This snippet from the description of Packer's statement is worth focusing on:
So where had they gone when he lost sight of them?
This dissertation suggests that the ~12:12 time at this which occurs, could have actually been much earlier (Packer mistook the departures at the end of the club meeting, for the closing of the pubs at around midnight).
Stride seems to have spent a lot of time outside the club, before her murder.
It's interesting when we consider her standing with the man, outside the club, possibly before midnight - at least an hour before her death!
The we have...
The area of the lane in which Stride was found, was very dark.
Does "He tried to pull the woman into the street" suggest Stride really wanted to stay in the darkness, with a man who wanted to throw her around?
Surely not! So how about:
Prior to her death, Liz Stride had been inside the club, and was attempting to reenter it when she was murdered
So what about the issue of Stride's matted and muddied hair?
From the above dissertation:
Her hair seems to have had plenty of time to dry out, and where she lay would have been no more than damp.
So what explains the muddied hair?
Was someone(s) trying to make it look as though she had been laying where she were found, longer than she had been?
At last the couple moved from their position and Packer saw them cross the road again and come over to the club, standing for a moment in front of it as though listening to the music inside. Then he lost sight of them. It was then 10 or 15 minutes past 12 o’clock, Packer, who was about to close his shop, noting the time by the fact that the public-houses had been closed.
This dissertation suggests that the ~12:12 time at this which occurs, could have actually been much earlier (Packer mistook the departures at the end of the club meeting, for the closing of the pubs at around midnight).
Stride seems to have spent a lot of time outside the club, before her murder.
It's interesting when we consider her standing with the man, outside the club, possibly before midnight - at least an hour before her death!
The we have...
Schwartz > Interpreter > Abberline > Swanson: He 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.
Does "He tried to pull the woman into the street" suggest Stride really wanted to stay in the darkness, with a man who wanted to throw her around?
Surely not! So how about:
Prior to her death, Liz Stride had been inside the club, and was attempting to reenter it when she was murdered
So what about the issue of Stride's matted and muddied hair?
From the above dissertation:
Dr Blackwell: The clothes were not wet with rain.
William Marshall: While I was standing at my door, from half-past eleven to twelve, there was no rain at all.
James Brown: Was it raining at the time? - No. I went on.
PC Smith: It rained very little after eleven o'clock.
William Marshall: While I was standing at my door, from half-past eleven to twelve, there was no rain at all.
James Brown: Was it raining at the time? - No. I went on.
PC Smith: It rained very little after eleven o'clock.
So what explains the muddied hair?
Was someone(s) trying to make it look as though she had been laying where she were found, longer than she had been?
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