On 23 July 1956, the day MrsHullett died, the Eastbourne coroner notified Walker that from his post-mortem her death did not appear to be natural. The police began taking statements from individuals who had been in contact with her shortly before her death, many of whom believed that she had committed
suicide. One of her friends, who was also her
executor, provided three letters she had written in April 1956 and had placed with her will, which indicated that she had contemplated suicide then. A second post mortem conducted by a
Home Office pathologist concluded that the cause of death was
barbiturate poisoning. After the second post-mortem, the investigation was taken over from Eastbourne police on 17 August 1956 by two officers from the
Metropolitan Police's Murder Squad. The senior officer,
Detective Superintendent Herbert Hannam of Scotland Yard, was known for having secured a conviction in the
Teddington Towpath Murders in 1953, although the defence counsel,
Peter Rawlinson, called into question Hannam's evidence on how the confession was obtained. In view of the opinion Hannam later expressed, that detectives must sometimes ignore the law, his methods are open to question. He was assisted by Detective Sergeant Charles Hewett. Hannam was in the unusual position that, instead of having to find a suspect for a known crime, he had a known suspect in Adams but needed to link him to more serious crimes than
forging prescriptions, making false statements and mishandling drugs. Devlin suggests that Hannam became fixated on the idea that Adams had murdered many elderly patients for legacies, regarding his receiving a legacy as grounds for suspicion, although Adams was generally only a minor beneficiary. Investigators decided to focus on cases from 1946 to 1956. Of the 310 death certificates examined by
Home Office pathologist Francis Camps, 163 were considered by Camps to be worthy of further investigation. This was because, firstly, a very high some 42% of all 310 of Adams's deceased were diagnosed as having died of cerebral thrombosis or cerebral haemorrhage against an average in the late 1950s of around 15% for elderly, bedridden patients, and secondly the 163 certificates related to Adams's patients who had died while in a coma could be suggestive of the administration of a narcotic or barbiturate as well as the cause stated. The police took numerous statements from nurses who had treated Adams's patients and their relatives. Some were generally favourable to him, but others claimed Adams had given patients "special injections" of substances that were unknown to the nurses and which Adams refused to disclose to them. The statements also claimed that his habit was to ask the nurses to leave the room before injections were given and that he would also isolate patients from their relatives, hindering contact with them. However several of the witnesses whom Hannam had questioned orally refused to give sworn statements to confirm their allegations against Adams. During the trial, the assertions of MrsMorrell's nurses that they did not know what Adams was injecting or that he did not give injections in front of them were disproved by the contents of their own notebooks.
Obstruction On 24 August the
British Medical Association (BMA) sent a letter to all doctors in Eastbourne reminding them of "Professional Secrecy" (
i.e. patient confidentiality) if interviewed by the police. The police were frustrated by this move, although some local doctors ignored it and gave statements relating either to deceased patients or, in one instance, one who was alive. The action of the BMA was part of a concerted attempt to secure better terms for its members, whose pay had remained virtually static since the
National Health Service had been set up in 1948; this action later led to talk of an all-out strike. The
Attorney-General, Sir
Reginald Manningham-Buller (who customarily prosecuted cases of poisoning or delegated them to the
Solicitor General), wrote to the BMA secretary,
Angus Macrae, "to try to get him to remove the ban". The impasse continued until on 8 November Manningham-Buller met Macrae to convince him of the importance of the case. During this meeting, in a highly unusual move, he passed Hannam's confidential 187-page report on Adams to Macrae. His intention was to convince the BMA of the seriousness of the accusations and the need to obtain cooperation from local doctors. Macrae took the report to the President of the BMA and returned it the next day. Convinced of the seriousness of the accusations, Macrae dropped his opposition to doctors talking to the police. It has been speculated that Macrae also copied the report and passed it on to the defence, and conspiracy theorists have claimed that Manningham-Buller did so intending to assist the defence case, but there is no evidence of this. However the incident does call Manningham-Buller's competence into question, and he was strongly criticised at the time. On 28 November 1956, opposition
Labour Party MPs
Stephen Swingler and
Hugh Delargy gave notice of two questions to be asked in the
House of Commons regarding the affair, one asking what "reports [the Attorney-General] has sent" to the
General Medical Council (GMC) in the "past six months". Manningham-Buller replied that he had "had no communications" with the GMC, but only with an officer of it. He did not mention the report. Instead, he instigated an investigation into a
leak, later concluding that Hannam himself had passed information regarding the meeting with Macrae to a journalist, probably
Rodney Hallworth of the
Daily Mail.
Meeting Hannam On 1 October 1956, Hannam met Adams, who asked, "You are finding all these rumours untrue, aren't you?" Hannam mentioned a
prescription Adams had forged: "That was very wrong [...] I have had God's forgiveness for it", Adams replied. Hannam brought up the deaths of Adams's patients and his receipt of legacies from them. Adams answered: "A lot of those were instead of I don't want money. What use is it? I paid £1,100
super tax last year." Hannam later mentioned, "Mr Hullett left you £500." Adams replied, "Now, now, he was a life-long friend [...] I even thought it would be more than it was." Finally, when asked why he had stated untruthfully on
cremation forms that he was not to inherit from the deceased, Adams said: Oh, that wasn't done wickedly, God knows it wasn't. We always want cremations to go off smoothly for the dear relatives. If I said I knew I was getting money under the Will they might get suspicious and I like cremations and burials to go smoothly. There was nothing suspicious really. It was not deceitful.
