How was the match made? Perhaps that little blue man from Mars that's been mentioned,did the matching?
Were the two pieces laid on the floor side by side.?Were they held up by the hands?Was it a casual glance at two separate items made at different times?All of the above are feasible.There now seem to be quite a confusion surrounding the apron pieces.a considerale amount of could be,maybe,etc.It was all so plain before Trevor stepped in and s aid there could be other explanations,and we should look for them.Credit where credits due.Why, when the match supposedly made by Brown occurred with three other doctors present,did none of those three comment on it?Wouldn't Phillips,who took the Goulsten street cloth to the mortuary,for reasons unknown,have been interested enough to make some official comment?
But back to Long.If there had been only excrement on the cloth would he have jumped to the conclusion that a crime may have been committed in that building?if not it must have been the blood that caused his later actions.How much blood was there?Not much from some accounts,plus no victim,no assailant.Plus as has been mentioned countless times,blood on people even, was commonplace in London at that time.
Long's evidence smells,and I do not need him here to question him,to come to that conclusion.
Were the two pieces laid on the floor side by side.?Were they held up by the hands?Was it a casual glance at two separate items made at different times?All of the above are feasible.There now seem to be quite a confusion surrounding the apron pieces.a considerale amount of could be,maybe,etc.It was all so plain before Trevor stepped in and s aid there could be other explanations,and we should look for them.Credit where credits due.Why, when the match supposedly made by Brown occurred with three other doctors present,did none of those three comment on it?Wouldn't Phillips,who took the Goulsten street cloth to the mortuary,for reasons unknown,have been interested enough to make some official comment?
But back to Long.If there had been only excrement on the cloth would he have jumped to the conclusion that a crime may have been committed in that building?if not it must have been the blood that caused his later actions.How much blood was there?Not much from some accounts,plus no victim,no assailant.Plus as has been mentioned countless times,blood on people even, was commonplace in London at that time.
Long's evidence smells,and I do not need him here to question him,to come to that conclusion.
Comment