Parker-Hulme murder

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The Parker-Hulme Murder was a sensational murder and court case that occurred in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1954.

On June 22, 1954, the body of Honora Rieper (née Parker)[1] was found in Victoria Park in Christchurch. She had been killed by multiple blows to the head by a brick. On June 23, two teenage girls were arrested, Pauline Parker (Parker's daughter, also known as Pauline Rieper) and Juliet Hulme. Pauline was a girl from a working class background; Juliet Hulme was the daughter of a distinguished physicist who was the rector of University of Canterbury in Christchurch.

The two girls formed an elaborate fantasy life together and would sneak out and spend the night acting out stories involving fictional characters they had created. Their parents found this disturbing, and when their parents attempted to compel them to remain separate, the girls formed a plan to murder Pauline Parker's mother and escape to the United States.

The two girls were tried together. The trial was a sensational affair, with speculation about their possible lesbianism and insanity. The girls were convicted on August 30, 1954, and each of them spent five years in prison. They were released with the condition that they never contact one another again.

After her release from prison, Juliet Hulme traveled to the United States and went on to have a successful career as a historical detective novelist under her new name Anne Perry.[1] She now lives in Scotland. The story of the murders was loosely adapted into the French film Mais ne nous délivrez pas du mal (Don't Deliver Us from Evil) and more faithfully into Peter Jackson's Oscar-nominated film, Heavenly Creatures. Perry's identity was only uncovered due to publicity surrounding the latter film. The case was also fictionalised in 1958 as "The Evil Friendship" by Vin Packer (aka M.E. Kerr).

The murder was touched upon as strong evidence of moral decline less than four months later by the Special Committee on Moral Delinquency in Children and Adolescents in what became known as the Mazengarb Report, named after its chair, Oswald Mazengarb.

In March 2006, Perry said that while her relationship with Pauline Parker was obsessive, they were not lesbians. (NZ Herald)

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Before the trial began, it was discovered that Honora Rieper had never married Herbert Rieper, the man known as her husband. During the trial she was referred to by her maiden name, Parker.

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