Book description
In 1909, Oscar Slater, a German Jew was convicted and sentenced to
death for the brutal murder of Marion Gilchrist, an elderly Glaswegian
spinster. His trial is now known to have been one of the most
scandalous miscarriages of justice in the annals of legal history.
This book is a masterful and highly readable unravelling of this
infamous case. Tommy Toughill includes material which has only
recently come to light, including the correspondence of Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle (who waged a long campaign to get Slater released) and the
once and future Prime Minister, Ramsey Macdonald, who stated 'the
Scottish legal authorities and the police strove for Slater's
conviction by influencing witnesses and with-holding evidence.' Oscar
Slater was finally released from prison in 1927 after years of intense
public pressure, led by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and William Roughead,
the great criminologist. In the author's quest to clear Oscar Slater's
name, and to lay bare the deep corruption both within the police force
and at the highest levels of the judiciary, the real murderer is
identified for the first time. Toughill also reveals how Slater came
to be wrongly convicted. Slater was the victim not merely of a
miscarriage of justice, but of a conspiracy between senior law
officers intent on framing him in order to protect the real men
involved. Toughill gives place of honour to the policeman John Trench
who in 1914 made pubic his misgivings about the Slater case. His
honesty was 'rewarded' with dismissal from the force. Trench's
revelations came from material not made available to the defence or
consequently the jury. The fact that it has taken nearly 100 years
after Slater's conviction to produce evidence that could and should
have been used during the original trial is shocking enough. How the
legal establishment knowingly witheld this evidence will only serve to
fuel further the doubts many continue to have about our judicial
system. The mistakes in the system of justice illustrated in the Oscar
Slater case are as relevant today, perhaps even more so, as when they
happened nearly one hundred years ago.
Thomas Toughill has laboured in a whisky distillery, taught
history in Gibraltar, been a police officer in Hong Kong and a
bodyguard to Henry Kissinger. A graduate fo the University of Glasgow
and a former Infantry officer in a Scottish regiment.