<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p class="center"><small>THE CASE OF DR. LAMSON</small></p>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> only case on record in
which the active principle of
aconite has been used for the
purpose of criminal poisoning
is that of Dr. Lamson, who
suffered the extreme penalty
of the law for administering
the drug to Percy Malcolm
John, and thereby causing his
death. The story is remarkable
for the cold-blooded way in
which the murder was carried
out. George Henry Lamson,
a surgeon, in impecunious circumstances,
had a reversionary
interest through his wife in a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</SPAN></span>
sum of £1,500, which would
come to him on the death
of his brother-in-law, Percy
Malcolm John. The latter, a
sickly youth of eighteen years
of age, was paralysed in his
lower limbs from old-standing
spinal disease. On November
27, 1881, Lamson purchased two
grains of aconitine, and shortly
afterwards went down to the
school where the lad had been
placed as a boarder, and had an
interview with him in the presence
of the headmaster, professing
at the same time a
kindly interest in the lad and
his health. During the interview
he produced some gelatine
capsules, one of which he filled
with a white powder, presumed
to be sugar, and directly after
seeing his brother-in-law
swallow it, he took his departure.
Within a quarter of an hour
John became unwell, saying he
felt the same as when Lamson
had given him a quinine pill
on a former occasion. Violent
vomiting soon set in, and he
became unable to swallow. This
was rapidly followed by delirium,
and in three hours and three-quarters
death ensued. Suspicion
fell on Lamson, and he
was arrested shortly afterwards,
and charged with the murder of
John.</p>
<p>According to evidence at the
trial, it is probable that Lamson
had made several previous
attempts on the lad's life, with
aconitine, in the form of pills
and powders, which he had
given him under the pretence of
prescribing for his ailments.
The money to which he was
entitled on the death of John
doubtless supplied the motive
for the crime. The proof of the
purchase of aconitine by the
prisoner, and the evidence of
the post-mortem examination,
pointed to the cause of death,
and the presence of aconitine
was amply proved by the clinical
and other tests patiently and
carefully applied by the analyst.
The difficulty of proving the
presence of a rare vegetable
alkaloid in the body after death
was, no doubt, duly considered
by Lamson when he fixed on
aconitine as the medium for
his evil design; but science
proved the master of the criminal,
and the evidence of the
instrument by which the crime
was committed was indisputably
proved.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />