Exceptional service, comfortable accommodations, and a walk to some of Ogunquit’s most desirable group destinations. A Maine Stay, Authentically Ogunquit. -61 Total Rooms -25 Dbl Queens -Welcome Reception -Bus Parking Property managed by uncommon hospitality. 95 Maine St. | Ogunquit, Maine | 207.646.7093 | theadmiralsinn.com A remarkable and historic property, complete with modern amenities. Located in the heart of Ogunquit Village and just steps to the rocky coastline we know as The Marginal Way. -62 Total Rooms -21 Dbl Queens -Welcome Reception -Bus Parking Property managed by uncommon hospitality. 145 Shore Rd. | Ogunquit, Maine | 207.646.5191 | thecolonialinn.com s u m m e r g u i d e 2 0 1 7 2 5 9 from the Bahamas, effective immediately. This was the jury’s concession to a single morally minded member who refused to vote for acquittal unless the fast-living de Marigny was removed from the colony. Following the trial, the Duke of Wind- sor ordered the official search for Sir Har- ry Oakes’s killer or killers to be abruptly stopped–nor would it resume in the nearly three-quarters of a century that followed. h iLLed Sir harry There’s no lack of armchair theories about this juicy case, some more far- fetched than others. The list of possible suspects is long and gossipy, clanking with scoundrels and criminals. According to various researchers, the American Ma- fia kingpins Charlie “Lucky” Luciano and Meyer Lansky were interested in building gambling casinos and hotels in Nassau, and some chroniclers have suggested that both the Duke of Windsor and Harold Christie were in league with them, almost tasting the shady money. Author Mar- shall Houts points out that Lansky and Christie had known each other since “the rum-running days of [P]rohibition” and claims, “[I]t was well known that [Capt. James Barker] had been on Meyer Lan- sky’s payroll for a number of years.” But the irresistible force of Mafia mon- ey ran into an immovable object in Sir Harry Oakes, who was unwilling to see his island idyll turned into a gambling den–or so the theory goes. However, this explanation doesn’t stand up under scru- tiny. In order for casinos to be built in Nassau, the Bahamas’ no-gambling laws would have to have been formally amend- ed. And as time proved, the removal of Sir Harry Oakes did not suffice to further Lansky’s plan. Only after Fidel Castro’s regime expelled the mob from Cuba was casino gambling introduced into Nassau two decades later. Also, as Marquis points out, the messy murder wasn’t up to Ma- fia standards; the mob might simply have “disappeared” Sir Harry. None of this is to say that the Duke of Windsor didn’t have an ulterior motive for burying the case; from the very begin- ning, his handling of it was nothing short of abysmal. When he called in the Ameri- can detectives, his specific instruction to them was to find evidence of Sir Harry’s suicide, when the most perfunctory glance