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Norman Thorne

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Norman Thorne (ca 1902 – 22 April 1925)[1] was an English chicken farmer and murderer. He was alleged to have strangled his girlfiend Elsie Cameron (born 22 April 1898[1]) on 5 December 1924[1] after she claimed he had made her pregnant, and later dismembered the body. Suspicion fell on him when he claimed the girl had hanged herself in the barn but it was discovered that the beam in his barn was covered in a thick layer of dust. This made his story of discovering her lifeless body and cutting her down seem improbable. Police also discovered newspaper cuttings about a murder that had occurred in 1924, one committed by Patrick Mahon, who had also dismembered the corpse of his victim. This finding hinted at pre-mediation on the part of Thorne and he was quickly arrested.

Thorne was tried at Lewes Assizes on 11 March 1925 before Mr Justice Finlay. The prosecution was led by Sir Henry Curtis Bennett and the defence by J. D. Cassels. The defence claimed that Elsie had hanged herself and that he had concealed the death out of panic. The evidence of Home Office pathologist Sir Bernard Spilsbury was that she had been beaten to death which is at odds with the claim that she had been strangled.[1]

Thorne was hanged on 22 April 1925[1] on the same gallows at Wandsworth prison used to dispatch the Crumbles killer, Patrick Mahon, whose method of killing it was argued that Thorne had copied (See: Crumbles murders).

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Walters, Minette (2006) Chickenfeed. 3rd edn. London, England: Pan Books. ISBN 978-0330440318
  • Helena Normanton (ed.). The Trial of Norman Thorne. Geoffrey Bles.
  • Andrew Rose, 'Lethal Witness' Sutton Publishing 2007, Kent State University Press 2009: Chapter Twelve 'A Martyr to Spilsburyism'
  • Frederick Porter Wensley (2005). Forty Years of Scotland Yard: A Record of Lifetime's Service in the Criminal Investigation Department (reprint ed.). Kessinger Publishing. pp. 288–291. ISBN 1-4179-8997-1.