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The Nature of Evidence

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  • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
    As you've probably guessed nothing about CL says 'killer' for me.
    It didn't take much guessing, Herlock.

    All the best,
    Frank
    "You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
    Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"

    Comment


    • Originally posted by FrankO View Post
      It didn't take much guessing, Herlock.

      All the best,
      Frank
      I suppose not

      The threads gone really quiet at the moment. Fisherman's away at the moment and I assume that Steve (Elamarna) is totally tied up with his current research (unless he's been locked in the cellar of the Ten Bells ). No doubt it will come to life again pretty soon.

      Regards
      Herlock

      Comment


      • >>Why did he only see him at (almost) the exact moment that Lechmere stopped in the middle of the street?<<

        Or to put it another way, why did he just happen to see him at the very moment hat confirms Zmere's version of events.

        Charles Lechmere is a person of interest, but the current theories against him are all based on spin.
        dustymiller
        aka drstrange

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
          Elamarna: Of course Fish we really have nothing to say when he approached the authorities do we?

          Yes, we actually do have a few bits and bobs that allow us to establish a few things. we know that on the evening of the 2:nd, Neil was still claiming to be the finder of the body, and that was on Sunday, the day before Mondays inquest day. So at that stage, Lechmere had quite apparently not made his entrance.
          If you are saying that we do not have the exact time he arrived at the cop shop, you are correct, of course.

          We know when he appeared at the inquest, however as far as I am aware there are no records of when he first made contact. Yes it may have been after the Lloyds article but then again it could have been before,
          Of course you know that by the use of "seemingly".

          As I say, Lechmere blew Neils story out of the water, and that story was very much afloat on the evening of the 2:nd.
          You have a propensity at times to underrate how things can be read from surrounding circumstaces, but I hope you won´t allow that to lead you wrong on this matter.
          The only logical removes of time that Lechmere can have arrived is on Sunday evening or on Monday, possibly in direct connection with the inquest.
          Hi Fish, hope you have had a good few days.

          Something occurred to me about the above.

          If as you say on the Evening of the 2nd, Neil was still claiming to be the finder of the body; does not that mean that either he was not aware of the Lloyds story or that he and maybe his superiors were discounting it?

          Are we to believe that Mizen made no comment to Neil ?
          Surely by the Evening of the second Mizen had given at least a verbal and probably written report of events, was Neil unaware of these or just ignoring ?

          Therefore if Lechmere would blow Neil's story out of the water, Paul's already had in the public eye and any report from Mizen would have the same effect internally in the Police.

          It follows that just because Neil was still saying he was the finder on the Sunday evening it does not exclude Lechmere from having already made contact with the authorities.

          Steve

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
            "Rare aspect of human perception"?? You write the most amusing things, Caz. It involves no rare aspect of huamn perception at all, and if you think Lechmere needed a diploma in perception psychology to make that one up, you are VERY gravely mistaken. Which would not surprise me in the least.
            Wherever did you get that whopper from? Please enlighten me on that point, and I will take you out of your misconception quicker than you can say whooops.
            Hi Fish,

            Yeah, it is rare to come across a dead body in the street. So it follows that the normal human reaction to this experience will be equally rare, since few of us will ever experience this, never mind more than once. Your killer is meant to have been a psychopath, with no empathy for a living prostitute who had to ply her trade in the early hours when he was on his way to work, let alone a dead or dying one. He could not have had the remotest idea that an innocent witness, on initially spotting the "freshly killed" Nichols, would have been programmed psychologically to see something else entirely - in this case a tarpaulin - if the last thing on earth he'd have wanted to see, and therefore expected to see, was a fellow human being in this condition.

            Sorry, Fish, but your reaction - to try and make fun of me for having to explain this very real phenomenon to you - is also very telling.

            If there was cctv of Jack the Ripper running off just before Cross arrived, you'd say Cross must have had the technology to fake it.

