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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
    From The Echo, Oct 1 (emphasis added to the interesting bits, with a tiny bit of editing for missing words) ...



    Profiteering Socialists.

    A man chased away at ~12:45, whom 'the public' regarded as the murderer.

    A club secretary who just can't seem to remember the name of the man who did the chasing.

    The body allegedly discovered 15 minutes before a constable arrived.

    Something to see here, Ripperologists?
    I have to say Im pleased you posted that now. Its the general feel you get from the text that means a lot...and you summarized some real issues within it well.

    Im getting more and more convinced that Liz was discovered around 12:40-:45. One other element here is curious,...you asked about Lave, he says he was at the gates from around 12:30 until 12:40 then went back inside his cottage, ...but other than Eagle, who says he came through about 12:40, no-one is around. Not one smoker, not one person catching some air...even though the neighbors complained about "low men" talking and smoking in that passageway late at night after meetings.

    It seems the stage was cleared by some statements, so that an event could be constructed by a story that would show the club as blameless in this murder. They even went for help yelling "another murder has been committed"....another?? A single throat cut indicates the same guy on the loose?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    From The Echo, Oct 1 (emphasis added to the interesting bits, with a tiny bit of editing for missing words) ...

    Very little additional information was to be obtained (writes an Echo reporter shortly after noon) concerning the murder of the woman Stride up till noon to-day. Except for a couple of hundred or so of men, women, and children, whose morbid curiosity had attracted them to the scene of the crime, there was nothing to indicate that another of these mysterious murders had taken place. Among the loungers were, of course, many who professed to be in possession of all the details connected with the unfortunate woman's death, but on being questioned, it transpired that the stories which they were obligingly disposed to relate were nothing more than conjecture. Several men who were surrounded by respective groups of eager listeners went so far as to say that the woman Stride had been seen in the neighbourhood of Berner-street about twelve o'clock on Saturday night in company with a middle-aged man of dark complexion, but here the description of the supposed murderer of the woman stopped. In answer to questions, however, neither of the men would father the story, preferring to escape any direct, or to them inconvenient, inquiries on the subject by saying "They had heard so."

    So far there is no actual clue to the perpetrator of the murder, and the police are now somewhat reticent as to whether they believe the Berner-street and the Mitre-square crimes were committed by the same hand- a matter, on which, however, the police have come to a prompt decision. In Berner-street the gateway within which the woman Stride was enticed is to-day closed, and in charge of two police-constables of the Metropolitan district; but the sack manufacturer and cart builder, whose premises are situated behind the house in which the International and Education Club meetings are held, are carrying on their business as usual, the employees of both gaining access and egress to the yard by means of a wicket-gate in the right hand half of the gate itself. The police in charge have little trouble in keeping the footpath clear, and it is only when the wicket is opened to allow of someone passing out of the yard, that the constables have to use a little force to keep back the crowd, who are anxious to obtain a glimpse of the spot where the body of the murdered woman was found.

    The Club itself (proceeds the reporter), which is next door to the large gate, is now closed, but all this afternoon members and others who have special business there, are admitted after knocking at the door. The committee of the institution held a meeting this morning, at which the crime was talked over, and it was decided not to admit any stranger without the payment of a fee. The fee, the secretary explained, was to [???]. The committee, it seems, did not fix the amount to be charged; but, in reply to a question, the secretary said he thought that 5s. would not be too much. Considering there is nothing to be seen, this is rather an extortionate price to be paid by those whose curiosity leads them to Berner-street.

    In the course of conversation (says the journalist) the secretary mentioned the fact that the murderer had no doubt been disturbed in his work, as about a quarter to one o'clock on Sunday morning he was seen- or, at least, a man whom the public prefer to regard as the murderer- being chased by another man along Fairclough-street, which runs across Berner-street close to the Club, and which is intersected on the right by Providence-street, Brunswick-street, and Christian-st., and on the left by Batty-street and Grove-street, the [two latter?] [?] up into Commercial-road. The man pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the Club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body. Complaint is also made [as to the difficulty that] was experienced in obtaining a policeman, and it is alleged that from the time the body was discovered fifteen minutes had elapsed before a constable could be [retrieved ?] from Commercial-road. This charge against the police, however, requires confirmation. There is, notwithstanding the number who have visited the scene, a complete absence of excitement, although naturally [a] fresh addition to the already formidable list of mysterious murders forms the general subject of conversation.
    Profiteering Socialists.

