By "he" you mean Abberline, and no, the report is most certainly not a "cover letter".
You're seriously suggesting that the covering letter was all Abberline sent to his superiors, minus the statement itself, and without even including the description? If that was standard practice for Abberline (which it definitely wasn't, but let's play), how was Swanson able to know anything about Schwartz's account and description, let alone recount so much of it?
First, a 'possible' second sighting, in a market on Sunday, is not a detail that the police can work with, not unless he was adamant about it, and clearly he was not. It may have potential value, but not immediate value.
No, it would have been senseless, negligent and foolish for Abberline to have withheld the "Sunday policeman" episode had Hutchinson said anything about it on the Monday. The corollary, therefore, is that he didn't.
And so Abberline makes enquiries, locates which PC was on duty at the market and questions him. The PC informs Abberline that a man did come to him with a story and that he said he thought he saw the man briefly but lost him in the crowd. There was no trace of the man that I could see so I told him I cannot leave my post but if you are sure then go to Commercial St. station and report to the Inspector what you saw.
This is your definition of shocking negligence?
This is your definition of shocking negligence?
It's also my definition of painful nonsense that certainly never happened.
Firstly, Hutchinson would have mentioned the original Friday episode to this non-existent policeman in order to provide a context for the Petticoat Lane sighting. "Lost in the crowd" and "fixed point duty" are not contained within any part of Hutchinson's press or police statement. They are simply details you've made up out of nowhere in an attempt to make a wildly implausible claim seem less so, and they don't succeed. The PC could have made up any crap excuse he wanted to, but the bottom line is that because of his failure to act, Hutchinson could have been known the police - and Astrakhan accordingly investigated - well in advance of him coming forward at 6pm on Monday 12th.
But anyway, we've been over the non-existent policeman many times, so that's going to have to be you done with that particular argument. Visit "Hutchinson's Sunday Sighting" if you're insistent on reviving that one.
On the subject of well-dressed men frequenting the East end, William Fishman provides a few examples
The John Boyle example also tells us absolutely nothing about the existence of well-dressed men on the streets of Whitechapel. When he was found in Brick Lane, he clearly didn't look anything like Astrakhan, as his "fortune" had already left him. The article observed simply that he was accustomed to dressing stylishly when visiting friends, and you can guarantee this didn't happen in Brick Lane!
All the best,
Ben
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