A Llanrwst Christmas, Not Worth Dying For
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Mood & Emotion
Serious
Disturbing
No sexual content
Character & Plot
Race/culture :
White
Age :
0-50
Sexuality :
Straight
Gender :
Female
Plot :
Success against the odds
Book Description
This is based on a true murder that happened in Llanrwst, North Wales, on Christmas Day, 1937.
The blood flowed from the horrific knife wound in William’s neck. William was a cruel, itinerant, out-of-work, lame hawker, who got offensive when he drank and left Caroline penniless and hungry, living in a squalid, condemned house. But she loved him. People had often witnessed her wielding the knife. She called it her ‘protection’. It was her way of keeping herself safe in their constant arguments.
Caroline confirmed to the police that it was just the two of them in the house, which was her downfall, as she was arrested, although she vehemently stated she was innocent. She had no memory of committing the act. Her son, Edward, tells her to say it was Robert, whom William thought she was having an affair with. However, Robert had an alibi. Caroline was taken to Court, listening to the doctors’ reports and the witnesses' statements. What followed was a gruelling court case, trying to fathom out the truth within the lies and deceit as her sons tried to save their mother from the gallows. However, even though the Jury had requested mercy, the Judge donned his black cap, and she was sentenced to hang.
This book is about prejudice and how the legal system pre-judges guilt, especially as Caroline was an illiterate gypsy, in Wales, not able to read or write, and naïve in respect of the law. She was not even allowed to go into the witness box.
This book is about prejudice and how the legal system pre-judges guilt, especially as Caroline was an illiterate gypsy, in Wales, not able to read or write, and naïve in respect of the law. She was not even allowed to go into the witness box.
Throughout the investigation, I have added notes where I felt the case had truly let Caroline down, bringing to light the inconsistencies in the police investigations and trial. I have also given an indication of how an investigation would have been carried out nowadays.
Caroline’s sentence was repealed to life imprisonment, after an initial unsuccessful appeal, followed by a campaign, when the verdict was finally overthrown and ascertained as being a miscarriage of justice. After 20 months in prison, Caroline revealed the truth about the murder – a truth that is truly unpredictable – and another lie! I prove that it could not have happened in that way, but it leads to Caroline finally being released.