
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Hello
Welcome back
This is survived with Sophie and Lexi
We started telling our survived story (in college) and we are moving on to being you guys more
Through many different topics
It's week two of the spooky season! Today we have a true crime case that involves the paranormal
An engraving in Kirby’s Wonderful and Scientific Museum, published early in 1804, portrays a pale, otherworldly form drifting among the tombstones—the eerie specter at the heart of the Hammersmith Ghost murder case. That year, paranoia and superstition combined in a string of midnight sightings around London’s Hammersmith district, producing one of Britain’s most notorious legal precedents: the principle that a person may be held criminally liable for lethal force even when acting on a wholly mistaken belief in self-defence.
By Sophie and Lexi2.2
1111 ratings
Hello
Welcome back
This is survived with Sophie and Lexi
We started telling our survived story (in college) and we are moving on to being you guys more
Through many different topics
It's week two of the spooky season! Today we have a true crime case that involves the paranormal
An engraving in Kirby’s Wonderful and Scientific Museum, published early in 1804, portrays a pale, otherworldly form drifting among the tombstones—the eerie specter at the heart of the Hammersmith Ghost murder case. That year, paranoia and superstition combined in a string of midnight sightings around London’s Hammersmith district, producing one of Britain’s most notorious legal precedents: the principle that a person may be held criminally liable for lethal force even when acting on a wholly mistaken belief in self-defence.

37,636 Listeners

172,000 Listeners

10,430 Listeners

12,100 Listeners

10,914 Listeners

5,798 Listeners

15,123 Listeners

370,110 Listeners

983 Listeners

47,654 Listeners

5,859 Listeners

10,515 Listeners

5,879 Listeners

142 Listeners

465 Listeners