Originally posted by GBinOz
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Eagle: I had been there about 20 minutes when the man I mentioned-Gigelmann-came and said, "There is a dead woman lying in the yard."
Diemschitz: My wife was with several of the members of the club. I told them "There is a woman lying in the yard, but I cannot say whether she is drunk or dead." I then got a candle and went down. By that light I could see there was blood even before I reached the body.
If Gigelmann = Diemschitz, then surely "the man I mentioned" would have been identified as the steward.
How did Gigelmann know there was a dead woman in the yard, when Diemschitz states that he did not know if the woman was drunk or dead? Diemschitz told at least one reporter that he thought the woman might have been his wife, and went inside to look for her. Yet according to Eagle, the man Gigelmann seems to have stated positively that the woman was dead, and so this man must have already seen her by match or candlelight. The question is; when? Before answering, consider how Eagle continues:
I went down in a second, struck a match, and saw a woman lying on the ground near the gates with a lot of blood near her. Her feet were six or seven feet from the gate, and her head lay towards the yard. When I reached the body and struck the match there was only one of the members present. I thought at first she was drunk, and told her to get up-that was before I struck the match.
Only one of the members present? Was that Diemschitz?
Arbeter Fraint: Comrades Morris Eygel, Fridenthal and Gilyarovsky were standing around the body. Eygel struck a match and shouted to the figure lying there: “Get up!”
Apparently not. So when was this scene occurring? Was it before or after this ...?
Mrs. Diemschitz: Just by the door I saw a pool of blood, and when my husband struck a light I noticed a dark lump lying under the wall. I at once recognised it as the body of a woman, while, to add to my horror, I saw a stream of blood trickling down the yard, and terminating in the pool I had first noticed. She was lying on her back with her head against the wall, and the face looked ghastly. I screamed out in fright, and the members of the club, hearing my cries, rushed downstairs in a body out into the yard.
How could it have been after, if on hearing Sarah's screams, the members "rushed downstairs in a body out into the yard"? So it must been before. That is, before Diemschitz had even arrived home.
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