It's a fact that the Metropolitan Police disclosed reliable inside information to certain members of the press. It is therefore a complete waste of time to claim otherwise and argue accordingly. We have at least two proven instances of it occurring, although I'm sure there are many more. Nobody's suggesting that it was ever the common practice, but the sheer naivity - and impossibility - of the argument that it "never" happened in the Whitechapel murders investigation should be apparent to all.
On the evening of the 13th November, The Echo published inside information from "the authorities" to the effect that Hutchinson had been discredited for reasons that were inextricably linked to the question of his credibility, or lack thereof. Did the Echo lie about this detail for the sheer shytes and giggles of it? Well, no, definitely not, because almost immediately following this publication they obtained additional Hutchinson-related information directly from Commercial Street police station. Would the police have wanted anything to do with the Echo if they'd caught them publishing brazen out-and-out porkie-pies about their treatment of Hutchinson's account? No. Would the Echo have deliberately sabotaged what was evidently a good relationship with the Met police? Also no.
So we may dispense, permanently, with the insanely ludicrous suggestion that the Echo lied about the police's discrediting of Hutchinson.
And yes, the revelation that the 14th November description attributed to "George Hutchinson" emanated from the same source as the 13th November account attributed to "a man, apparently from the labouring class but with a military appearance" certainly qualified as "inside information". The account from the 14th was not sanctioned by the police, unlike the account from the 13th, and as such the police would not have wished it to be "public information" that both came from the same source.
Regards,
Ben
On the evening of the 13th November, The Echo published inside information from "the authorities" to the effect that Hutchinson had been discredited for reasons that were inextricably linked to the question of his credibility, or lack thereof. Did the Echo lie about this detail for the sheer shytes and giggles of it? Well, no, definitely not, because almost immediately following this publication they obtained additional Hutchinson-related information directly from Commercial Street police station. Would the police have wanted anything to do with the Echo if they'd caught them publishing brazen out-and-out porkie-pies about their treatment of Hutchinson's account? No. Would the Echo have deliberately sabotaged what was evidently a good relationship with the Met police? Also no.
So we may dispense, permanently, with the insanely ludicrous suggestion that the Echo lied about the police's discrediting of Hutchinson.
And yes, the revelation that the 14th November description attributed to "George Hutchinson" emanated from the same source as the 13th November account attributed to "a man, apparently from the labouring class but with a military appearance" certainly qualified as "inside information". The account from the 14th was not sanctioned by the police, unlike the account from the 13th, and as such the police would not have wished it to be "public information" that both came from the same source.
Regards,
Ben
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