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Holmes' Castle On August 11, 1895, Joseph Pulitzer's The World published a fictional floor plan of Holmes' "Murder Castle" with (left to right and top to bottom): a vault, a crematorium, a trapdoor in the floor, and a quicklime grave with bones. Holmes moved to Chicago in August 1886, which is when he began using the pseudonym "H. H. Holmes". [18]
Alice McKenzie was possibly a prostitute, [118] and was murdered at about 12:40 am on Wednesday 17 July 1889 in Castle Alley, Whitechapel. Like most of the previous murders, her left carotid artery was severed from left to right and there were wounds on her abdomen. Her wounds were not as deep as in previous murders, and a shorter blade was used.
A book titled Death in the Castle: Three murders in Dublin Castle 1920, written by Sean O'Mahony, and published by 1916–1921 Club records both the life and deaths of the three Republicans. [citation needed] There is a road in Dublin, close to the Phoenix Park called Conor Clune Road and another called Clune Road in Finglas. [citation needed]
John Trehenban (pronounced TREM-on) (1650–1671), of St Columb Major in Cornwall, United Kingdom, was a murderer sentenced to imprisonment in a cage on Castle An Dinas downs and starved to death. The murder of the two young girls is recorded in the Parish Register. [1]
The murders were the subject of an episode of Teens Who Kill on CBS Reality in March 2017. [15] It was covered in October 2017 on an episode of Jo Frost on Britain's Killer Kids. [16] In May 2019, the case was covered by Britain's Deadliest Kids on Quest Red, with interviews from relatives, lawyers, the police, councillors and journalists. [17]
Camb's trial in Winchester was an unusual one, since it was labelled by some as the first case in English law whereby a prosecution was sought without a victim's body. This has been pointed out to be untrue, as there was a case thirteen years earlier where a father (Thomas Davidson) was convicted of murdering his son (John), and even further back to the Campden Wonder case in 1660.
Ricky Kasso was the son of a local high school history teacher and football coach at affluent Cold Spring Harbor High School.He was often thrown out of his home as a young teenager and lived on the streets of Northport, New York, a suburb of New York City; he usually slept in the local woods or in the cars, garages, backyards and houses of friends.
In Assassin's Creed III, fictional protagonist Connor Kenway visits Hutchinson's abandoned Edinburgh Castle, Jamaica in 1776 (three years after Hutchinson was hanged) in search of Joseph Palmer's piece of Captain Kidd's treasure map, which was implied to have ended up in Hutchinson's private museum.