478 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
478 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
221B BAKER STREET
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1. >THE UNHOLY MAN<
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The preacher was in fact a thief who had stolen the original
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manuscript of Hamlet from an exhibit on the Riviera, where he
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also acquired his tan. The preacher disguised the manuscript as
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a Bible and had Longworth authenticate it for the Duke, whom the
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preacher hoped would buy it. Longworth, however, in desperate
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need of money, killed the preacher with Hamlet's sword and stole
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the manuscript. Longworth, who does not smoke, planted the
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German-made cigarette near the victim's body to throw suspicion
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from himself; but in the process, he accidentally dropped his
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packet of aspirin.
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KILLER: EARL LONGWORTH
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WEAPON: SWORD
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MOTIVE: MANUSCRIPT
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2. >SILVER PATCH<
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Sir Reginald Cosgrove, in dire need of money, concocted a plot
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to collect money from his large insurance policy on Silver Patch.
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Sir Reginald painted over the silver patch on the mane of his
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prize horse and painted a silver patch on the mane of Night
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Dancer, another of his horses. He then switched stalls and
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poisoned Night Dancer, who now looked like Silver Patch.
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Realizing that he would have to take Oscar Switt into his
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confidence, Sir Reginald arranged for his trainer to meet him at
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the stables. When Switt refused to go along with Sir Reginald's
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plan to kill Night Dancer, Sir Reginald became enraged and killed
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the trainer, smashing him over the head with an ale bottle, then
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stabbing him repeatedly with the broken bottle.
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KILLER: SIR REGINALD COSGROVE
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WEAPON: BROKEN BOTTLE
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MOTIVE: INSURANCE
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3. >THE CHAMELEON'S VENGEANCE<
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Disguised as Inspector Lestrade, the chameleon planted explosives
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in the violin case which housed the instrument Holmes was to play
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in the duet finale at the Playhouse.
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SURPRISE: EXPLOSIVES
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HIDING PLACE: VIOLIN CASE
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CHAMELEON: LESTRADE
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4. >THE CODED MESSAGE<
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Knowing death was near, Rudolph Hickle forced his canary to
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swallow the valuable Eyes of Lucifer. Hickle then attempted to
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notify his good friend, Harry Blake, by writing in a code the two
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had developed years ago.
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MESSAGE: PEARLS INSIDE CANARY.
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5. >THE CLERK'S DEMISE
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Two years after being dishonorably discharged from the British
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military, Donald Hobson changed his name to Alfred Cooke and
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tried to start a new life. Neither his eventual employers at
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Scotland Yard nor his wife and children knew the truth of his
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past. Manfred Maloney stumbled onto Cooke and attempted to
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blackmail his old army buddy. To protect his secret, Cooke
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killed Maloney with an icicle and tried to make it appear to be
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the work of a radical political group.
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KILLER: ALFRED COOKE (DONALD HOBSON)
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WEAPON: ICICLE
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MOTIVE: BLACKMAIL
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6. >THE REWRITTEN DEATH<
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Understudy, Vance Hillyard, planned to murder Roderick Garrick
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to obtain the star's role; but, owing to Hillyard's color
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blindness, the actor mistakenly killed Albert Boswell.
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KILLER: VANCE HILLYARD
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MOTIVE: STAR'S PART
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7. >THE PILLAGED PAWNBROKER<
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While cleaning out her husband's attic, Mrs. Phyllis Cahill
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inadvertently included among the items sold to the pawnbroker a
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secreted Ming vase John Cahill had stolen from the museum.
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Cahill traced the priceless chinese objet d'art to the
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pawnbroker shop and broke in, placing the Ming vase in an armor
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helmet for protection and wrapping the treasure with newspaper
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and string. When Miles Balfour surprised the thief, Cahill
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killed the pawnbroker with a broadsword from the set of old
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English armor and, as an afterthought, robbed the cash till to
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throw suspicion from himself.
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KILLER: JOHN CAHILL
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WEAPON: BROADSWORD
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MOTIVE: MING VASE
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8. >THE EMPTY-HANDED THIEF<
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As was her custom periodically, Mrs. Beatrice Galton opened the
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wall safe in her husband's study to view the Renshaw Diamonds
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bequeathed by her late mother. When she attempted to return the
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gem tray, a stone fell to the floor and she whirled, stepping
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firmly, only to find the "diamond" crushed underfoot. Numbly,
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Beatrice smashed "jewel" after "jewel" with a letter opener from
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the desk. She suddenly realized the truth. Her husband had
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disposed of her diamonds, replaced the gems with glass replicas,
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and squandered the money. Beatrice confronted Galton as he
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entered the room with the latest packet of unpaid bills and, in a
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fury, she stabbed him.
