A sitting Member of Parliament left a neat pile of clothes on a Miami beach, walked away, and let the whole world think he'd drowned. 😱 He was not dead. He was in Melbourne, Australia, under a fake name, with his mistress.
John Stonehouse was a Labour MP and former Cabinet minister — literally one of the most powerful politicians in Britain. He'd served under Harold Wilson, had a wife, kids, a career. 👑
He also had a secret affair with his secretary, Sheila Buckley. And a mountain of financial fraud. And — oh yeah — allegations that he'd been spying for Czechoslovakia. So. A lot going on.
On November 20, 1974, Stonehouse was on a business trip in Miami. He walked into a beach club, left his clothes in a pile on the sand, and just... left. 🫠 Everyone assumed he'd drowned.
His escape plan involved stealing the identities of two dead men — Joseph Markham and Donald Clive Mildoon — whose deaths he'd researched in public records. Fake passports, fake credit cards, one-way flight to Australia. He literally took notes from the thriller novel The Day of the Jackal. Not even joking.
Back in Britain, his wife was grieving. Parliament held a moment of reflection. ⚡ Meanwhile, Stonehouse was opening bank accounts in Melbourne under his stolen names.
A sharp-eyed bank teller in Melbourne noticed the same man depositing cash at two different banks under two different names. He tipped off the police. Wild, right?
Australian police started surveilling a suspicious Englishman — but 👀 they weren't even looking for Stonehouse. They thought he was Lord Lucan, a British aristocrat who had vanished two weeks earlier after allegedly murdering his children's nanny.
Britain had TWO missing men at the same time. The Australians picked up the wrong one — then realized they'd actually picked up the right one. 🤯
On Christmas Eve 1974, John Stonehouse was arrested in Melbourne. He'd been on the run for just over a month.
After his arrest, Stonehouse tried to seek asylum in Sweden and Mauritius. Both said no. 💔 He was deported back to the UK.
He continued to serve as an MP while awaiting trial. Yes, really. Labour's majority was so razor-thin — just three seats — that the party couldn't afford to lose his vote. A man who faked his own death was still technically a Member of Parliament.
His trial lasted 68 days. In August 1976, he was convicted of fraud, theft, and deception and sentenced to seven years in prison. Sheila Buckley received a two-year suspended sentence. He served three years before being released on health grounds.
After prison, Stonehouse married Sheila Buckley — the woman he'd blown up his entire life for. He wrote novels. He died of a heart attack in 1988 at age 62. ⚔️
He faked his death, stole two dead men's identities, fled to Australia, got caught by a bank teller while police were hunting someone else entirely, and still kept his parliamentary seat through the whole ordeal.
History really said: hold my beer. 🔥
Missing British M.P. Found in Australia - The New York Times (1974)
British M.P. Is Given 7-Year Sentence - The New York Times (1976)
As John Stonehouse's web of deceit unravelled, he faked his death - ABC News Australia
What's the true story of John Stonehouse? - ABC News Australia