Page:Particular account of the murder of Mr Thos. Weare, the trial of John Thurtell and Joseph Hunt and the execution of J. Thurtell.pdf/8

 whose body had hot been found, he left town, and being present, at the Coroners’ Inquest, identified the body to be that of Mr Weare. From the evidence of Mr Tetsall, the landlord of the Coach and Horses, Conduit-street, Bond-street, it appeared that John Thurtell, Hunt, Probert, and a Mr Noyes, brother-in-law to the latter, were all at his house on the day the murder was committed, leaving it between' five and six, having, as he understood, hired one gig at Mr Probatt’s, Charing-Cross, and having also Mr Probert’s own gig with them. Thomas Thurteil declared, that on Friday evening his brother John drove away from the Coach and Horses in a gig drawn by a grey horse, which Hunt had brought to the door. He then saw that his brother had two pistols, and inquired what he was going to do with them ? Hunt, accompanying his question with a dreadful expression, asked “what, was that to him?” and turning to Probert, said, “Bill, will you be in it?” Hunt had previously brought a sack and some cord, which he put into John Thurtell’s gig, and said, “it was all right; drive on.” In the evening, while at the Coach and Horses, Hunt had said to John Thurtell,