    A man chased away at ~12:45, whom 'the public' regarded as the murderer.

    A club secretary who just can't seem to remember the name of the man who did the chasing.

    The body allegedly discovered 15 minutes before a constable arrived.

    Something to see here, Ripperologists?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    I have suggested this here before, but it perhaps bears repeating...IF Israel Schwartz was at the club that night, and he attended the meeting, and on his way out via the passageway he sees Liz inside the gates with someone quietly arguing, or perhaps struggling, then almost every other witness statement can be re-made to fit the last half hour. Almost.
    If Israel Schwartz was at the club that night?
    Well he probably would be if that were his home address!
    It wasn't until after the double event that Schwartz moved to 22 Ellen St.

    The best census match found to an Israel Schwartz, of about the right age and address, is from the 1891 census.
    By that stage the family is living at 22 Samuel St, with a daughter, and a very young son, named Louis.
    By the way, did you know that Leon Goldstein lived at 22 Christian St, and Charles Cross lived at 22 Doveton St?
    In 1885 there was a Sarah Schwartz living at 22 Backchurch Lane, so perhaps Israel was in England by that stage, and learning the language?
    On the night of the double event, there was that funny goings on, at 22 Batty St, possibly linked to Israel.
    In 1905, an Egyptian American supposedly confessed to the Whitechapel murders. He name was Charles Hermann.
    There is a Nap Hermann in the 1891 census, living at 22 Ellen St, the address Israel gave to Abberline.

    If he sees what he says he saw around 12:42-:45... only inside the gates...then Eagle is already inside, Lave is back inside the cottage, and it allows for the people who say they were by the body at around 12:40-12:45 to be correct.
    Lave back inside? Is there a quote to back this up?
    The quote I pasted into #445 does seem to support this.

    The only round peg for this square peg board would be....LOUIS.
    Louis doesn't remember from what direction he arrived at the club.
    He can't remember what room he found his wife in.
    He saw grapes that weren't there.
    Louis doesn't know if he's coming or going.

    The club steward, and the person with the most responsibility to the club and its management onsite at between 12:30-1:00am.

    As it sits with Israels given story, and with the 4 witnesses who say they were by the body at 12:45ish...and Louis's account claiming he arrived "precisely at 1am" (that "precisely was in Louis's actual statement), there are too many contradictory accounts left, too many questions left.

    If as I suggest the episode Schwartz describes takes place around the same time, but inside the gates, fewer problems exist. Having him give a story that has it taking place off the property is likely for the benefit of Wess, Diemshutz and anyone else who would be dramatically impacted by suspicions.
    Let's have a look at some evidence ...

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
    All emphasis mine...


    Part A indicates the visit to Leman Street police station occurred late on the day of the murder.
    The Star interview occurred the following day.

    Part A also indicates that the police (including Abberline) regarded Schwartz as having no English at all.
    Part B indicates this to be false.
    Putting these points together, suggests some level of deception has occurred.

    Parts C & D follow the same pattern as in the Swanson report.
    The story could end at the end of part C, but then Schwartz would almost be obliged to state what he learnt when he turned back to see what the matter was.
    Knifeman to the rescue! Just in time.

    In part D we learn that Schwartz actually flees to his new lodgings in Ellen St, quite a bit closer to where he runs from, than the railway arch.
    Apparently the railway arch bit was also a lie, but hard to pick the lie when the witness is using a foreign language.

    In part C, we learn that Schwartz has been out all day, and away from his wife, while she moves to the new address.
    We are not told what Schwartz does during this period. I wonder if stops at a pub, during his mysterious day out?
    In part E, we learn that tipsy man was respectably dressed, as was Schwartz at the station.
    It's almost as though this character and this real man, have a shared identity.

    In part F, the Star reporter implies that he thinks Schwartz is full of it.

