The Most Extraordinary Trial of William Palmer, for the Rugeley Poisonings, which lasted Twelve Days

audiobook

The Most Extraordinary Trial of William Palmer, for the Rugeley Poisonings, which lasted Twelve Days

by Anonymous

EN·~13 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total

TRIAL OF WILLIAM PALMER FOR THE RUGELEY POISONINGS.

0:03

CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT, May 14, 1856.

1:47:55

SECOND DAY, May 15.

55:18

THIRD DAY, May 16.

58:28

FOURTH DAY, May 17.

1:04:06

FIFTH DAY, May 19.

54:46

SIXTH DAY, May 20.

35:11

SEVENTH DAY, May 21.

5:08

THE DEFENCE. (Seventh Day Continued.)

2:25:27

EIGHTH DAY, May 22.

58:12

Description

A courtroom in mid‑nineteenth‑century London becomes a stage for one of the era’s most sensational legal battles. Over twelve tense days, jurors, lawyers, and a throng of curious onlookers witness the prosecution’s painstaking case against a seemingly respectable country surgeon accused of murder. The trial’s drama is amplified by the sheer volume of testimony, newspaper reports, and public speculation that flood the streets outside the courthouse.

William Palmer, a 31‑year‑old doctor from Rugeley, appears at first glance to be a successful professional with a comfortable family life. Yet his recent decision to insure his wife’s substantial inheritance for thousands of pounds, followed by her untimely death, raises unsettling questions about motive and greed. As the Crown presents evidence of forged prescriptions and suspicious financial dealings, the defense struggles to portray a man whose love of sport and medicine may have hidden a darker ambition. The early stages of the trial lay bare a clash between Victorian legal rigor and a chilling possibility of calculated homicide.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~13 hours (790K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

Release date

2016-02-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A

Anonymous

Some of the world's oldest and most enduring stories come to us without a known writer. When a book is credited to "Anonymous," it usually means the author's identity was never recorded, was deliberately withheld, or has been lost over time.

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