Please see my replies below.
Macnaghten wrote he had been incarcerated in March of '89, which doesn't fit with Kozminski's records, so did he get the date wrong, or the name wrong?
The date.
That aside, given the fact Mac. did believe Kozminski had been sent to an asylum, why would Anderson leave that detail out?
If it were true, he could have simply included the asylum detail after the ID instead of before?
I presume you are referring to his omission of the incarceration in his final version.
I think he left it out because it would have conflicted so obviously with his previous account of what had happened.
Right, which means the ID must have taken place before March of '89 (Macnaghten).
I don't know how you arrived at that deduction, but I think Anderson and Swanson both had in mind a similar date to that given by Macnaghten, because Anderson's theory has the murders stopping because of the suspect's incarceration and Swanson has the murders stopping after the suspect's identification.
So, which ever theory we choose, we are required to argue a high ranking policeman got it wrong, and this without any firm evidence.
Well, Anderson got plenty wrong.
He claimed that his conclusions that the murderer did not live alone, and that he must therefore have been Jewish, were shared by his colleagues.
Surely, no-one actually believes that.
I'm not so sure about that.
The police can have him locked up if he can be certified as insane, but the police still need to know if he was responsible for the murders, even though they cannot charge him with any of them. Something must call a halt to the murder investigation at some point, even without a trial.
If Anderson was not seeking to put the suspect on trial, why did he claim that the suspect refused to testify against him?
And why did Anderson remove the part about the suspect already having been certified at the time of his identification, unless because it made a nonsense of his claim that he was indeed seeking a conviction?
Originally posted by Wickerman
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Macnaghten wrote he had been incarcerated in March of '89, which doesn't fit with Kozminski's records, so did he get the date wrong, or the name wrong?
The date.
That aside, given the fact Mac. did believe Kozminski had been sent to an asylum, why would Anderson leave that detail out?
If it were true, he could have simply included the asylum detail after the ID instead of before?
I presume you are referring to his omission of the incarceration in his final version.
I think he left it out because it would have conflicted so obviously with his previous account of what had happened.
Right, which means the ID must have taken place before March of '89 (Macnaghten).
I don't know how you arrived at that deduction, but I think Anderson and Swanson both had in mind a similar date to that given by Macnaghten, because Anderson's theory has the murders stopping because of the suspect's incarceration and Swanson has the murders stopping after the suspect's identification.
So, which ever theory we choose, we are required to argue a high ranking policeman got it wrong, and this without any firm evidence.
Well, Anderson got plenty wrong.
He claimed that his conclusions that the murderer did not live alone, and that he must therefore have been Jewish, were shared by his colleagues.
Surely, no-one actually believes that.
I'm not so sure about that.
The police can have him locked up if he can be certified as insane, but the police still need to know if he was responsible for the murders, even though they cannot charge him with any of them. Something must call a halt to the murder investigation at some point, even without a trial.
If Anderson was not seeking to put the suspect on trial, why did he claim that the suspect refused to testify against him?
And why did Anderson remove the part about the suspect already having been certified at the time of his identification, unless because it made a nonsense of his claim that he was indeed seeking a conviction?
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