    In the Mrs. Kuer’s Lodger dissertation, Gavin Bromley states the Schwartz and his family may have been in England for 3 years, by Sep '88.
    I don't think the statements about Schwartz's level of English conflict. The Star reads "The reporter's Hungarian was quite as imperfect as the foreigner's English, but an interpreter was at hand,...", and the first bit is just a colourful way of confirming the reporter could no more speak Hungarian than Schwartz could speak English (i.e. none at all), and this is bolstered by the statement that there was an interpreter available. I don't think that creates a conflict sufficient to suggest there was any deception involved.

    Fleeing to Ellen Street makes a lot more sense than the railway arch, but whether that conflict is a result of the Star or the police making an error (of or via the interpreter) or Schwartz himself changing his story is unknown, and all three possibilities need to be considered. Obviously, Schwartz changing his story would be suspicious, the other two could reflect confusion that arises through an interpreter (i.e. if Schwartz said in the direction of the railway arch and this was recorded as if meaning to the railway arch with the police, then he may simply have rephrased the same thing but this time his choice of words happened to clarify it better; just presenting something to illustrate what I'm getting at, obviously, I don't know what was said or intended, only what is recorded).

    The most important change is that the pipe becomes a knife, and it is the 2nd taller man who shouts the warning, while in the police version the knife is a pipe and it is the man attacking Stride that shouts "Lipski" as a warning to the 2nd man according to Schwartz (Abberline is of the opinion that Schwartz was mistaken, and the shout of "Lipski" was directed at Schwartz himself as an insult).

    Whether the reporter got confused at the time he wrote up the story from his notes, or he embellished the story, or Schwartz changed his story, is unknown, but we do have lots of examples of the first two happening in the press at the time, so again, all three possibilities need to be considered. Only the last one would be a concern, but of course, it's in the running.

    In Part F, is the man being referred to the man in police custody or Schwartz himself though? I rather tend to agree with you that it probably is in reference to Schwartz, that there was some doubt as to the accuracy of his testimony, but I'm not entirely sure it's saying that the entire story is in doubt.

    Still, we're only differing in degrees here.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    I have suggested this here before, but it perhaps bears repeating...IF Israel Schwartz was at the club that night, and he attended the meeting, and on his way out via the passageway he sees Liz inside the gates with someone quietly arguing, or perhaps struggling, then almost every other witness statement can be re-made to fit the last half hour. Almost. If he sees what he says he saw around 12:42-:45... only inside the gates...then Eagle is already inside, Lave is back inside the cottage, and it allows for the people who say they were by the body at around 12:40-12:45 to be correct. The only round peg for this square peg board would be....LOUIS.

    The club steward, and the person with the most responsibility to the club and its management onsite at between 12:30-1:00am.

    As it sits with Israels given story, and with the 4 witnesses who say they were by the body at 12:45ish...and Louis's account claiming he arrived "precisely at 1am" (that "precisely was in Louis's actual statement), there are too many contradictory accounts left, too many questions left.

    If as I suggest the episode Schwartz describes takes place around the same time, but inside the gates, fewer problems exist. Having him give a story that has it taking place off the property is likely for the benefit of Wess, Diemshutz and anyone else who would be dramatically impacted by suspicions.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    NBFN, the reasoning for a story that includes elements that are not necessary to plant the seeds of suspicion on BSM, who by reasonable interpretation is portrayed as a likely anti-Semitic thug, is because any good story has a beginning and an end. When people lie don't they tend to offer a story that has many flowery elements that have nothing to do with the principle lie itself?
    An adequate end to the story would be Pipeman saying something to Schwartz, which he doesn't understand (language barrier), and then Schwartz continuing to walk down Berner, while Pipeman continues to smoke. Perhaps Schwartz also turns to see BS Man walking away in disgust, while Liz 'dusts herself off'.
    Problem is; that cannot be part of the story - Schwartz needs to leave the woman & BS man situation, open-ended - it is left (deliberately) to you and I, to fill in the blank.
    However, Pipeman enters the story at a huge risk to the storyteller.
    If Pipeman stays at the corner enjoying his pipe, he can potentially corroborate Schwartz' story, if tracked down.
    As it stands though, Pipeman looks more like an accomplice to BS Man, thus making Schwartz story rather harder to believe.
    Having said that, it does appear to have worked on Abberline, although not so on the Star reporter, who can apparently see right though Schwartz' BS.

