Originally posted by c.d.
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I do see your point. But for whatever reason, Hutch did mix himself up in this by venturing forward and claiming that he had been loitering for nearly an hour, with Mary (+ alleged customer) in mind, near what was shortly to become the most horrible Whitechapel murder scene to date.
He would automatically have been risking his own neck if he: couldn't produce said customer; changed anything he had initially told the police when talking to the press (risking a charge of perjury, if nothing else); didn't have a verifiable alibi; could have been seen - and recognised again later - by one or more of the witnesses who had already given evidence; was counting on the feeble excuse that it was only idle curiosity that kept him lurking for that long.
I'd still like to know why he thought it was a cool idea, under any circumstances, to say he had lurked for quite so long. If he was worried that a witness could have put him there at any time between 2.15 and 3, and reasoned that he had better put himself there between those times and have an explanation ready, he really was dicing with the hangman if he didn't leave the court at 3pm as he claimed, and a witness could have known that too.
One explanation that could make some sense is that the long wait was integral to his story - ie he had to "be there" in order to confirm that his suspect had been in that room too long for a quickie.
If Hutch was indeed out of work at the time, I think he would have taken a chance and taken the money from a twitchy client, and later from the papers, as long as the police had no evidence to pin the murders on him. Maybe he could prove he was somewhere outside the area for one or more of the previous crimes - even prove he was not in Whitechapel on November 9th if push came to shove and he had made the whole thing up.
Love,
Caz
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