Cameo Murders
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Cameo murder. (Discuss) Proposed since June 2021. |
This article does not cite any sources. (December 2014) |
Author | |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Crime, crime, Fact |
Publisher | Bluecoat Press |
Publication date | 1999 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 223 pp |
ISBN | 1-872568-60-2 |
OCLC | 46432379 |
Preceded by | -- |
Followed by | unknown (2006) |
The Cameo Murders is a book by , first published in the United Kingdom by the Bluecoat Press in 1999. The book details the brutal and baffling murders of the manager and assistant manager at the Cameo Cinema in Liverpool in March 1949, subsequent investigation and miscarriage of justice. The book effectively lead to quashed convictions of two co-offenders, post-hanging.
Background[]
The Liverpool City Police launched a massive manhunt and over 9,500 houses were visited and 75,000 people were interviewed. Over 1,800 fingerprints were taken and handwriting samples were obtained from 1,841 women. The subsequent conviction of George Kelly and Charles Connolly made legal history.
Trials[]
The first trial was the longest trial in England and George Kelly became one of the few men to be tried twice for a capital offence. The conviction and execution of Kelly is one of the milestones which led to the eventual ending of capital punishment in Britain.
The gross miscarriage of justice which resulted in the hanging of George Kelly forms part of the book. However, George Skelly, in his book The Cameo Conspiracy - The Real Story Of The Cameo Cinema Murders (Avid 1998 and Upstage 2001 editions), says that far from Kelly's execution prompting abolition, it was in fact met in 1950 with widespread public approval. He quotes the Daily Express editorial of 29 March 1950, which stated:
Kelly richly deserved to die. The world is better for his removal.
Quashed convictions[]
Rather was it the hangings of Timothy Evans (1950), Derek Bentley (1953) and Ruth Ellis (1955) which precipitated abolition.[citation needed]
Skelly's book, together with the efforts of his friend, retired businessman Luigi Santangeli who caused the case to be referred to the Criminal Cases Review Commission (see Court of Appeal judgement, October 2003), was responsible for the quashing of the convictions of both Kelly and his co-accused, Charles Connolly in 2003.[original research?]
- 1999 non-fiction books
- Non-fiction crime books