    The whole thing for me is that if you wish to use all the statements you will be unable to get a cohesive 30 minute interval recorded, that last 30 minutes.
    Agreed!

    12:30-Wess leaves club via passageway and gates
    12:35-PC Smith sees Liz talking to someone, Fanny at her door sees young couple, Lave comes to the gates
    12:40-Eagle says he arrives at the gates, "couldnt be sure a body wasn't there", Lave is also at the gates, the young couple is still around.
    Eagle seemed a lot more certain at the inquest.
    12:40-12:45- Issac Kozebrodski, Abraham Heschburg, a member named Gillen, and Edward Spooner say they were in the passageway standing over Liz. Louis is said to be there, others were also there. Issac says he was sent out to get help. James Brown sees the young couple. Israel Schwartz says he saw a man assault Liz Stride outside the gates, then yell "Lipski" at either him or to another man across the street. The other man chased him off.
    IK's 12:40 estimate, and AH's 12:45 estimate, seem too early to me. However, that is what they said!
    Where does Gillen state or imply he was over the body at in that period?
    Spooner's 12:35 time is improbable. However, I think I know what he really said, which I will get to in another thread.

    12:46-Estimated earliest cut time for Liz Stride
    I believe Blackwell thought 12:56 was more likely than 12:46.
    At the moment, I'm supposing 12:51-12:55 is the time of death window.

    12:50 Fanny is back at the door
    She is probably never more than a few metres from the front door, in the entire 12:30-1:00 am period.
    12:55 Fanny sees Goldstein pass by the club gates and look in. She describes the street as "deserted".
    Are you sure this occurs at about 12:55?
    In which direction does she see him walking?
    By the way, why do you suppose Walter Dew was so suspicious of this person?

    1:00 Louis claims to arrive at the club, Fanny goes indoors, having seen nothing since Goldstein.
    Louis claims to see a clock at 1:00. He is unsure where this occurs, and consequently he must be unsure of which clock he sees.
    Therefore his time of arrival can't be pinned down to anything more accurate than 1:00-1:03, and that assumes the dubious pony and cart story is true.


    That paints a picture of that last 1/2 hour.
    A picture with so much time distortion that Salvador Dali would have trouble depicting it.

    Lave doesn't see Eagle, or vice versa.
    Eagle didn't know if a body lay there at the time when he arrives
    4 witnesses state they were by the body, with others, around 12:40-12:45. One witness states the neck wound was flowing freely.
    I would say 2, the other 2 later (but before 1 am).
    No-one sees Israel, BSM, Pipeman or hears any call out across the street.
    After the Star interview on Oct 1, no one related to the investigation sees or hears from this slippery character, ever again!
    Louis says he arrives "precisely" at 1, and states he got the time from a local clock. No-one sees him arrive.
    Fanny hears a cart and horse shortly after going inside, she cannot reliably state which direction it was going, or who was driving it.
    No she doesn't - the Star reporter hears it on her behalf, after adding 4 minutes of time, after his definition of her outside vigil.
    This is the same reporter that spends a lot of time talking to Diemschutz, during the day.
    He almost repeats some of Louis' phrases, word for word, and picks up on the grapes story.
    Fanny is never quoted, stating that she hears the pony and cart - she hears a commotion in one quote, and cries for police in another. Nothing else.
    There is no pony and cart!


    Semi deserted street, young couple, Goldstein. No BSM, Israel, Pipeman, no Louis arrival at 1 based on Fannys statement. No confirmation from Eagle that the woman was not lying there when he passed. No Eagle sees Lave standing there, or vice versa. 4 witnesses all independently giving the same approximate time and circumstances.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    All emphasis mine...

    Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post

    The Star clearly states that Israel speaks no English and has an interpreter at hand, the same one who translated for Abberline, on account of the fact The Star again clearly states that the reporter knew he was going to the station and caught up with him. How accurate The Star report is is another matter, but at no point does it imply something akin to "the Mizen scam".
    Here is the Star report, broken down into logical sections.

