Dudley, Stephens and Brooks were picked up by the German sailing
barque Moctezuma, which returned the men to
Falmouth, Cornwall, England, on 6 September
en route to its destination in
Hamburg. On arrival in Falmouth, the survivors attended the
customs house and Dudley and Stephens entered statutory statements under the
Merchant Shipping Acts, required in the event of a shipping loss. All three were candid, with Dudley and Stephens believing that their acts were justified by necessity – the need to ensure their own survival by practising
cannibalism at sea as a last resort before starvation. The duty police sergeant of the
Falmouth Harbour Police, James Laverty, was near the
depositions and overheard the statement given to the customs officer. He later questioned Dudley about the means by which he had killed Parker, taking custody of the knife and promising to return it. The depositions were
telegraphed to the
Board of Trade and to the Registrar General of Shipping in
Basinghall Street in
London. While the survivors were making arrangements to rejoin their families, Basinghall Street advised the men be detained. The Board of Trade gave conflicting advice to take no action but informed the
Home Office, which was closed for the weekend. Laverty sought
warrants for the men's arrest for murder on the high seas, which he obtained later that day from the mayor, Henry Liddicoat. Dudley, Stephens and Brooks were held in the police station until their appearance before
magistrates on 8 September. Dudley appears to have been confident that the magistrates would dismiss the charges. Liddicoat visited the men to apologise for the inconvenience but all magistrates had recently been instructed to seek advice from the
Treasury Solicitor in all murder cases and the clerk probably prompted Laverty to ask for a
remand in custody and
adjournment while advice was sought. Local
solicitor Harry Tilly appeared for the men and requested
bail but after the magistrates, including Liddicoat, had consulted, they were returned to the police cells until Friday. By Wednesday, the file had been passed to
Home Secretary Sir
William Harcourt. That day Harcourt consulted with
Attorney General Sir
Henry James and
Solicitor General Sir
Farrer Herschell. Harcourt took the decision to
prosecute, the system having not clarified the law given the events of James Archer (see
below). By the time of bench appearance on Friday, public opinion in Falmouth had swung behind the
defendants, especially after Parker's brother Daniel, also a seaman, appeared in court and shook hands with the three. The case was re-adjourned until 18 September, granting bail, the Home Office having hinted that this would be appropriate. The three men returned to their homes while the case began to appear across the British and international press. It soon became clear that consensus lay on the side of the
defence. Harcourt was disgusted by the public's sentiment and became even more intent on a conviction.
William Otto Adolph Julius Danckwerts, a
barrister of only six years'
call but a specialist in wreck inquiries, was briefed for the prosecution but soon realised that public sentiment and the lack of
evidence posed formidable difficulties. The only
witnesses were the three defendants themselves and their
right to silence would impede any formal proceedings. A
confession was only admissible against the person making it, not his co-defendants and the contents of the
depositions were probably inadequate to convict. When the case was heard by the magistrates at the
courthouse in Falmouth on 18 September, Danckwerts told the court that he intended to offer no evidence against Brooks and requested that he be discharged so that he could be called as a witness for the prosecution. There is no evidence that Brooks had been canvassed about this and the magistrates agreed. Danckwerts opened the prosecution case and called as witnesses those who had heard the survivors' stories and Brooks. The magistrates committed Dudley and Stephens to trial during the winter days of
assizes in
Exeter but extended their bail. ==Legal background and precedent==