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KILLER: BEATRICE
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WEAPON: LETTER OPENER
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MOTIVE: DISCOVERED JEWELS
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9. >THE PECULIAR CHARWOMAN<
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Tobacconist Daniel Ferguson, equally dividing his time between
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his London and Liverpool shops, found in the arrangement an equal
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opportunity to divide his affections. Surprised by his Liverpool
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wife Bessie's visit to his London shop, Ferguson lured the
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unfortunate girl into a shed behind the shop (used to
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hickory-smoke certain blends), then dressed his victim in a
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charwoman's garb, his immediate problem cured.
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KILLER: DANIEL FERGUSON
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MOTIVE: BIGAMY
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CAUSE OF DEATH: SMOKE INHALATION
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10. >THE DUCHESS'S DEMISE<
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In her sitting room at Barrington Manor, the Duchess confronted
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Alex Stafford, demanding he return the funds he had won from
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cheating at the card table. Enraged, Stafford killed the Duchess
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with a poker from the fireplace and attempted to establish an
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alibi for himself using ventriloquism.
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KILLER: ALEX STAFFORD
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MOTIVE: DISCOVERED CHEATING
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ALIBI: VENTRILOQUISM
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11. >THE DEADLY CALLER<
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Captain Victor Juno feared his stepmother's wild infatuation
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for gigolo Lorenzo Marchetti and concocted a fiendish murder
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plot to secure his inheritance. Juno returned to England
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carrying a deadly but trained Indian cobra. He then adjusted the
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radiator in his stepmother's room to emit a "whistling" pitch.
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from his adjoining room, Juno released the cobra into a common
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ventilator shaft opening near his stepmother's bed. As Mrs.
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Lyons rose in the night hearing the gentle sound of movement, she
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realized too late that "music" from the radiator pipes had
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"charmed" the caller.
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KILLER: VICTOR JUNO
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WEAPON: SNAKE
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MOTIVE: INHERITANCE
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12. >THE SPINSTER'S WILL<
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Learning that a vast diamond field had been discovered near the
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worthless gold mine Miss Pierpoint was to bequeath him, druggist
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Ward Ramsey substituted sleeping pills for the aspirin tablets
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Miss Pierpoint kept at her bedside.
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KILLER: WARD RAMSEY
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WEAPON: SLEEPING PILLS
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MOTIVE: DIAMOND MINE
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13. >THE NETTLESOME BRIDE<
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Penelope Holloway discovered she was making a bridal trousseau
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for another woman to marry the man who once proposed to her.
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Seeking revenge for her romantic jealousy, the seamstress stabbed
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Imogene Boylan with a pair of scissors and stole the engagement
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ring from her finger.
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KILLER: PENELOPE HOLLYWAY
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MOTIVE: ROMANTIC JEALOUSY
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WEAPON: SCISSORS
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14. >THE AMOROUS SAILOR<
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"I wed two wives" should be Willie Dryden's epitaph. The white
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ring of untanned flesh around Willie's ring finger tipped Holmes
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to the fact that Willie had no business marrying Mitzi. He was
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already married in Singapore to the lady in black. This femme
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fatale followed Willie to London, learned he was marrying Mitzi,
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took her place in the receiving line and gave Willie the kiss of
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death.
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IDENTITY: DRYDEN'S WIFE
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MOTIVE: BIGAMY
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METHOD: POISON LIPSTICK
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15. >THE UNKNOWN VICTIM<
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Enraged by his wife's confession of having had an affair with
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Carl Seagram, Barry Auguston plotted the General's death. On the
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pretense of showing him the house, Auguston lured Seagram into
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the guest chamber. Auguston requested a look at Seagram's sword;
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and when he had it, he forced the General to change into a tweed
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suit and then stabbed him. He quickly shaved off the General's
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moustache and beard, hoping no one would recognize him. He left
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the body on the bed, along with the sword. He hoped Scotland
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Yard would assume the missing General killed this man, then drop
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the case when the General couldn't be found.
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KILLER: BARRY AUGUSTON
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VICTIM: CARL SEAGRAM
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MOTIVE: JEALOUSY
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16. >THE KIDNAPPED SONGSTRESS<
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Winnie Oats and her manager Dale Rice are devious characters.
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They used poor Lloyd Newcomb to get favorable publicity, then
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tried to hang the kidnapping on him by planting the mask in the
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reporter's carriage. Dale Rice wore the mask when he swept down
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on the rope to kidnap Winnie, who was fully prepared for the
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kidnapping. Winnie's husband, Guy, found out about her
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involvement with Newcomb. Guy booked passage for himself,
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probably bound for his lawyer and a divorce.
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KIDNAPPER: DALE RICE
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MOTIVE: PUBLICITY STUNT
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LOCATION: PLAYHOUSE ATTIC
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17. >THE POISONED POKER PLAYER<
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Ralph Cotson was correctly convinced that Roger Stearns had
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been winning at cards by cheating. When Stearns brought his jade
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ring to Cotson the jeweler for repair, Cotson contaminated the
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ring with cyanide poison, and waited anxiously for their next big
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poker game.
