Talk:Murder of Pamela Werner

Dennis's role in Tientsin incident
This is a fascinating (though horrific) case and I thank whoever wrote the article. I noticed a small point of interest that's tangential to the main subject. This article states that during the Tientsin Incident "the Japanese blockaded that city after Dennis had refused to turn over two Chinese assassins." I thought it remarkable that a British police official was involved in two such noteworthy incidents, so I read the Wikipedia article on the Tientsin Incident. It mentions British Ambassador in Chongqing, Sir Archibald Clark-Kerr; "[t]he local British consul, Mr. Jamieson"; and British Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax as being involved in the decision not to hand over the suspects (though they were handed over and executed at the end of the incident), but the name Dennis does not appear in that article. If Dennis was part of the decision making, should that be mentioned in that other article? Should I have made this note at that other article? I put it here because whoever wrote this is the person who knows where Dennis's contribution to the decision is referenced and thus could authoritatively add content to the Tientsin Incident article if appropriate. Gms3591 (talk) 12:18, 8 January 2017 (UTC)
 * As the primary contributor, thank you. French is the one who mentions Dennis's role—or perhaps role as perceived by the Japanese—in that affair. I will have to look through his references and see what might support it (and yes, that would be worth adding to the Tientsin Incident article). Daniel Case (talk) 21:46, 8 January 2017 (UTC)