Eric Vivian Tullett, known as Tom Tullett (1915 – December 1991)[1] was a renowned British Crime Journalist. He adopted the name Tom when he joined a busy National News Desk as a Crime Reporter. He was a big man in every sense of the word, and was a much loved and respected figure in Fleet Street. One of the last investigative journalists of his day, he died in 1991.

Biography edit

He was formerly the Chief of the Daily Mirror's Crime Bureau and was one of the best known crime reporters in Fleet Street. Prior to this he was a member of the British Criminal Investigation Department at Scotland Yard and investigated many major crimes in the UK. He therefore developed an intimate knowledge of London's underworld.

Bibliography edit

  • Portrait of a Bad Man. (The Life and Death of Ronald Chesney, an International Smuggler and Murderer) [2]
  • Murder Squad: Famous Cases of Scotland Yard's Murder Squad from Crippen to The Black Panther
  • Inside Interpol
  • Inside Dartmoor
  • Bernard Spilsbury: His Life and Cases (Pathologist) - co-author with Douglas G Browne
  • No answer from Foxtrot Eleven (Murder of Police Officers).
  • Strictly Murder
  • Clues to Murder: Famous Forensic Murder Cases of Professor J M Cameron[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Tom Tullett" (Obituary), The Times, 11 December 1991.
  2. ^ Initial detail from Clues to Murder, published by Bodley Head, and further comment from Portrait of a Bad Man published by Evans London.
  3. ^ Most of bibliography and biography detail from Clues to Murder, first published by Bodley Head and later published by Leisure Circle in 1986