If the police in 1888 had problems with erasing the traces of a killer it can be traced in the erasing of statements by various methods.
Erase-case A)
Lechmere said, on the night of the murder of Polly Nichols, that he saw a policeman in Buck´s Row. This has been interpreted as the "Mizen Scam" by Fisherman. Mizen said that Cross told him there was a policeman in Buck´s Row. But at the inquest, Lechmere said he had not seen a policeman in Buck´s Row.
Hypothesis 1: His testimony was erased before he entered the courtroom. Mizen did not lie.
Erase-case B)
Lawende was not allowed to give his testimony about the dress of the man that he saw together with Eddowes close to the murder site. Lawende was silenced by the city solicitor who said that for particular reasons evidence about the dress should not be given.
Hypothesis 2: His testimony was erased when he had entered the courtroom.
Erase-case 3:
Arnold told the Herald that he met a police officer in Fleet Street who warned him that another terrible murder had been performed in Backchurch Lane. He gradually "changed" his statement.
Hypothesis 3: His statement was stepwise erased, from having been a statement about a police officer in the Herald to becoming an "ex member of the Met" (!) and finally a "man dressed as a soldier" in the CID papers. When Arnold entered the police building to make his statement to the police, the police officer he had seen was totally erased.
So if the police wanted to erase something and let it disappear without a trace, there are still the traces of the erasing.
Regards, Pierre
Erase-case A)
Lechmere said, on the night of the murder of Polly Nichols, that he saw a policeman in Buck´s Row. This has been interpreted as the "Mizen Scam" by Fisherman. Mizen said that Cross told him there was a policeman in Buck´s Row. But at the inquest, Lechmere said he had not seen a policeman in Buck´s Row.
Hypothesis 1: His testimony was erased before he entered the courtroom. Mizen did not lie.
Erase-case B)
Lawende was not allowed to give his testimony about the dress of the man that he saw together with Eddowes close to the murder site. Lawende was silenced by the city solicitor who said that for particular reasons evidence about the dress should not be given.
Hypothesis 2: His testimony was erased when he had entered the courtroom.
Erase-case 3:
Arnold told the Herald that he met a police officer in Fleet Street who warned him that another terrible murder had been performed in Backchurch Lane. He gradually "changed" his statement.
Hypothesis 3: His statement was stepwise erased, from having been a statement about a police officer in the Herald to becoming an "ex member of the Met" (!) and finally a "man dressed as a soldier" in the CID papers. When Arnold entered the police building to make his statement to the police, the police officer he had seen was totally erased.
So if the police wanted to erase something and let it disappear without a trace, there are still the traces of the erasing.
Regards, Pierre
Comment