George Cecil Horry
George Cecil Horry (6 May 1907 – 29 April 1981) was an English-born New Zealand criminal, confidence trickster, tailor and convicted murderer.[1]
In 1951, he became the first person in more than 300 years to be convicted under English common law for the murder of a victim of whose body was never found.[2]
He had emigrated with his family to New Zealand in 1921, and from 1923 he accumulated a series of convictions and in 1938 was declared a "habitual criminal;". He married in 1935 and twice in 1942. The first marriage in 1942 was to Mary Eileen Jones. A week after the wedding he told her parents that she had been lost at sea when their ship was torpedoed in the Atlantic Ocean, but they were suspicious and reported her disappearance to the police. Detective Sergeant William Fell established that "George Turner" (supposed to be wealthy and an agent of the British government who was returning to Britain) was, in fact, George Cecil Corry, and persuaded the Crown solicitor in Auckland that the case was strong enough to go to trial. He was arrested in 1951
By 1951 when he was arrested he had accumulated 64 convictions (and been conscripted into the New Zealand Army in 1944). The jury accepted the circumstantial evidence and found him guilty; though the death penalty for murder had been restored it was not in force in 1942 so he was not hanged. Although one of the officers who interviewed Horry in 1943 had retired, his written record of the interview enabled him to recall the details.[3]
References
- Stephenson, Brian W. "George Cecil Horry". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
- Redmer Yska (11 December 2014). "Ain't got no body: NZ's history-making murder case". New Zealand Listener.
- Department of Justice (1974) [1968]. Crime in New Zealand: A Survey of New Zealand Criminal Behaviour. Wellington: A R Shearer Government Printer. p. 36.