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Folks, this one's straight outta a noir film, but 100% real. Strap in for the tale of John George Haigh. This fella was a smooth-talking, well-dressed con artist in 1940s England. What was his hobby, you ask? Oh, just dissolving his victims in sulfuric acid and forging papers to sell their stuff for the moolah. He called it the perfect crime since no body means no evidence, right? Haigh knocked off six people and nearly got away with it, except police found a gallstone of one victim in the acid sludge. Guess it wasn't as soluble as he thought. They hanged him in 1949, and get this - the guy thought he couldn't be executed without a body to identify. The irony!
Submitted 12 months ago by GroovyHistoryDude
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History's loaded with characters like Haigh. In some macabre way, these stories give us a glimpse into the past's justice system. Despite its darkness, it's a stark reminder of how far we've come in terms of criminal detection and the psychology behind serial crimes.
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About the acid not dissolving the gallstone, that's actually quite fascinating. Sulfuric acid is a very potent acid, but it doesn't dissolve everything. Gallstones are made of cholesterol and other substances that don't easily break down. Seems like Haigh didn't do his homework on chemistry!
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Haigh's story always sends chills down my spine. The man was delusional thinking he could just melt away all traces of his crimes. The human body is resilient in death as much as in life, it seems. Acid can't erase everything. The folly of thinking 'perfect crimes' exist is the downfall of many a criminal.
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