Fatal Confession Fatal Confession
Landmark Cases in Canadian Law

Fatal Confession

A Girl’s Murder, a Man’s Execution, and the Fitton Case

    • $32.99
    • $32.99

Publisher Description

When the body of thirteen-year-old Linda Lampkin was found, raped and strangled, on Toronto’s industrial waterfront in 1956, locals feared a sex maniac was on the loose. Within a day, detectives announced the arrest of Robert Fitton. He was charged with murder, although Fitton claimed the sex was consensual and the strangulation accidental. Fatal Confession is a compelling analysis of that violent encounter and the ensuing legal and political entanglements, which ended in the hanging of Fitton despite the jury’s and judge’s recommendation of mercy. The case exposed judicial ambivalence about the criminal definition of constructive murder in connection with rape, disagreements over the voluntariness of confessions to police, and widespread doubt over the culpability of males “tempted” by precocious females.

Weaving together politics, culture, legal history, and biography, Fatal Confession unravels a case that ultimately called into question both capital punishment and masculinist legal interpretations of sexual consent.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2025
October 15
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
306
Pages
PUBLISHER
UBC Press
SELLER
eBOUND Canada
SIZE
8.4
MB
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