Search On 24 November, Hannam, Hewett and the head of Eastbourne
CID,
Detective Inspector Pugh, searched Adams's house with a
warrant issued (in Pugh's name) under the Dangerous Drugs Act 1951. When told they were looking for "
morphine,
heroin,
pethidine and the like", Adams was surprised: "Oh, that group. You will find none here. I haven't any. I very seldom ever use them," he said. When Hannam asked for Adams's Dangerous Drugs Register, which was at that time the record of those controlled drugs ordered, but not how they were used, Adams responded: "I don't know what you mean. I keep no register." He had not kept one since 1949, although such failures were not uncommon at that period. When shown a list of dangerous drugs he had prescribed Morrell, and asked who administered them, Adams said, "I did nearly all. Perhaps the nurses gave some but mostly me." This was later contradicted by the contents of the nurses' notebooks produced during his trial. Hannam then observed, "Doctor, you prescribed for her 75 [heroin] tablets of () each] the day before she died." Adams replied, "Poor soul, she was in terrible agony. It was all used. I used them myself[...] Do you think it is too much?" Devlin suggested that Hannam generally considered what a suspect said in interrogation was the best form of evidence, and that the police and prosecution case was based to a significant degree on admissions that Hannam had recorded Adams making. He considered that Hannam's records were reasonably accurate, although putting emphasis on matters that might assist a prosecution, as was the practice at the time. However Devlin considered that proof of guilt should be based as far as possible on facts rather than pre-trial statements to the police, and that an admission had to be taken as a whole, so that Adams's statement that he had used all 12 grains or 75 tablets of heroin could not be divorced from his claim that Mrs Morrell was in terrible agony. Adams opened a cupboard for the police: amongst medicine bottles were "chocolates – slabs stuck – butter, margarine, sugar". While the officers inspected it, Adams walked to another cupboard and slipped two objects into his jacket pocket. Hannam and Pugh challenged him and Adams showed them two bottles of morphine; one he said was for Annie Sharpe, a patient and major witness who had died nine days earlier under his care; the other said "Mr Soden". Soden had died on 17 September 1956, but pharmacy records later showed he had never been prescribed morphine. Adams was later (after his main trial in 1957) convicted of obstructing the search, concealing the bottles and failing to keep a Dangerous Drugs register. Later at the police station, Adams told Hannam: Easing the passing of a dying person isn't all that wicked. She [Morrell] wanted to die. That can't be murder. It is impossible to accuse a doctor. In the basement of Adams's house, the police found, "a lot of unused china and silverware. In one room there were 20 new motor car tyres still in their wrappings and several new motor car leaf springs. Wines and spirits were stored in quantity." Hallworth reports that Adams was stockpiling in case of another
World War. On the second floor, "one room was given over to an
armoury [:] six guns in a glass-fronted display case, several automatic pistols". He had permits for these. Another room was used "wholly for photographic equipment. A dozen very expensive cameras in leather cases" lay around.
Sexuality Adams became engaged around 1933 to Norah O'Hara but called it off in 1935 after her father had bought them a house and furnished it. Various explanations have been suggested: Surtees suggests that it was because Adams's mother did not want him to marry "trade" though he also quotes a rumour that Adams wanted O'Hara's father to change his will to favour his daughters. Adams remained friends with O'Hara his whole life and remembered her in his will. In December, the police acquired a
memorandum belonging to a
Daily Mail journalist, concerning rumours of
homosexuality between "a police officer, a
magistrate and a doctor". The "doctor" directly implied Adams. This information had come, according to the reporter, directly from Hannam. The 'magistrate' was Sir
Roland Gwynne,
Mayor of Eastbourne (1929–31) and brother of
Rupert Gwynne, MP for Eastbourne (1910–24). Gwynne was Adams's patient and known to visit every day at 9:00a.m. They went on frequent holidays together and had spent three weeks in
Scotland that September. The 'police officer' was the
Deputy Chief Constable of Eastbourne,
Alexander Seekings. Hannam interviewed Gwynne on 4 February 1957, following which Gwynne severed all connection with Adams. Hannam's record of the interview does not refer to any homosexual acts (which were a criminal offence in 1956), and the police instead gave the journalist a dressing-down.
Arrest Adams was first arrested on 24 November 1956 on 13 charges including false representation on cremation certificates and granted
bail. He was arrested on 19 December 1956 and charged with the murder of Mrs.Morrell. When told of the charges, he said: Murder... murder... Can you prove it was murder? [...] I didn't think you could prove it was murder. She was dying in any event. Then, while he was being taken away from Kent Lodge, he reportedly gripped his receptionist's hand and told her: "I will see you in heaven." Hannam considered he had collected enough evidence in at least four of the cases for prosecution to be warranted: regarding Clara Neil Miller, Julia Bradnum, Edith Alice Morrell and Gertrude Hullett. Of these, Adams was charged on one count: the murder of Morrell, but with the death of Mr. and Mrs.Hullett being used to prove 'system'. Although it was usual in 1956 for only one count of murder to be indicted, evidence of other suspected murders not being tried could be given, provided each such instance would, on its own facts, be capable of proof beyond reasonable doubt and strikingly similar to the case tried.
Adams and Eves On 22 February 1957, the police were notified of a
libellous and potentially prejudicial poem about the case titled
Adams and Eves. It had been read at the
Cavendish Hotel on the 13th by the manager in front of 150 guests. An officer spent ten days investigating and discovered a chain of hands through which the poem had passed and been recopied to be redistributed. The original author was not discovered; an unnamed
Fleet Street journalist was suspected. ==Patients==