    A
    Information which may be important was given to the Leman-street police late yesterday afternoon by an Hungarian concerning this murder. This foreigner was well dressed, and had the appearance of being in the theatrical line. He could not speak a word of English, but came to the police-station accompanied by a friend, who acted as an interpreter. He gave his name and address, but the police have not disclosed them.
    B
    A Star man, however, got wind of his call, and ran him to earth in Backchurch-lane. The reporter's Hungarian was quite as imperfect as the foreigner's English, but an interpreter was at hand, and the man's story was retold just as he had given it to the police. It is, in fact, to the effect that he saw the whole thing.
    C
    It seems that he had gone out for the day, and his wife had expected to move, during his absence, from their lodgings in Berner-street to others in Backchurch-lane. When he came homewards about a quarter before one he first walked down Berner-street to see if his wife had moved. As he turned the corner from Commercial-road he noticed some distance in front of him a man walking as if partially intoxicated. He walked on behind him, and presently he noticed a woman standing in the entrance to the alley way where the body was afterwards found. The half-tipsy man halted and spoke to her. The Hungarian saw him put his hand on her shoulder and push her back into the passage, but, feeling rather timid of getting mixed up in quarrels, he crossed to the other side of the street. Before he had gone many yards, however, he heard the sound of a quarrel, and turned back to learn what was the matter ...
    D
    ... but just as he stepped from the kerb a second man came out of the doorway of the public-house a few doors off, and shouting out some sort of warning to the man who was with the woman, rushed forward as if to attack the intruder. The Hungarian states positively that he saw a knife in this second man's hand, but he waited to see no more. He fled incontinently, to his new lodgings.
    E
    He described the man with the woman as about 30 years of age, rather stoutly built, and wearing a brown moustache. He was dressed respectably in dark clothes and felt hat. The man who came at him with a knife he also describes, but not in detail. He says he was taller than the other, but not so stout, and that his moustaches were red. Both men seem to belong to the same grade of society.
    F
    The police have arrested one man answering the description the Hungarian furnishes. This prisoner has not been charged, but is held for inquiries to be made. The truth of the man's statement is not wholly accepted.
    Part A indicates the visit to Leman Street police station occurred late on the day of the murder.
    The Star interview occurred the following day.

    Part A also indicates that the police (including Abberline) regarded Schwartz as having no English at all.
    Part B indicates this to be false.
    Putting these points together, suggests some level of deception has occurred.

    Parts C & D follow the same pattern as in the Swanson report.
    The story could end at the end of part C, but then Schwartz would almost be obliged to state what he learnt when he turned back to see what the matter was.
    Knifeman to the rescue! Just in time.

    In part D we learn that Schwartz actually flees to his new lodgings in Ellen St, quite a bit closer to where he runs from, than the railway arch.
    Apparently the railway arch bit was also a lie, but hard to pick the lie when the witness is using a foreign language.

    In part C, we learn that Schwartz has been out all day, and away from his wife, while she moves to the new address.
    We are not told what Schwartz does during this period. I wonder if stops at a pub, during his mysterious day out?
    In part E, we learn that tipsy man was respectably dressed, as was Schwartz at the station.
    It's almost as though this character and this real man, have a shared identity.

    In part F, the Star reporter implies that he thinks Schwartz is full of it.

    In the Mrs. Kuer’s Lodger dissertation, Gavin Bromley states the Schwartz and his family may have been in England for 3 years, by Sep '88.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    NBFN, the reasoning for a story that includes elements that are not necessary to plant the seeds of suspicion on BSM, who by reasonable interpretation is portrayed as a likely anti-Semitic thug, is because any good story has a beginning and an end. When people lie don't they tend to offer a story that has many flowery elements that have nothing to do with the principle lie itself?

    The whole thing for me is that if you wish to use all the statements you will be unable to get a cohesive 30 minute interval recorded, that last 30 minutes.

