Entry Text: | TULLETT, Tom. Portrait of a Bad Man. [vi], 196, [4]p., illus. London: Evans, 1956.
John Donald Merrett was a small time crook, gambler and murderer. He murdered his mother over debts in 1926, although found not proven on a majority verdict. He decamped to Hastings, married and spent more time in jail for fraud, now with the name Ronald Chesney, before inheriting a small fortune aged twenty-one. He soon drifted into smuggling and became familiar with small boats, moving to the Mediterranean for richer pickings. He returned to the UK when war started and was commissioned in the navy in 1940, moving to Alexandria where he commanded a schooner running supplies to Tobruk, accompanied by more black market dealing and some degree of heroism. He was captured, escaped, was recaptured and repatriated due to illness, then commanded small craft in Home waters, finishing the war at Scapa, as a Lt Commander with a fearsome reputation for wine, women and song. After a spell serving in Germany with looting and the black market as his main activities, he was court-martialled for theft. The next ten years were spent in and out of prison until he murdered his wife and subsequently committed suicide. Indeed a bad man. |
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