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Time-gap between Eddowes murder and Goulston Graffito
Or are some of us not believng Long to make things easy/easier?
Hi GUT,
Easier? Yes I guess you're right, however I could use... more likely, more plausible, more probable, more feasible, straightforward, uncomplicated...I could go on but I think you get my point.
One policeman being mistaken or endless theories where none of the words above could realistically be used?
As a purely personal guess, 125 years later, and worth less than nothing.
I personally think P C Long simply missed it first time round, but I have to go where the evidence leads me and at this distance I just cannot decide, so any hypothesis you come up with has to take both possibilities into account or it must fail.
G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
I think we start playing a dangerous game when we start discounting witnesses statements just because their statement seem to complicate things and we have no other solid reason to discount their Story- because where does it end?
A very sound reflection, Abby!
I look at the matter this way:
Long did discover the rag at the later stage.
It therefore applies that at this stage, he did a thorough enough search to accomplish this.
So here we have evidence that as Alfred Long did his tour of Goulston Street at around 2.55, he did it in a fashion that ensured his finding the rag in the doorway.
This means that if he missed the rag at 2.20, he reasonably did things differently at that stage. Why would we think he did?
The reasonable thing to predispose is of course that he did things in the same way at 2.20 as he did at 2.55. The better guess is therefore that the rag was not there at the earlier stage.
The litmus paper, if you like, is how Long expressed things at the inquest. If he had wawered and been uncertain, then we should doubt that he did the search in the same manner at 2.20 as at 2.55.
But he did not wawer. He was very certain: It was not there at 2.20.
The outcome is obvious: even if it sounds a simpler solution to accept that Long missed the apron at 2.20, we need to accept that the evidence is very much against it. And - just like Abby says - we also need to accept that we are dealing with a killer who seemingly did not adjust to the norms laid down by society. Why would we expect him to choose the simple solution when given a choice?
More pertinently, how do we know that the solution he chose did not appear as the simplest and best solution to him, even if it involved depositing the rag in the doorway at a later stage?
I am new here still. I see great weight placed on Long not having his notebook with him at the Inquest. A heinous crime it seems but to me its completely irrelevant. He went and got his Notebook, didn't he? And his Notebook confirmed what he said? So how does not having his Notebook change anything about what was written in it? Isn't that the core of the matter?
I am new here still. I see great weight placed on Long not having his notebook with him at the Inquest. A heinous crime it seems but to me its completely irrelevant. He went and got his Notebook, didn't he? And his Notebook confirmed what he said? So how does not having his Notebook change anything about what was written in it? Isn't that the core of the matter?
I think the reasoning goes along the lines of Long being sloppy since he did not bring his notebook, and if Long was sloppy, then he probably did not check the doorway in Goulston Street properly, and therefore we may conclude that he simply missed the rag at 2.20.
I don´t buy this reasoning at all. We have conclusive evidence that Long was not sloppy at 2.55, and by reasoning, he would perform his duties in the same manner every time he passed the street.
So much as some posters would like to use the "forgotten" note book as evidence that Long would have missed the rag at 2.20, the two issues are of course not related. A policeman may be extremely diligent when checking doorways, and still not bring his notebook to an inquest. Simple as.
I am new here still. I see great weight placed on Long not having his notebook with him at the Inquest. A heinous crime it seems but to me its completely irrelevant. He went and got his Notebook, didn't he? And his Notebook confirmed what he said? So how does not having his Notebook change anything about what was written in it? Isn't that the core of the matter?
Sometimes it takes a breath of fresh air to remind others of what is relevant
Welcome Sunbury.
What you may see quite often here is if a witness can't be shown to be mistaken the next step is to go for character assassination.
It therefore applies that at this stage, he did a thorough enough search to accomplish this.
So here we have evidence that as Alfred Long did his tour of Goulston Street at around 2.55, he did it in a fashion that ensured his finding the rag in the doorway.
This means that if he missed the rag at 2.20, he reasonably did things differently at that stage. Why would we think he did?
The reasonable thing to predispose is of course that he did things in the same way at 2.20 as he did at 2.55. The better guess is therefore that the rag was not there at the earlier stage.
The litmus paper, if you like, is how Long expressed things at the inquest. If he had wawered and been uncertain, then we should doubt that he did the search in the same manner at 2.20 as at 2.55.
But he did not wawer. He was very certain: It was not there at 2.20.
The outcome is obvious: even if it sounds a simpler solution to accept that Long missed the apron at 2.20, we need to accept that the evidence is very much against it. And - just like Abby says - we also need to accept that we are dealing with a killer who seemingly did not adjust to the norms laid down by society. Why would we expect him to choose the simple solution when given a choice?
More pertinently, how do we know that the solution he chose did not appear as the simplest and best solution to him, even if it involved depositing the rag in the doorway at a later stage?
All the best,
Fisherman
Bingo fish.
And I might add this was a large piece of white apron. Pretty hard to miss I would think.
"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
In my mind PC Long's character doesn't have to be an issue in making a reasonable hypothesis as to when the apron was placed where he eventually found it. There's enough evidence and known circumstances to reason that it is quite possible - maybe even probable - that the apron had been there as much as an hour before it was found.
Best Wishes,
Hunter
____________________________________________
When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888
In my mind PC Long's character doesn't have to be an issue in making a reasonable hypothesis as to when the apron was placed where he eventually found it. There's enough evidence and known circumstances to reason that it is quite possible - maybe even probable - that the apron had been there as much as an hour before it was found.
Reason? Anybody can reason about anything.
... but I´m afraid the truth of the matter is that there is no evidence at all telling us that the apron was in that doorway an hour before it was found. Speculation only can place it there at 2.20 - and it´s speculation that goes against the only REAL evidence we have on the matter: Longs assertion that it was not there at 2.20.
Or was deposited between 1.55 and 2.55 and he missed it once.
Indeed, and that interpretation requires us to accept the killer took his time, because it is not an 11+ minute walk/jog from Mitre Sq. to Goulston St.
(According to Watkins the killer was gone by 1:44am)
Or, he took the longer route via Aldgate High St. and then north on Goulston St. which does nothing for the theory he was headed home in an easterly direction from Mitre Sq. But then he should have run by PC Harvey.
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