    12:30-Wess leaves club via passageway and gates
    12:35-PC Smith sees Liz talking to someone, Fanny at her door sees young couple, Lave comes to the gates
    12:40-Eagle says he arrives at the gates, "couldnt be sure a body wasn't there", Lave is also at the gates, the young couple is still around.
    12:40-12:45- Issac Kozebrodski, Abraham Heschburg, a member named Gillen, and Edward Spooner say they were in the passageway standing over Liz. Louis is said to be there, others were also there. Issac says he was sent out to get help. James Brown sees the young couple. Israel Schwartz says he saw a man assault Liz Stride outside the gates, then yell "Lipski" at either him or to another man across the street. The other man chased him off.
    12:46-Estimated earliest cut time for Liz Stride
    12:50 Fanny is back at the door
    12:55 Fanny sees Goldstein pass by the club gates and look in. She describes the street as "deserted".
    1:00 Louis claims to arrive at the club, Fanny goes indoors, having seen nothing since Goldstein.

    That paints a picture of that last 1/2 hour.

    Lave doesn't see Eagle, or vice versa.
    Eagle didn't know if a body lay there at the time when he arrives
    4 witnesses state they were by the body, with others, around 12:40-12:45. One witness states the neck wound was flowing freely.
    No-one sees Israel, BSM, Pipeman or hears any call out across the street.
    Louis says he arrives "precisely" at 1, and states he got the time from a local clock. No-one sees him arrive.
    Fanny hears a cart and horse shortly after going inside, she cannot reliably state which direction it was going, or who was driving it.

    Semi deserted street, young couple, Goldstein. No BSM, Israel, Pipeman, no Louis arrival at 1 based on Fannys statement. No confirmation from Eagle that the woman was not lying there when he passed. No Eagle sees Lave standing there, or vice versa. 4 witnesses all independently giving the same approximate time and circumstances.

    Leave a comment:


  • Al Bundy's Eyes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post



    When The Star reporter chased him down, it turned out that he could speak some English.
    Abberline apparently believed that he couldn't speak a word of it.
    This amounts to a serious deception!
    Speaking his native language at the interview would have prevented Abberline picking up on subtle cues and hesitations, in Schwartz' speech.
    It is a far more serious deception than 'Cross/Lechmere'.
    The Star clearly states that Israel speaks no English and has an interpreter at hand, the same one who translated for Abberline, on account of the fact The Star again clearly states that the reporter knew he was going to the station and caught up with him. How accurate The Star report is is another matter, but at no point does it imply something akin to "the Mizen scam".

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    MWR: Don't see Israel as a suspect here myself, there isn't any evidence other than his given times...though again I suspect his statements value was not time dependent. It was off site aggressive Gentile dependent.
    MWR: Anderson claimed that during Septembers door to door inquiries, which he missed.. being in Paris, led him to conclude a local immigrant jew was likely the man they looked for, the neighbours and the cops wanted the club closed, and the general sentiments towards immigrant jews was dangerously negative. Without gentile "Lipski" yelling man, like as it appears the story goes in the Inquest, the closest people to Liz at the time of the murder wqere street residents and local jews.

    One just has to observe the tragic erasure of the GSG to see how volatile the area was thought to be concerning Jews.
    Let's compare the notion of Schwartz as suspect, versus Schwartz as implicator of a Gentile, using the text from Swanson's report.

    Here is the relevant section, split into 4 parts, for the sake of argument.

    A
    12.45 a.m. 30th. Israel Schwartz of 22 Helen [sic - Ellen] Street, Backchurch Lane, stated that at this hour, on turning into Berner St. from Commercial Road & having got as far as the gateway where the murder was committed he saw a man stop & speak to a woman, who was standing in the gateway. The man tried to pull the woman into the street, but he turned her round & threw her down on the footway & the woman screamed three times, but not very loudly. On crossing to the opposite side of the street, he saw a second man standing lighting his pipe. The man who threw the woman down called out apparently to the man on the opposite side of the road 'Lipski' & then Schwartz walked away ...
    B
    ... but finding that he was followed by the second man he ran so far as the railway arch but the man did not follow so far.
    C
    Marginal note: The use of "Lipski" increases my belief that the murderer was a Jew.
    D
    Schwartz cannot say whether the two men were together or known to each other. Upon being taken to the mortuary Schwartz identified the body as that of the woman he had seen & he thus describes the first man, who threw the woman down: age about 30 ht, 5 ft 5 in. comp. fair hair dark, small brown moustache, full face, broad shouldered, dress, dark jacket & trousers black cap with peak, had nothing in his hands.
    If Schwartz' purpose is merely to implicate a Gentile in the murder, then he has fully achieved this in part A.
    At the end of part A, he is walking away from the scene - he never interferes with it, and never speaks.
    BS Man has already shouted 'Lipski', and therefore Pipeman is superflous to requirements.

