Originally posted by BooksbyBJThompson
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I'd be inclined to say "yes". Like DJA says, not wearing a hat would be more conspicuous. Anyway, regardless of that, your line of speculation is one that applies a controlled sense of reason in the killer, an attention to a minor detail that suggests an organised killer, a planner, but it's at odds with the far more real risks he was willing to take. 'What if his hat got knocked off?' What if she screamed? Or a burly neighbour just happened to be about? Dunno. There were very few aspects the killer actually had control of, so leaving his hat at home could be one of them.
I don't think it's the lynchpin of his identity anyhow. Every sighting involves a hat, so looking for hatless people is pointless by virtue of the fact there's no accounts to follow. Even if the idea that he didn't wear a hat was convincing, where does it get us? Discarding every eyewitness, so we're working with even less in an already barren field. Questions are there to be asked, but I don't think this one leads anywhere.
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