Rodney Hallworth

Rodney Hallworth (born 1929, Stockport, died 1985, Newton Abbot) was a British crime journalist and publicist.

Career

Journalism

Hallworth worked as a crime reporter for the Daily Mail.[1] He reported on many cases but most famously on that of suspected serial killer Dr John Bodkin Adams in 1956. Hallworth was very close to the main investigating officer, Herbert Hannam, and twice during the investigation he himself was investigated: once for being discovered with a memorandum alleging a homosexual link between Adams, a local magistrate (Sir Roland Gwynne, and a local policeman;[2] and a second time for leaking information to two Members of Parliament[3] that the Attorney-General Reginald Manningham-Buller had handed a confidential police report to the British Medical Association (who were organising Adams' defence).[4] Both times Hallworth was given a dressing-down but no more. Hallworth later co-wrote a book about the case, published in 1983 after Adams' death. In it he accused the prosecuting counsel of mismanaging the case, saying that Adams, who was acquitted, was in fact a murderer.[5]

Later Hallworth joined the rival Daily Express, hoping to replace Percy Hoskins as head crime reporter.[6] However, Hoskins carried on in his position and Hallworth was left to "wither on the vine".[6]

Publicity

Hallworth eventually left the Daily Express to become a publicist, representing amongst others, notorious yachtsman Donald Crowhurst in 1968-69.[7][8] Crowhurst disappeared in the Caribbean during a round-the-world yacht race and Hallworth flew over to collect his boat's logbooks, which he then sold to the Times newspaper[8] for "a small fortune".[7] Hallworth's part in the affair brought him a lot of criticism, leading him to being called "money-grubbing"[7] and "unscrupulous".[9]

According to others who knew him, however, Hallworth was a "genial, rotund chap"[6] who was "larger than life".[10]

Books

The Last Flowers On Earth, Angley Book Co., Maidstone 1966. ISBN B001ALS2EY

Articles

Hallworth's article, "The Murdered City", appeared in the April 1966 issue of Devon Life magazine. "The heart of Exeter is dead", he wrote, and then proceeded to criticise severely the post-war rebuilding of the city. Hallworth praised the as-yet unfinished Exeter University (founded in 1955),[11] as well as the area around the Cathedral, which "is worthy of the highest praise". But the article is largely a robust condemnation of post-war development, which he saw as unfriendly to residents and visitors: "If the citizens are prepared to remain on their sick bed of complacency then they should do nothing but watch their home town lapse further behind in the fight for progress and ultimate survival". Throughout the article, his writing is impassioned: "The weapon is at hand to cut out the miserable apathy and disease which is eating Exeter's heart. Big business is waiting to spend its money. Regional planners are waiting to use the centre to show Britain what tomorrow can offer. Let's have a gay, bright, throbbing city. It's waiting to be built."[12]

Notes and references

Sources

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