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SAVED BY A DREAM.

BEDROOM DRAMA,

MASKED MAN ACCUSED

ALLEGED ATTEMPT ON EICII UNCLE. ■ The strange story of a dream that did not come true in the strict sense of the word because it enabled the intended victim to divert the course of events, lies behind a remarkable case that will have to be argued out in the Law Courts after the authorities at Nimes, France, Lave completed their investigation. Au even more remarkable feature of the case is that the principal point at issue is whether a person who plunges a knife into a dummy figure in the beliet that it is the intended victim is guilty ot attempted murder. The- circumstances are that an elderly man of means in this region had a vivid dream, in which he believed that while lying in bed a masked figure came into the room and struck at him through the bedclothes with a kiuie. Night Vigil.

The dream made euch an impression, on the mau and his wife that he decided to take the advice o£ a police friend, and the following night the parties rigged up a dummy figure on the bed while they kept watch through the chinks of a communicating door. Some time alter midnight the watchers saw the window open and a masked figure stepped into the room, moving straight towards the bed nn which the form of the dummy figure was clearly outlined. A knife was seen to gleam in the moonlight, and then to descend swiftly on the figure under the bedclothes.

The watchers rushed out and eeized the intruder, who proved to be Georges Lcroux, the scapegrace nephew of the intended victim, who had expectations under his will, but feared that his uncle would alter the document as the result of recent happenings if .he were not "removed ' in time.

The police magistrate who has gone into the affair ie of the opinion that there is a case for attempted murder against the nephew, but his lawyers argue that to justify "attempt" there must be some chance of success, and with a dummy figure on the bed there was never any chance of the gesture of the _ nephew proving fatal. The matter is being referred to the Ministry of Justice in Paris for a decision based on precedents.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19330909.2.157.23

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 213, 9 September 1933, Page 4 (Supplement)

Word Count
384

SAVED BY A DREAM. Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 213, 9 September 1933, Page 4 (Supplement)

SAVED BY A DREAM. Auckland Star, Volume LXIV, Issue 213, 9 September 1933, Page 4 (Supplement)

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