The following post is robustly critical of ideas only, and contains no personal attacks.
I object in the strongest possible terms, and would suggest you don't do it again in future. My introductory line, before you fiddled with it, reflected the reality of the situation, which is that detectives supplied the press with case-related inside information on occasion. It seems to be only you who continues to insist - controversially, unrealistically and with startling naivity - that it never happened. But the real world works so much better, I find.
But it has been demonstrated, over and over again, and not just by me. You'll notice that Garry and Sally have both urged common sense on this issue, but to no avail. It isn't possible for the two proven examples of a police-press correspondence to have been achieved through the supposedly "established means" you suggest. One of these examples, if you cast your mind back, was the Lawende description, leaked to the press prematurely and published on the 2nd October. The description would have been contained in a report at the police station, and I don't see any pressman finding access to that unless a detective chose to show it to him, which is obviously - oh so terribly obviously - what happened. So, I'll repeat my introductory line again, and without your silly inappropriate "amendment":
Detectives shared case related information with certain members of the press.
Splendid.
Onwards...
Certainly, but an "individual PC" would not be able to produce Lawende's description on request, and nor would he know the status of an eyewitness account in terms of how much credibility it was then being accorded. And yet these two pieces of case-related information were obtained quite obviously from a detective, and probably without a whisky bribe too.
It has been proved, many times.
And I will continue to insist and assert for as long as your lazy one liners to the contrary keep coming. It's such a shame when potentially meaningful discussions degenerate into a stamina/repetition battle; when all that's left is a competition to see who's capacity for repetition is the largest...
The Echo knew very well that he was discredited, which is essentially what they reported over two days. There is absolutely no evidence that the police were pursuing the Astrakhan line of inquiry a week later, absolutely none at all.
Ah, but nobody said anything about "talking directly to Scotland yard". I'm talking primarily about communications with individual detectives working "on the ground" in police stations based in the Whitechapel and Spitalfields area, although there was certainly nothing to prevent the press from obtaining details from Scotland Yard as well. To argue that this "never" happened is equally naive and unrealistic. As I've explained before, you've simply misunderstood the sentence:
"From latest inquiries (i.e. undertaken by the Echo) it appears that a very reduced importance seems to be now - in the light of later investigation (i.e. undertaken by the police) - attached to a statement made by a person last night that he saw a man with the deceased on the night of the murder"
Firstly, you can "dispense" with whatever you like, just don't expect many others to take your dispensations seriously. I fully intend to remind all and sundry about the fact that Hutchinson was discredited for as long as erroneous protestations to the contrary exist. Secondly, what's this nonsense about the Star "realizing their mistake"? The only reason they didn't mention Hutchinson after 15th November is because there was simply no point in dwelling on a discredited witness.
But these all pre-date the discrediting of Hutchinson's account. For all I know (and care) the police may well have had nothing to do with the Star prior to that time, but that must have changed by mid-November or else they wouldn't have disclosed the provably correct detail that Hutchinson's account had been discredited - according as it does with the reports from the Echo, which we know were both truthful and accurate, and couldn't possibly have been obtained by any other means than a direct communication with a senior police source. It also makes sense for the police to have appeased the hostile Star by supplying them with case-related information of the type previously denied to them.
Again, I'm not talking about a general practice of passing on information. I'm simply refuting the silly, naive suggestion that it never once happened. It's a dead argument. The examples I've provided prove it false. You ought to move on.
Oh no they don't. You have no examples whatsoever of the Star reporting enthusiastically about a subject on one day and then undermining their own enthusiasm by pouring water on that same subject the next day, knowing full well that those undermining attempts were based on lies...and don't pretend you have. You keep ignoring Garry's observation that if the Star had wished to lie about Hutchinson's account, they had only to sensationalize it further; milk it for all it was worth, make Astrakhan the undisputed villain and sell more papers.
No.
Forget "the seen with Kelly" bit. It's wrong.
Check out the following from the St. James' Gazette:
"He was of gentlemanly appearance and manners and somewhat resembled the description given by witnesses at the late inquest. After being closely questioned as to his whereabouts at the time of the murders, and supplying a satisfactory account of himself, he was liberated."
The Echo, who reported on the same subject, also mentioned nothing about the man being "seen with Kelly". Hence, it may be concluded that the newspaper(s) that reported this detail were in error.
What we have then is a man of "gentlemanly" appearance and manners who was mentioned at the inquest.
Lewis' Bethnal Green Road man meets both criteria.
Astrakhan man meets neither.
The Echo, in particular, were well aware that Hutchinson did not attend the inquest, and thus knew full well that the Birmingham suspect was not being compared to Hutchinson's already-discredited Astrakhan man. There is not the remotest possibility, therefore, of them describing Hutchinson as a witness who attended the inquest.
Hutchinson never used the expression “gentleman”, unlike Lewis.
Haha! Good one
No.
If you remember, that was another argument of yours that was proven utterly false. Sarah Lewis did not see anyone enter Miller's Court. She did not see Kelly that night (she didn't even know who she was), and she certainly did not see anyone that night who looked like Hutchinson's Astrakhan invention.