    In part B, Pipeman chases Schwartz away, or at least follows him with intent.
    What has this to do with implicating the murderer as a Gentile?
    Pipeman does not need to exist, to achieve this!

    The crucial question then arises - why does Schwartz add Pipeman to the story?
    Does he need an excuse to run away from the vicinity of the murder location?
    Could that be because he was seen running away from the murder location?
    Does part B actually suggest that Schwartz was chased away from the murder location, because he was involved with the murder?

    Part C suggests that, in practice, your theory of 'Lipski' as a way of implicating a gentile, failed completely.
    A dissertation on the subject quotes a Home Office memo:

    It does not appear whether the man used the word "Lipski" as a mere ejaculation, meaning in mockery I am going to "Lipski" the woman, or whether he was calling to a man across the road by his proper name. In the latter case, assuming that the man using the word was the murderer, the murderer must have an acquaintance in Whitechapel named Lipski.
    Part D suggests that Schwartz got a good look at Stride.
    He did not get a good look at Stride from within the club, unless she were also inside it at some point.
    I doubt very much that he could have got a good look at Stride, the way he describes things ...

    BS Man stops at Stride, probably obscuring her from Schwartz' view, and Stride, being at the edge of the gateway, is probably in a pretty dark location.
    BS Man then tries to pull her to the street, but ends up throwing her down on the footway. Schwartz then crosses the street.
    He never gets a good look at her face, yet somehow he is able to identifier her at the mortuary.
    Is that because Schwartz got a much better look at Stride, than we are led to believe?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

    If you happen to agree with something no need to post it in a rebuttal format.
    It didn't know there was any such thing as 'rebuttal format'.
    As far as I'm concerned, it's 'quote & response format'.
    Different interpretations, I guess.

    Imagine how difficult this would be if I were писать на русском языке

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  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    MWR: The 4 corroborative accounts for being by body at around 12:40-12:45 do.
    What do you suppose was the time of death?

    What time did Louis arrive?

    At what times was Fanny Mortimer on her doorstep?

    Did anyone see or hear Louis arrive?

    Where in the yard is the pony and cart parked, and why don't we hear of it beyond that moment?

    MWR: Don't see Israel as a suspect here myself, there isn't any evidence other than his given times ...
    When The Star reporter chased him down, it turned out that he could speak some English.
    Abberline apparently believed that he couldn't speak a word of it.
    This amounts to a serious deception!
    Speaking his native language at the interview would have prevented Abberline picking up on subtle cues and hesitations, in Schwartz' speech.
    It is a far more serious deception than 'Cross/Lechmere'.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Robert St Devil View Post

    Hello MWR

    I read it that Spooner is saying he started standing on Fairclough around 12:30 to 12:35ish and had been there for 25 minutes before the members of the IWMEC ran past him, which would put the time around 1am (or, the generally-accepted time the murder was discover).

    Morning Advertiser
    Oct 3, 1888

    On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the "Bective," at the corner of Christian-street and Fairclough-street, along with a young woman. We had been in a beershop at the corner of Settles-street, Commercial-road, and remained till closing time. I stood at the top of Christian-street for a few minutes, and then walked down the street. We had been standing there about 25 minutes, I suppose, when two Jews came running along.
    Hey Robert,

    If you put Spooners full statement into context, he says they walked from the closed pub to the spot outside the Beehive and were there around 25 minutes when he sees the men running. It would have taken him 10-20 minutes at a leisurely pace to get to the Beehive from the Commercial Street pub, and when you add the "approx." 25 minutes to that, you can understand why Spooner thought he was in the yard by the body before 12:45. Lets not forget Strides wound was still flowing when he got there too. And when he got there he guessed 15 men were already there standing around.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    So why do you rarely quote from the vast resources here, yourself?

