Houdini Hinds: The Man Who Escaped Justice Three Times
How Alfred George Hinds turned a controversial 1953 conviction into a legend of prison breaks and legal redemption

Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Alfred George Hinds was arrested on September 29, 1953, charged with armed robbery of the Maple Jewelry Store on a London high street. The haul was substantial—roughly £5,000 in cash and between £30,000 and £90,000 in jewels, though the bulk of the stolen goods were never recovered.
The evidence against Hinds was circumstantial. Traces of safe-blowing materials and blast residue found on his palms formed the core of the prosecution's case, with a co-accused robber identifying him as the man who blew the safe. At his trial at Wandsworth Prison, the judge excluded five key alibi witnesses. The jury deliberated for just 30 minutes before convicting him. Hinds received a 12-year sentence—and maintained his innocence from that moment forward.
After a failed appeal citing 16 errors in the trial, Hinds was transferred to Nottingham Prison in February 1955. There, his legend began.
**The Escapes**
On November 25, 1955, Hinds slipped through a locked door using self-built wooden panels to scale a 20-foot prison wall. He evaded capture for 248 days, working as a builder-decorator across Ireland and Europe under an assumed name. While on the run, he sent letters, tapes, and statements to MPs and the press, proclaiming his innocence. He even sold his story to the *News of the World* for £40,000.
His recapture came on July 31, 1956, when he was stopped in Dublin for driving an unregistered car. He had been living as William Bishop, a car salesman, in a rented apartment purchased with proceeds from the original robbery.
But Hinds was far from finished. While fighting a libel suit in court, he orchestrated a second escape by smuggling in a padlock, which he used to lock two guards in a toilet cubicle—the hinges had been pre-fitted with screw eyes. He slipped into the Fleet Street crowd but was recaptured at an airport within five hours.