            Love,

            Caz
            X
            Last edited by caz; 07-25-2017, 03:16 AM.
            "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


            Comment


            • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
              nope. not at all. the mysterious man would be suspect number one. no doubt about it.
              But Abby, if by the slightest of chances, this 'man' [Cross] could have been traced and questioned, what evidence would there have been against him by then? Paul didn't even know Nichols had been murdered when they examined her together and left together to alert a policeman. It's the same with Blotchy. If he had been traced, what then? They didn't have anything like a reliable time of death for Kelly. You can't hang witnesses or persons of interest for not coming forward and those who stay away are not necessarily guilty. If Cross and Blotchy were not one and the same, one or both were innocent.

              Love,

              Caz
              X
              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


              Comment


              • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                That´s as clueless as it gets. People who are found alone with murder victims at the approximate times of their deaths, and who subsequently dissapear from the radar, will inevitably be the focus of any investigation worth it´s salt, especially if no other suspect surfaces.

                Lechmere apparently defused this by coming forward by himself. It hsould be noted, though, that he seemingly did not come forward until after the Paul interview.

                Thought you´d value a reality check, Caz.
                But that is not what I was saying, Fish. I was pointing out that if the 'man', who examined Nichols with Paul and went with him to alert a copper, then 'disappeared from the radar', he'd have barely been on it in the first place, not having given rise to any suspicion on the part of either Paul or PC Mizen. They'd have had a job to put him back on the radar and make him a focus of their investigation, but if they had eventually succeeded in tracking him down, and he was positively identified by both witnesses as 'the man', what then?

                As you will have found to your deepest regret, they couldn't hang Cross for finding Nichols first, whether he lied to PC Mizen and again at the inquest and PC Mizen knew it, or he didn't turn up at all because, by all accounts, he hadn't actually witnessed a murder.

                Love,

                Caz
                X
                "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                Comment


                • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                  That´s two whoppers on Caz´s account now.
                  Hi Fish,

                  I'd appreciate it if you would not accuse me of 'whoppers', which English speakers generally take to mean lies. I was expressing my opinions, based on the evidence in this case and on documented first impressions on seeing a dead or dying person. I don't accuse you of telling whoppers when you are merely expressing your views, however much I might disagree with them.

                  If you meant something else, then perhaps you'd be gracious enough to use a more appropriate word for it in future. I do realise you have trouble with the language, but you are also quick enough on the uptake not to repeat the offence once it has been pointed out to you.

                  Love,

                  Caz
                  X
                  "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                    He actually came from the south side of the street after having killed Nichols, and he never entertained any idea about a tarpaulin at all. It was just part of the ruse, and it is typical that he did not mention it to Paul ("I first thought it was a tarpaulin, mate"), because he only made it up later.
                    Hi Fish,

                    As you accused me of saying I'd somehow 'proved' Cross innocent on account of his 'tarpaulin' description, how do you justify the above assertion, Fish? It's as risible as anything I have suggested.

                    I repeat: what are the chances of a psychopathic killer in 1888 being aware that an innocent witness might not immediately have recognised his victim as a human being? Where would such an awareness have come from? I have yet to see you address this question in a sensible manner. You merely poke fun, as if you can wish it away.

                    And you called Herlock 'gullible' for falling for Cross's 'ruse'.

                    Pathetic.

                    Love,

                    Caz
                    X
                    "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by caz View Post
                      But Abby, if by the slightest of chances, this 'man' [Cross] could have been traced and questioned, what evidence would there have been against him by then? Paul didn't even know Nichols had been murdered when they examined her together and left together to alert a policeman. It's the same with Blotchy. If he had been traced, what then? They didn't have anything like a reliable time of death for Kelly. You can't hang witnesses or persons of interest for not coming forward and those who stay away are not necessarily guilty. If Cross and Blotchy were not one and the same, one or both were innocent.

                      Love,

                      Caz
                      X
                      Hi caz
                      If lech hadn't come forward, I think they probably could have found him fairly easily. They knew he was a carman going to work and Paul or Mizen could have identified him. And finding him would be the first step in either clearing him or not. And once they find him, who knows what they could have found out-or if they find any other incriminating evidence. But one thing for sure is that until they did find him he would be number one suspect, or at least person of interest.

