Thursday, August 22, 2024

THE MAD HOUSE OF LORD LUCAN

  

The murderer was Richard John "Lucky" Bingham (above), the Seventh Earl of Lucan.  There was never a mystery about that.  He was hard to miss, standing six feet four inches tall, dark and handsome and debonair with an arrogant entitled blue blood air about him. You might think if he had been just an average guy, he might have never felt entitled to commit murder. But lots of average men try to murder their wives. 
Lord Lucan (above, center) fancied himself as a professional gambler, and was descended from a long line of royal cads. His great-great-great grandfather, the second Earl, gained infamy during the Irish Potato Famine as the very epitome of a heartless, greedy Englishman, throwing starving Irish peasants out of their homes to starve to death. 
John’s Great-Great-Grandfather, George Charles Bingham, the third Earl (above), was the cad who ordered the charge of the Light Brigade. The Fifth Earl, George Charles Bingham, sat out the First World War in the House of Lords, but liked to be called “Major” a rank he achieved between the wars when there was no shooting going on. And John’s father had shocked the family by switching his alliance to the Labor Party in the 1930’s.
John chose his profession the way most gamblers do, right after a winning streak: he won twenty-six thousand pounds in two days, while playing backgammon. 
What John did not know was that his gambling club of choice, the Clermont Club (above), was in fact a den of thieves. The club's owner, gangster John Aspinall, described his upper class customers as pigeons...
... and described the Claremont as “…like robbing Fort Knox or the Bank of England - just a lot easier.” Lord Lucan was such a favored pigeon that Aspinall had a bust of him placed on display in the club
In November of 1963 John married the petit and pretty Veronica Duncan.  She gave birth to three children; a daughter, Frances, in October 1964, George (the heir) in 1967, and Camilla, born in June of 1970.
John seems to have always been a control freak, and one nanny would later claim that John beat Veronica with a stick wrapped in masking tape when to punish her for suffering from postpartum depression.  Veronica would not admit the abuse until decades later, saying that John beat her with a cane to get the “mad ideas out of your head. .He could have hit me harder. They were measured blows. He must have got pleasure out of it because he had intercourse (with me) afterwards”.
Lady Lucan's untreated depression became worse after Camilla was born, and required medical assistance for herself,  and a young nanny, Sandra Rivett,  to help her care for the children.
Meanwhile, his Lordship had discovered that not only was the income of a professional gambler prone to ups and downs, it was also prone to its own addictions. By the mid 1970’s, after putting in his time at the backgammon table, John began spending the wee hours of each morning, playing what he had once labeled as the “mugs games” of roulette and craps and even bridge, trying to recover what he had lost at his first choice of games.
He was losing them all, of course. Because he was being  fleeced by his friend, the gangster John Aspinall (above).
The marriage bent under the strain of mounting bills and Veronica’s personal struggles, and the couple separated. John moved into an apartment a few blocks away from their five story London townhouse at 46 Lower Bellgrave Street (above) . (It was just around the corner from Buckingham Palace.) He hired a private detective to spy on his wife and gather information for what he was certain would be an eventual divorce.
Lord Lucan was now suffering from regular headaches, and drinking heavily. He became obsessed with regaining control of his children. Not that he actually wanted anything to do with them, on a daily basis. But when he could no longer afford the Private Investigator,  John was reduced to stalking Veronica himself.   
In March of 1973 John kidnapped his children and sued to gain legal custody.  But in June the judge sided with Veronica.  He labeled John’s behavior as “lawless” and granted Veronica full custody. All three children moved back into the mansion on Lower Bellgrave.  What with child support and alimony, plus Veronica’s medical care and the cost of a nanny, the judge’s decision left John in debt for forty thousand pounds. So John began to make other plans.
By 9:30 P.M. on the night of Friday 8 November 1974 the two younger children had been put to bed. Frances was watching television with her mother in the family room on the second floor when, just before ten, the new nanny, Sandra Rivett, (above) poked her head in the door and asked if there was anything else she could do before going home. On a whim Veronica suggested a cup of tea, and Sandra went down to the basement kitchen to put the kettle on. Thirty minutes later, when Sandra had not returned, Veronica went downstairs to see what had become of her. When she reached the darkened main floor she was attacked by a man wielding a bent pipe.
He struck her several times in the head. Veronica tried to cry out, but the man ordered her to “shut up”, and roughly shoved two gloved fingers down her throat. Veronica instantly recognized the voice as John’s. She fought back, bit his fingers, grabbed John by his testicles and squeezed as hard as she could. He released his grip and the two collapsed on the floor in heap. 
Gathering her courage and her voice, Veronica asked where Sandra was. John admitted he had just murdered the nanny.  In the dark of the basement he said, he had mistaken her for his wife (they were both 5’2” tall and slightly built). Thinking quickly Veronica assured John that Sandra would not be missed, and that in order to avoid a scandal she would help him dispose of the body. John led her to the second floor where they both told their daughter Francis to go upstairs to her own bedroom. In the master bedroom Veronica lay on the bed while John went in to the bathroom to wet a washcloth. And the second Veronica heard the water running she leapt off the bed, ran down the stairs and out of the house.
She stumbled down the street to the Plumber’s Arms Pub (above). In her nightdress and covered in blood, she made quite an impression. She gasped hoarsely to the startled patrons, “Murder, murder, I think my neck has been broken - he tried to kill me”  Back at the house, when John realized that Veronica had escaped, he ran for it. They found poor Sandra stuffed in a bloody sack near the basement door. She had been horribly bludgeoned to death. A victim of mistaken identity.
John’s apartment was empty. The police would discover he driven forty miles to a friend’s farmhouse, and told them he had been passing the home on Lower Bellgrave when he saw an attacker through a basement window.  He said he had rushed in,  only to be knocked down by the attacker. Then he claimed, realizing he would be blamed for the murder, he had run away.  He called his mother twice. The second time she asked if John wanted to speak to the police officer who was with her. John hung up. And then, after his friends went back to sleep, Lord Lucan disappeared.
Three days after the attack they found his car parked on a public street (above) near the docks in Newhaven. In the car was his passport and a note to a friend,  asking him to look after his children. In the trunk was a bloody length of pipe, bent by the beatings administered to the innocent Sandra Rivett and then Veronica.
For decades the police continued to search for Lord Lucan, with dogs, and divers and detectives. An entire industry sprang up,  seeking the most famous missing royal murderer in recent history.  John was reported living happily in Australia, in South Africa, and even in India. 
But oddly enough none of this string of "Could-Be Johns" has displayed a gambling addiction, or an affinity to act like an arrogant snob.  In 1984 Scotland Yard tried to reopen the case but it ran into another series of dead ends. Eventually they gave up. 
The last suspected "John" was a man living in a van in New Zealand with a pet possum, a cat and a goat. But like all the others, he turned out to be somebody else.
Veronica Lucan, (http://www.ladylucan.co.uk/) never remarried,  and always insisted that John threw himself into the Thames estuary (the Solent), probably on 9 or 10 November.  And to tell you the truth, I agree with her.  Over time her mental illness slowly took control of her mind, and by the time she died at 80 years of age,  in October of 2017, she was estranged from her children, and died alone in her Belgrave apartment.
Still it makes a much more interesting story if Lord Lucan had managed to escape to someplace, Tahiti maybe, or perhaps Ceylon. But like the famous missing Judge Crater in the United States, Lord Lucan will likely remain not dead, but missing, forever.  Because that’s the way most of us prefer our  harsh reality; with a softening dose of myth.
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