Originally posted by Ben
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We are in no position to second guess why Macdonald only called a dozen witnesses in such an important case as this. Compare Macdonald's short list and single sitting with Wynne Baxter's long list of witnesses and over several days.
Had Wynne Baxter presided over Kelly's inquest we might have fewer questions and a more complete picture.
One consideration why Mrs Kennedy was not called may be that she told her complete story to the press after, I'm sure, being requested by the police to say nothing to anyone. Lewis, Cox, Prater, etc. complied, Kennedy did not.
I didn't mention this earlier, but it's nonsense to suggest that Kennedy would not have been called owing to the extreme similarity with Lewis. On the contrary, had there been any opportunity to present mutually corroborative evidence, police and coroner would have seized at the chance.
Neither was the man who sold her the milk... (read on).
"On inquiries being made at the milkshop indicated by the woman her statement was found to be correct, and the cross-over was also found in Kelly's room. Another young woman, whose name is known, has also informed the police that she is positive she saw Kelly between half-past 8 and a quarter to 9 on Friday morning."
Where are these "very important supportive witnesses" (known to the police), Ben?
Your assumption is unfounded. It should be clear to you that gathering supportive witnesses is not deemed a requirement by the Coroner.
A Coroner does not play "My gang is bigger than your gang" type games, one good witness is all he needs.
Need I go on...?
Sarah Lewis saw the loiterer standing watching a couple pass up the court, this was important because of the time, 2:30 am.
Mrs Kennedy only saw "Kelly"? outside the Britannia "about 3:00 am", with no-one. Yes there was a couple nearby, but she does not say they were so close as to be regarded as "together". Kelly was apparently alone.
The evidence of Sarah Lewis has more potential because of her seeing the loiterer in the vicinity of the murder scene.
The irony is that even if they did sound similar, it would only illustrate that Kennedy passed on the name she had misheard from Lewis.
This extract is not from Mrs Kennedy, the reporter appears to have spoken directly with Mr Gallagher..
"... Immediately opposite the house in which Mary Jane Kelly was murdered is a tenement occupied by an Irishman, named Gallagher, and his family. On Thursday night Gallagher and his wife retired to rest at a fairly early hour. Their married daughter, a woman named Mrs. Kennedy, came home, however, at a late hour..."
Well, all being well, I won't have to. With any luck, we've finished with this distracting off-topic nonsense now.
Everyone knows she did. She saw one woman standing in Commercial Street outside the Britannia with your favourite black bag man, and then a second woman "in drink" who was with a young man further on down Dorset Street from Miller's Court.
And, just to remind you, the couple you mention above seen by Lewis, those being watched by this loiterer, are not specified to be in Dorset St. in any press article, that is your invention.
They were located as walking up the passage/court.
There doesn't need to be. Who else apart from the Star got the scoop on Israel Schwartz? No other newspaper. Are you now going to suggest that the Star "made up" Israel Schwartz too?
Trusting The Star has always been ill advised, even at the time.
So instead it needs to be realised that the Star made investigations independent from other newspapers, and uncovered information that we now know to be true.
You may not like the Star, but they demonstrated perfectly - not just in the Schwartz case - that they "practiced their own investigative skills".

When Lewis saw the wideawake man, who I agree was Hutchinson, he was standing opposite the court entrance by Crossingham's lodging house. This is made clear in every single source, including her police statement, apart from the Daily News. There is no earthly justification for you to champion the Daily News' erroneous report as accurate whilst discarding all the other accounts which flatly contradict it. None at all.
"...They both then went up the court together. I then went to the Court to see if I could see them, but could not. I stood there for about three quarters of an hour to see if they came out they did not so I went away."
Then the same to the press...
"...and they both went up the court together. I went to look up the court to see if I could see them, but could not. I stood there for three quarters of an hour to see if they came down again, but they did not, and so I went away."
She might have said she was, but it's far more likely that she heard from Lewis that she was "sealed in". It's just another detail that Kennedy stole from Lewis' account.
And now, you go so far as to add Sarah Lewis to your "liars club". You do agree she honoured a request by the police to say nothing?, yet you now make her a liar by suggesting she told Mrs Kennedy, why?, its your way of trying to uphold your crumbling theory.
I said she honoured her agreement with the police not to speak to the press. I never said she didn't speak to other women. Indeed, I think it's very clear that she did, and that Kennedy was one of those women.
Sure Ben, that's the common police method to limit the spread of critical evidence, dammit, how come I missed that (good grief!).

We're regurgitating entire debates practically verbatim. I think out of respect for the other posters here, let's put all this Kennedy silliness on hold for now.
But the reliable, non-discredited, taken-seriously evidence paints a somewhat different picture - that of an intoxicated woman with ample time for extended sing-song indoors.
Quite consistent with Kelly being out, back on the streets.
Yes, she could have fallen asleep, but there's no "reliable, non-discredited, taken-seriously evidence" (your words), to be sure either way. And, falling asleep in a cold room with no fire (no light?) - not likely.
Also, two people, albeit two members of your ever expanding "liars club", say they saw her out, whether you choose to believe them or not.
But one of the most crucial criteria for such judgments is the manner in which that evidence is presented, and as such, police and inquest statements are bound to be treated as more reliable than press tattle. That's just obvious.
And, my question has always been, on what basis do we reject the story given by a press witness especially when it does not contradict a story given at the inquest?
My point being, press witnesses are only rejected by modern theorists because what they say conflicts with modern ill thought out theories.
All the best, Jon S.
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