Incredible
Norma, I am not sure what you are referring to as you don't refer to a specific post. Cohen was taken before the court on 7 December 1888 charged as a lunatic found wandering at large. Two weeks later he was incarcerated in Colney Hatch Asylum where he died on 20 October 1889.
All I really have to say about the alleged identification appears in my last book and all the indicators are, supposing it to have taken place, that it was an identification by confrontation as opposed to an identity parade. What is described by Anderson and Swanson does not equate with any proper police procedure, especially as an alleged lunatic is involved, and is unsupported by any other source or police source. That such an allegedly difficult identification for such a supposedly important suspect (which of necessity would have involved others) should have remained totally unremarked upon and unrecorded anywhere else seems incredible.
Originally posted by Natalie Severn
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All I really have to say about the alleged identification appears in my last book and all the indicators are, supposing it to have taken place, that it was an identification by confrontation as opposed to an identity parade. What is described by Anderson and Swanson does not equate with any proper police procedure, especially as an alleged lunatic is involved, and is unsupported by any other source or police source. That such an allegedly difficult identification for such a supposedly important suspect (which of necessity would have involved others) should have remained totally unremarked upon and unrecorded anywhere else seems incredible.
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