Originally posted by harry
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I do not believe policemen are infallible nor do I believe they are above occasional dishonesty. Nevertheless, they are more likely to be observant (training and experience) and they are more likely to make contemporaneous notes. All this adds to make them generally more reliable than someone unused to observing and relying on memory, all other things being equal.
You ask for evidence that PC Long did not write the graffiti. You rely on his testimony to place him in the doorway (provides opportunity, you suggest). If you are to rely on PC Long's testimony, then you should not omit the rest of his testimony in which he claims to have found the writing:
He was walking his beat in Goulston Street at 2.55am, 30th September 1888, whereupon he found a portion of woman's apron (produced at the inquest) lying in the entrance of the staircase to 108-19 Wentworth Dwellings. There were bloodstains on it and one portion was wet. Above it on the wall of the passage was a message written in chalk. At the inquest, PC Long gave the wording as "The Jews are the men that will not be blamed for nothing". The apron piece had not been there when he had passed the spot earlier at 2.20am, though he could not say if the writing had been there also.
You may think he is lying and wrote the message himself, in which case we might ask what leads you to set aside his evidence and reach that conclusion.
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