    Because as I said, anyone serious about the study would have read them already for themselves. Most would look for contrary information if they objected to what was posted too.

    Spooner reaches the yard from just around the corner.
    He discovers the cut throat, not long after arriving, then stands guard over the body for no more than 5 minutes, until Lamb arrives at ~1 am.
    Are you seriously suggesting that this activity is compatible with a 12:35 arrival, with 'some room for error'?


    Im saying that he was likely off on his estimate due to the fact he was account for a longer period of time than the other witnesses...without benefit of clock or watch. He tells us what happened with him from 12:00am on.

    That tells us nothing about the time this occurred.

    The 4 corroborative accounts for being by body at around 12:40-12:45 do.

    That doesn't mean we can be sure on his behalf.

    Not sure how you got that from what I posted. What he is saying by the comment is that Liz's body may well have been there when he returned.

    I think you're on much stronger ground here.

    Gee, thanks.

    How could he be out on the street from 12:30-1:00, except for that odd bit in the yard, and yet he sees no one suspicious, and possibly no one sees him?

    He cant. Not if Eagle arrives at 12:40 like he says. Or, he claimed to have seen no-one when he actually did.


    Why do you make claims, and then go looking for the supporting evidence?

    Your confusing me with people that claim 1 man killed 5 women and then go looking look for suspects. Its the evidence that drives all and any theories I use.

    Yes it does, but only at that time, and the identity of that person is only Goldstein if we choose to believe Wess.
    Apparently Walter Dew didn't!


    Wess tranlstaed for Goldstein, and likely for Schwartz.

    Or himself.
    Glad to see you don't believe any of that BS/Pipe Man nonsense
    .

    Don't see Israel as a suspect here myself, there isn't any evidence other than his given times...though again I suspect his statements value was not time dependent. It was off site aggressive Gentile dependent.

    What's your best evidence that the club would have come under intense scrutiny (or worse), had it not been for the 'Lipski' incident?
    Was it really just one word that saved them?


    Anderson claimed that during Septembers door to door inquiries, which he missed.. being in Paris, led him to conclude a local immigrant jew was likely the man they looked for, the neighbours and the cops wanted the club closed, and the general sentiments towards immigrant jews was dangerously negative. Without gentile "Lipski" yelling man, like as it appears the story goes in the Inquest, the closest people to Liz at the time of the murder wqere street residents and local jews.

    One just has to observe the tragic erasure of the GSG to see how volatile the area was thought to be concerning Jews.

    [/I]?
    If you happen to agree with something no need to post it in a rebuttal format.
    Last edited by Michael W Richards; 02-11-2020, 02:06 PM.

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  • Robert St Devil
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    I cant keep posting things that are readily available on this very site to show the errors people make, maybe they make the errors because they haven't read them in the first place.

    Spooner, Heshburg. Issac K have their remarks here under Witnesses in the files....Spooner..."about 25 to 1", Heshburg.." about 20 minutes to 1", Issac K..."about 20 minutes to 1", Gillen is referred to by another witness at around 12:40, Fanny stated that she was at her door..."nearly the whole time between half past 12 and 1am." We also know she stood there continuously within that half hour from 12:50 until 1.

    Louis says he arrived precisely at 1...the witnesses above disagree by at least 15 minutes.

    I don't use Israel Schwartzs statement in any way when investigating this case, if you like to use his scurrying away part, be my guest. I do not use any of it.
    Hello MWR

    I read it that Spooner is saying he started standing on Fairclough around 12:30 to 12:35ish and had been there for 25 minutes before the members of the IWMEC ran past him, which would put the time around 1am (or, the generally-accepted time the murder was discover).

    Morning Advertiser
    Oct 3, 1888

    On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the "Bective," at the corner of Christian-street and Fairclough-street, along with a young woman. We had been in a beershop at the corner of Settles-street, Commercial-road, and remained till closing time. I stood at the top of Christian-street for a few minutes, and then walked down the street. We had been standing there about 25 minutes, I suppose, when two Jews came running along.

    Leave a comment:

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