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MURDERER: RALPH COTSON
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MOTIVE: CHEATING
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HOW POISONED: RING
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18. >THE GLUTTONOUS GOSSIP<
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Harold Quail, the driver of a food delivery carriage, was madly
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in love with Helen Thrush, wife of the hotel manager. When
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Charles Maxwell exposed Harold's affair with helen in his gossip
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column, Helen committed suicide. One night, as Harold was making
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a food delivery at the pub, waiters carried Charles Maxwell out
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to the carriage to be rushed to the hospital. Maxwell was
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unconscious from an orgy of overeating. Filled with anger and
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hatred for the journalist, Harold covered the face of the
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unconscious man and smothered him to death with his bare hands.
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KILLER: QUAIL
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MOTIVE: REVENGE
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METHOD: SMOTHERED WITH BARE HANDS
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19. >THE WELL-INFORMED THIEF<
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Dentist Harrison Beale was in dire financial straits due to his
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compulsive cardplaying, when he decided to extract Mrs. Haigh's
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life savings along with her tooth. Beale administered a truth
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serum when the widow visited the dentist. While unconscious, the
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widow answered all of Harrison's questions concerning where she
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hid her life savings and when she would be away from her house.
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THIEF: BEALE
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HOW HE KNEW WHERE TO LOOK: ADMINISTERED TRUTH SERUM
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DURING DENTAL WORK.
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20. >THE LIMPING TAX COLLECTOR<
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Pawnbroker Phillip Pupil was a very lucky man until tax
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collector Clarence Alexander discovered that Pupil had filed
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false income tax returns for years. faced with probable
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imprisonment, Pupil decided to stab Clarence with a poisoned
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needle and leave false clues of suicide. When Clarence took his
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shoes off in the park and waded in the pond, Pupil stuck a needle
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dipped in curare poison in Clarence's left shoe. When Clarence
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put his shoe on and collapsed, Pupil rushed forward pretending to
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render first aid. He used this opportunity to plant the
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typewritten suicide note and the bottle of poison on Clarence.
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KILLER: PHILLIP PUPIL
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MOTIVE: TAX FRAUD
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METHOD: STUCK POISONED NEEDLE INSIDE SHOE
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21. >THE FALLEN ANGEL<
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Hot air balloonist Willie Crayfield talked human fly Hector
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Angel into a daring heist of the Crown Jewels stored in the
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heavily guarded Tower of London. As Crayfield maneuvered his
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balloon above the Tower, Angel climbed down a rope and entered a
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vent leading to the room containing the regal gems. After
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stealing the Crown Jewels, Angel commenced to climb back up the
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rope into the gondola of Crayfield's balloon. Angel made the
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fatal mistake of first handing the gems to Crayfield before
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completing his climb. As soon as Crayfield grabbed the jewels,
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he drew a sword and cut the rope Angel was ascending. Poor
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Hector Angel fell to his death still clutching a section of the
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severed rope.
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KILLER: WILLIE CRAYFIELD
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WEAPON: SWORD
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HOW KILLER ESCAPED: HOT AIR BALLOON
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22. >THE ALPHABET SPY<
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The leaders of the militant German province of Prussia were
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about to expand their influence by invading France. This
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aggression became known as the bloody Franco-Prussian War, and
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the date in the message marked Prussia's first assault. Bonus
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points for any sleuth who pegged the year as 1870, five years
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after the civil war.
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THE MESSAGE: AUGUST NINETEENTH
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THE EVENT: INVASION OF FRANCE
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WHO SENT THE MESSAGE: KING WILHELM
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23. >THE MYSTERIOUS SKULL<
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If you know anything about the sport of rowing, you know a
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"scull" is a racing boat used in the Olympics and the Henley
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Regatta. The fishermen who pulled the coach from the Thames
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heard the right word, but everybody assumed the wrong spelling.
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KILLER: ROWING TEAM
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HOW KILLED: HIT BY BOAT
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MOTIVE: COVER UP DRUG USE
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24. >THE MUSICAL MURDER<
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The quartet's harpist was bitter over the theft of his musical
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piece "Goodbye, Dolly," so he was determined to end William
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Minor's career on a sour note. You had an edge on this case if
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you know music and recognized that on the piano an E flat and a D
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sharp are exactly the same note.
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KILLER: JEFF DESHARPE
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WEAPON: HARP STRING
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MOTIVE: STOLEN COMPOSITION
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25. >THE EYE OF THE EIGER<
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Sir Edmund Hillman was an old fashioned hero: adventurous,
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modest and widely admired. Dr. Simon "Sy" Klopps who scaled the
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Eiger with Hillman deeply resented that his team leader gathered
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"all the glory" for the climb. Motivated by intense envy, Dr.