Sarah Lewis was most emphatically the witness described in the 19th November article, as I am prepared to reiterate for decades and decades if necessary.
But this is nonsense.
According to that logic, Emmanuel Violenia never left the station (maybe he's still there?). They were not satisfied that he was telling the truth - quite the reverse, actually - and yet despite his claim to have been the last person to have seen Annie Chapman alive, he was "let go" on the assumption that he was just another bogus witness. The same evidently occurred with Hutchinson, albeit after being given a temporary short-lived thumbs-up from Abberline.
I hope you don't mind me taking the liberty of correcting your introductory line.
Where you are lacking is in being unable to demonstrate, by any means available, just why in those instances you specify, the information had to be obtained directly & illicitly from detectives and not by the established means I suggest.
Detectives shared case related information with certain members of the press.
Splendid.
Onwards...
Certainly an individual PC's lips could be loosened by the offer of a free whisky or two
There you go again. Certainly you have insisted, and asserted, but never once have you proved Hutchinson was ever discredited. It is something you cannot prove for the simple reason you cannot prove something which never happened.
And I will continue to insist and assert for as long as your lazy one liners to the contrary keep coming. It's such a shame when potentially meaningful discussions degenerate into a stamina/repetition battle; when all that's left is a competition to see who's capacity for repetition is the largest...
The police would not still be pursuing that line of inquiry a week later if they had dismissed him as a liar on the 13th. The Echo knew he was never discredited.
Thats the bit we are missing, the paragraph in the Echo reads “From latest inquiries”, which means absolutely nothing as regards talking directly to Scotland Yard.
"From latest inquiries (i.e. undertaken by the Echo) it appears that a very reduced importance seems to be now - in the light of later investigation (i.e. undertaken by the police) - attached to a statement made by a person last night that he saw a man with the deceased on the night of the murder"
Reduced importance (Echo), does not mean Discredited (Star), and as the Star appear to have realized their mistake in never mentioning the subject again then we can dispense with this Discrediting nonsense once and for all.
Well, lets take a look at a few recent comments by the Star about the police refusal to talk with them.
Again, I'm not talking about a general practice of passing on information. I'm simply refuting the silly, naive suggestion that it never once happened. It's a dead argument. The examples I've provided prove it false. You ought to move on.
Oh yes they do, we have previous examples, in fact I have posted them. The Star were known for promoting a story one day only to downplay it the next.
We both know this “gentleman” was not the loiterer in the wideawake hat, so which one of the other two was it?
The first man Lewis mentioned was the Britannia man who she passed at the corner of Dorset St. The second was the man she saw walk up the court with a woman, though you say this couple were only in Dorset St.
Which one was it Ben?
Before you answer, let me just remind you that the “Birmingham” suspect was described as resembling the man “seen with Kelly”!
The first man Lewis mentioned was the Britannia man who she passed at the corner of Dorset St. The second was the man she saw walk up the court with a woman, though you say this couple were only in Dorset St.
Which one was it Ben?
Before you answer, let me just remind you that the “Birmingham” suspect was described as resembling the man “seen with Kelly”!
Forget "the seen with Kelly" bit. It's wrong.
Check out the following from the St. James' Gazette:
"He was of gentlemanly appearance and manners and somewhat resembled the description given by witnesses at the late inquest. After being closely questioned as to his whereabouts at the time of the murders, and supplying a satisfactory account of himself, he was liberated."
The Echo, who reported on the same subject, also mentioned nothing about the man being "seen with Kelly". Hence, it may be concluded that the newspaper(s) that reported this detail were in error.
What we have then is a man of "gentlemanly" appearance and manners who was mentioned at the inquest.
Lewis' Bethnal Green Road man meets both criteria.
Astrakhan man meets neither.
The Echo, in particular, were well aware that Hutchinson did not attend the inquest, and thus knew full well that the Birmingham suspect was not being compared to Hutchinson's already-discredited Astrakhan man. There is not the remotest possibility, therefore, of them describing Hutchinson as a witness who attended the inquest.
Hutchinson never used the expression “gentleman”, unlike Lewis.
As I showed you months ago, Sarah Lewis was witness to Astrachan with Kelly pass up the court.
No.
If you remember, that was another argument of yours that was proven utterly false. Sarah Lewis did not see anyone enter Miller's Court. She did not see Kelly that night (she didn't even know who she was), and she certainly did not see anyone that night who looked like Hutchinson's Astrakhan invention.
Sarah Lewis was most emphatically the witness described in the 19th November article, as I am prepared to reiterate for decades and decades if necessary.
You can wrestle with him being a witness or suspect, but he will not leave the station until Abberline is satisfied he is telling the truth.
According to that logic, Emmanuel Violenia never left the station (maybe he's still there?). They were not satisfied that he was telling the truth - quite the reverse, actually - and yet despite his claim to have been the last person to have seen Annie Chapman alive, he was "let go" on the assumption that he was just another bogus witness. The same evidently occurred with Hutchinson, albeit after being given a temporary short-lived thumbs-up from Abberline.
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