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Blood on the Page

A different kind of crime thriller intrigues Alan Montague

February 2, 2018 13:57
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2 min read

It was one of the most intriguing murder cases in British legal history. Wang Yam, a Chinese dissident, was convicted of murdering an elderly British author and sentenced to 20 years in prison. But he continues to protest his innocence 12 years after his arrest.

Nothing unusual there — plenty of convicts claim they did not commit the crime. But very few are tried in secret. Parts of Wang Yam’s trial at the Old Bailey were heard in camera, with the presiding judge, Mr Justice Ouseley, ordering that anyone reporting the proceedings would be guilty of contempt. Not only that but anyone even speculating on why the trial was being held behind closed doors would also be guilty of contempt. That order still stands, and Thomas Harding’s book is bound by it, as indeed is this review.

Eighty-six-year-old Allan Chappelow — who in younger days wrote a well-received biography of George Bernard Shaw — was bludgeoned to death in 2006 in his dilapidated Regency house in Downshire Hill, Hampstead. The police contended that the killing was the result of a burglary that went wrong — which makes the contempt order even more mysterious. 

Journalist Thomas Harding cites the judge’s ruling that there are exceptions to the requirement that trials should be held in open court where national security is at stake or a witness’s identity needs to be protected. Which is as far as Harding, or anyone, can go by way of explanation. “There is a necessary lacuna at the heart of this book,” he writes.