Eileen Isabella Ronnie 'Gay' Gibson was a 21-year-old actress who was travelling back to England on the
Union-Castle Line ship MV
Durban Castle in October 1947. 'Gay Gibson' was her
stage name. She had been on a theatre tour in
South Africa with
Doreen Mantle and was returning to
London to perform in theatre at the
West End. Her presence on board came to the attention of James Camb (born 16 December 1916), a 30-year-old
steward on the liner. Gibson had been accommodated in Cabin 126, B Deck, which was in first-class. Camb was seen associating with Gibson, which was against company regulations, and was subsequently reprimanded by a senior officer.
Durban Castle had set sail on 10 October. On the night of 17 October, after spending the evening dancing, Gibson was escorted to her cabin by two friends at 11:30pm. Sometime around 3:00am the following morning, the duty watchman, Frederick Steer, was awakened by a summons which had been activated from Gibson's cabin. When he arrived at Cabin 126, Steer noted that two lights were lit outside the cabin, one red and one green; one light indicated that the duty steward had been called, whilst the other meant that the duty stewardess had been requested also. Steer thought this strange as usually only one person would be summoned. Steer's knock at the door was answered by Camb, who only half-opened the door and informed him that everything was alright. Steer left as he assumed that as a deck steward, Camb had arrived before him to help the passenger. (Maxtone-Graham and others dispute this, saying that Steer believed Camb had made good on his boast to sleep with a passenger). Later, the officer in command of the ship, Captain Patey, interviewed Camb, who initially denied any involvement in Gibson's disappearance. When told that Steer had seen him inside Gibson's cabin, Camb relented and told a story that neither the captain or the ship's doctor could believe: Camb stated that Gibson had suddenly died while the two of them were having sex, and as he stood to lose his job and family, Camb panicked and pushed her body through the porthole. At the time,
Durban Castle was off the west coast of Africa (specifically what was then
Portuguese Guinea, now
Guinea-Bissau), heading north. Patey ordered the ship to turn around and to scour the water for Gibson's body. A return
cable was sent to Patey instructing him to "padlock and seal off the room; disturb nothing." When
Durban Castle docked at
Cowes Roads, officers from the
Southampton City Police were waiting to question Camb, who had been confined to his cabin by the ship's crew. Southampton Police were assisted by the
Metropolitan Police on the case and
forensic evidence was examined at the Met's laboratory at
Hendon. This was not uncommon at the time; Southampton Police was quite small and so often asked for help from Scotland Yard.
British police forces were involved as, even though the murder took place off the western coast of Africa, it was a British ship under British authority, so the
prosecution was brought by the British authorities. On Monday 27 October 1947, the
Southern Daily Echo reported that Camb had been
remanded in custody and charged with "murder on the high seas". ==Trial and aftermath==