Originally posted by caz
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I wasn't contemplating him making up a time. He said in all his interviews that he arrived at his usual time of about one o'clock. That would have been acceptable to all. Then he changed that to a clock sighting. The first sign of a dodgy witness is changing their story. Anyone have a reason for him changing his story?
FM is often discarded as a witness on the basis of inconsistancy, by I suspect in her case the comparison was between and interview and an editorial. I believe that FM, having heard Smith's footsteps many times a night for a long time, would be equipt with the ability to identify him on the night in question. If we adjust her times to police time, however they determined it, it suggests that Schwartz passed just after she went inside. Then apply the four or five minutes until she heard the horse and cart, and we have an interval between the BSman incident and the discovery of the body. A very short interval, which reduces the number of suspects and increases the likelihood of the interruption theory. If we have to adhere to the proposal that nobody lies, the "why didn't he see so and so" arguments devolve into clock syncs or witnesses not considering what they saw to be unusual.
Clock times don't really matter - differences in clock syncs could explain many of the differences in times quoted by the various parties. So Koze and Hosch could be correct in their time zone, as Michael suggests. When I set out my timeline I incorporated suggested time zone differences but if others want to adjust things for one witness then that is up to them. I think that Frank was on the right track with a timeline of sequences and no times.
Coming back to the topic of the thread, I think the whistle heard by Hosch and Harris was deployed by a member of the WVC, perhaps Koze or Jacobs.
Cheers, George
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