                      Re blotchy VS. Hutch. I'm sure they aren't the same man, blotchy had a very distinct appearance, and I'm sure abberline would have been all over it if lech had red hair and a blotchy face. And IMHO, between the two, lech would be the innocent one.
                      "Is all that we see or seem
                      but a dream within a dream?"

                      -Edgar Allan Poe


                      "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                      quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                      -Frederick G. Abberline

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                        I was responding to Herlock Sholmes who wrote that we KNOW that Lechmere had no need to bluff.
                        Innocent or guilty, we all rely on what we KNOW Cross said or did from his own testimony and that of Paul and PC Mizen.

                        We KNOW he never said or did anything to make Paul or PC Mizen remotely suspicious. Secreting the knife and moving away from the body would not have required any bluffing. [Heavy bloodstaining would have been another matter.] While with Paul he was, to all intents and purposes, just a witness, even if it had been to his own murder before Paul arrived. As long as he didn't boob by saying to Paul: "Come and look at this woman I've just slaughtered", or to PC Mizen: "You are wanted in Buck's Row where my victim is lying", he didn't need to bluff, did he? He was on his way to work; he did alert PC Mizen en route; Mizen did respond, if not instantly. There is no evidence that he ever viewed Cross with suspicion, either at the time or at the inquest, despite their little disagreement over what he was told.

                        So one could argue that Cross had no need to say or do anything differently from what Paul and PC Mizen between them reported seeing or hearing; no need to say or do anything differently, whether killer or witness.

                        You need pure speculation and invention to create a scenario whereby Cross was the killer; thought he needed to bluff his way past Paul and PC Mizen; and did so, in a peculiarly specific way, which has no visible means of support in the combined testimony of the only witnesses you have.

                        Love,

                        Caz
                        X
                        Last edited by caz; 07-25-2017, 05:12 AM.
                        "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                        Comment


                        • Hi all,

                          Can we put to bed this notion that Fish has that CL only attended the Inquest after Paul's interview in Lloyd's? And that Paul's statement forced him to reveal himself.

                          How great was it's circulation? Who was its target audience? Is it likely that CL would have bought or even seen a copy?

                          There appears to be not a shred of evidence to prove that CL was somehow forced out into the open. How can anyone know that he fully intended to attend the Inquest all along?

                          Regards
                          Herlock

                          Comment


                          • I agree, Herlock. When I observed that a fearless psychopath would hardly have felt 'forced' into the open by what Paul had to say about the night's work [positive and not remotely suspicious about the as yet unnamed finder's contribution; only negative about PC Mizen's], assuming he had even read the article, Fish ripped me a new one.

                            I think Fish preferred us to see it as damage limitation on Cross's part, now that Paul had revealed that PC Neil was not the finder after all. But if Cross was the killer, he must have expected his role to have come out one way or another, before he'd even arrived at work that morning.

                            Love,

                            Caz
                            X
                            "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                              For me, and obviously it's my own personal opinion, I give CL a 1 out of 10 suspect rating. He only gets that because he was actually, provably there.

                              Regards
                              Herlock
                              Does Paul get the same rating? He was there. Could he not have circled back? Maybe that's why he tried to avoid Cross? I mean, I can invent the same sorts of scenarios for Paul that have been invented for Cross.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
                                Hi caz
                                If lech hadn't come forward, I think they probably could have found him fairly easily. They knew he was a carman going to work and Paul or Mizen could have identified him. And finding him would be the first step in either clearing him or not. And once they find him, who knows what they could have found out-or if they find any other incriminating evidence. But one thing for sure is that until they did find him he would be number one suspect, or at least person of interest.

                                Re blotchy VS. Hutch. I'm sure they aren't the same man, blotchy had a very distinct appearance, and I'm sure abberline would have been all over it if lech had red hair and a blotchy face. And IMHO, between the two, lech would be the innocent one.
                                Shall we come up with a list of individuals associated with the Whitechapel murders who were sought and never found or identified?

                                Comment

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