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PARIS MURDER

A RUINOUS COURSE

REDUCED TO DESPERATION

CTnitefl Press Association —By Electric Telegraph—Copyright. (Eeceived 4th December, 2.30 p.m.) PARIS, 3rd December. A story of a gay life culminating in murder is revealed by the dramatic arrost of Georges Gauchot, who recently inherited 200,000 francs from, his father a successful pastrycook. Ho gave- up his job as a bank clerk and took a dancer for his mistress. Finally ho came down to his last meal on 17th November. On that date a jeweller named Dannenhoffer was found murdered in his shop in the Kuo Mozart with sixteen shots in his skull, and seven ribs broken, apparently by kicks. The only clue- was a nowspaper folded over at the racing page. This enabled the detectives to discover that Gauchot had lost heavily on a raeo mentioned in tho nowspaper. They tracked the youth to a Montmartre cafe at 3 o'clock in the morning. On Gauchet's wrist was a stolen watch. He: confessed that he was starving and had tried to raid the jeweller's shop, but Danncnhoffcr had noticed him and a desperate fight had ensued. He stunned the shopkeeper, picked up a revolver lying in the back shop and emptied its contents into the man's head. Then he turned out tho lights and fled into the night.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19301204.2.92

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 134, 4 December 1930, Page 11

Word Count
216

PARIS MURDER Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 134, 4 December 1930, Page 11

PARIS MURDER Evening Post, Volume CX, Issue 134, 4 December 1930, Page 11

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