5 – Archibald Hall
One of the aspects of serial killers that is often remarked upon is their ability to meld their appearance to their environment and their skills at blending into the background. Ted Bundy, for example, was nigh on impossible to identify for potential witnesses, as he looked different in almost every photograph and was so plain that nobody could remember anything specific about him. Bearing this in mind, Archibald Hall might just have been the expert in making himself appear as whatever people wanted him to be. His talents as a con man managed to move him into whichever social circles he saw as most advantageous to himself, and indeed, to catapult him into the higher echelons of the British aristocracy.
Hall was Scottish, born in the tough Glasgow district of Partick, at the time one of the most deprived inner-city areas of Europe. He began a criminal career at the age of just 15 in his native city, traveling to the richer parts of town to break into houses and steal jewelry. He eventually moved to London, using money that he had made from theft. Hall was bisexual and made headway in the budding gay scene in the capital, ingratiating himself into a community which was open to those of all backgrounds, even criminal ones.
Homosexuality was still illegal at the time in the UK and all social classes and groups could be found in the gay scene, as all were equally guilty under the law. Hall, living under the name of Roy Fontaine, worked as a butler – he took elocution lessons to rid himself of his lower class, Glaswegian accent – and began to move in aristocratic company, while still funding himself through jewel theft.
After being arrested and imprisoned, he moved back to Scotland and found himself again working as a butler to a wealthy woman on a country estate. He enjoyed the job and did not steal from the dowager (though he had initially intended to do so) and even attempted to stop a fellow criminal, David Wright, from taking her jewelry. When Wright threatened to expose him, Hall shot him and buried him in a stream. He left the estate and again found work as a butler in London for the Scott-Elliot family, members of the Scottish gentry.
He robbed and killed his employers with an accomplice, Michael Kitto, driving them all the way back to Scotland while drugged before strangling them. Hall and Kitto then stabbed the Scott-Elliot’s housekeeper, who had helped him in the previous murders, before going on to murder Hall’s brother Donald, a paedophile who had only been released from prison shortly before.
Hall was eventually caught by police after a hotel owner feared that he and Kitto would not pay their bill. When they were being questioned by police regarding a relatively simple motoring offense, the body of Donald Hall was found in the boot of their car. The car was then traced to the Scott-Elliot’s home in London and police there discovered the grisly scene there – while in the meantime, the body of the housekeeper had been found in Scotland. Hall was charged and convicted of murder while Kitto, who was also sent to prison, was told in court by police that Hall was planning to eventually kill him as well. Hall died in prison in 2002, at the time the oldest lifer in the British penal system.