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Infidelity and violence in 1935... 80 years later, and things aren't so different

1K views 2 replies 3 participants last post by  lifeistooshort 
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I thought that members here may be interested by this article I'd come across, about a prominent architect, his affair with a singer, his terrible treatment of his first wife, all culminating in his own murder at the hand of his 2nd wife's teenaged lover:

One of the most famous architects in British Columbia history, found in the sitting room of his England home with his head bashed in. Who is to blame? His wife, a scandalous woman, later painted as a sexual predator? Her 18-year-old lover, passionate but ultimately clueless?

It is a murder that has had people whispering and speculating for decades.

What really happened to Francis Rattenbury that day in 1935? Only his ghost knows for certain.
Drugs, Adultery & Betrayal: A Blueprint for Murder - British Columbia Magazine

Certainly, most cases of infidelity don't end in violence, but much of the rest of the article shows one thing we know for sure: the more things change, the more they stay the same.
 
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