Louis de Rougemont wrote entertaining articles for the Wide World Magazine in which he claimed to have lived for many years as a cannibal chief in Australia. Many experts were convinced by his stories, but investigation by journalists exposed him as a fake.

 

The Grappler: 1898

Ernest Terah Hooley bought up promising companies and then resold them to the public at an inflated price. His success and extravagance made him the talk of Europe, but a prosecution exposed his underhand methods to the public. He was made bankrupt four times and served two terms in prison.

 

The Juggler with Millions: 1900-1904

Whitaker Wright floated companies to exploit the Australian gold mining boom, but when the profits became losses, he falsified the company accounts to fool the shareholders. When the inevitable collapse came he fled abroad and was brought home to face trial, but he was determined he would never go to prison, and took cyanide.

 

The Double Duke: 1896-1907

In 1896 a Mrs. Druce claimed that her father in law, Thomas Druce, who had apparently died in 1864 had actually been the 5th Duke of Portland, and his supposed burial in that year had been a fake, the coffin at Highgate Cemetery containing lead weights. She claimed that her son was the real duke, and owner of estates worth £16,000,000.  Mrs Druce was eventually committed to an asylum, but George Hollamby Druce, son of Thomas Druce’s first marriage then made his own claim. The case was by now a national cause celebre. It was not until 1907 that the grave was opened and was shown to hold Thomas Druce’s body. The case collapsed, and two witnesses were convicted of perjury.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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