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Klopps utilized his considerable skills as a hypnotist to cause
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Sir Edmund to disgrace himself by appearing to shoplift clothes
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bearing the Eiger fashions logo. Holmes realized that Sir
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Edmund's doodles of a green eye in the Eiger revealed the
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solution to the case. Sir Edmund's subconscious mind associated
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Dr. Klopps with the one-eyed monster of myth, the cyclops. The
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green eye on the sketch suggested envy as a motive and hypnotism
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as the means of the crime.
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CRIMINAL: DR. SY KLOPPS
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MOTIVE: ENVY
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METHOD: HYPNOTISM
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26. >THE RANDOM MURDERS<
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Whig precinct worker Sean Byron set a new low in
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unsportsmanlike conduct in a political campaign: he murdered
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supporters of the opposition party. The incumbent candidate,
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Whig Sir Leroy Tick, derived a double benefit from his zealous
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supporter's actions since the murders not only decreased the
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number of Labour votes but also provided him with a strong "law
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and order" campaign issue. Although Sir Leroy did not instruct
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Byron to commit murder, he set the shocking events in motion by
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ordering his unbalanced aide to "do what it takes" to eliminate
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the Labour lead in the polls. Byron did as he was told.
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KILLER: SEAN BYRON
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MASTERMIND: SIR LEROY TICK
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MOTIVE: WIN ELECTION
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27. >MORIARTY'S CHALLENGE<
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The arch-villain, Professor James Moriarty, chose Holmes'
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birthday as an appropriate occasion to engage the master sleuth
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in a battle of wits. He planted an explosive in the candle at
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the table reserved for Holmes at the London Bistro. Although
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waiter Bill Beaconfield bore no ill will toward Holmes and never
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had dealings with Moriarty, he was Moriarty's unwitting agent in
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crime by lighting the candle intended to kill the great
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detective. As the candles at the restaurant last three hours,
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and the explosive was contained midway in the candle on Holmes'
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table, the murder would have occurred at 9:30.
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MORIARTY'S AGENT: BILL BEACONFIELD
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METHOD: EXPLODING CANDLE
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INTENDED TIME OF MURDER: 9:30 PM
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28. >THE DOCTOR'S LAST LAMENT<
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Dr. Van Nogh was a man with a guilty conscience. He served in
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the British Army during the South African Campaign; but when he
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was captured in battle he became a traitor and fought on the side
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of the Boers. Hence his cryptic remark that he had been a "bloody
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bore". His commanding officer, General Vernon Arnoux, always
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suspected Van Nogh's treason but could never prove it. Finally,
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he decided to take justice into his own hands and "execute" Van
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Nogh. When Arnoux confronted Van Nogh, he permitted the Doctor
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to write a suicide note. The general killed Van Nogh by
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injecting air into the man's arm with a hypodermic needle.
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Afterwards, thinking that he needed a more credible suicide
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method, General Arnoux poured cyanide into the dead man's mouth.
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KILLER: ARNOUX
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WEAPON: HYPODERMIC
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MOTIVE: PUNISH TREASON
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29. >THE MYSTERIOUS MURDER<
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Irene Marlow was unaware of her husband's old business
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partnership with Albert Kenilworth. Colonel Marlow had swindled
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Kenilworth, driving him to commit suicide. Ten years later,
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Albert's brother Arnold made good on his threat of revenge.
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Marlow had never met Albert Kenilworth, which Kenilworth used to
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his advantage. He followed Marlow and engaged the unsuspecting
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Colonel in a game of backgammon at the pub. After the game,
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Kenilworth jumped the Colonel and injected him with a large dose
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of strychnine, causing near-instantaneous death. Kenilworth then
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dragged Marlow's body to the dock and threw it into the river.
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MURDERER: ARNOLD KENILWORTH
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MOTIVE: REVENGE
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CAUSE OF DEATH: THE DRUG, STRYCHNINE
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WHERE: PARK
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30. >THE MURDERED STOCKBROKER<
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Barry Coopersfield, worried about the competition from Henry
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Lancelot's company, devised a devious plan to gain extra money
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for himself. He convinced Bailey that they should buy an
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insurance policy in case either of them died, with the surviving
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partner getting the insurance money. After the policy was taken
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out, Coopersfield took his souvenir western "six-gun" revolver,
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followed Bailey after work, and shot him outside the tobacconist.
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Coopersfield then went to the Wild West Show at the Playhouse.
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Posing as a stagehand, he snuck into the prop room and put his
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revolver in a prop bin containing other revolvers from the show.
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MURDERER: BARRY COOPERSFIELD
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MOTIVE: INSURANCE MONEY
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WHERE MURDER WEAPON IS: PLAYHOUSE PROP ROOM
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