Originally posted by David Orsam
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Possible Murder of Georgina Byrne
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by John G View PostExcept, officially at least, this wasn't a criminal case or an accident. Hence, no requirement to take particulars.
Same for Mizen. The body lying on the ground wasn't reported to him as a criminal case or accident so he couldn't possibly have known it would turn out to be a murder.
Explaining why neither of them needed to take particulars.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut we only know that with hindsight John. Duffin wouldn't have been blessed with 20/20 vision. That's why I said "The officer, when he arrives on the scene, cannot possibly know what has happened to her".
Same for Mizen. The body lying on the ground wasn't reported to him as a criminal case or accident so he couldn't possibly have known it would turn out to be a murder.
Explaining why neither of them needed to take particulars."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
Comment
-
Originally posted by curious View PostVery interesting, John. Thanks.
Nothing about widows, and according to "Gone with the Wind," widows in the U.S. at least were allowed almost nothing. Scarlett, being Scarlett, and it being a time of war, did not allow widowhood to keep her from living a full life. There is always what is "proper" and what people really do.
Do you think that with an estate of just over 100 pounds Mrs. Byrne was not really in the upper crust but in the "respectable" class?
See, that was one of my questions: did clubs for people of both genders exist there in Blackfriars at the time? That was what I meant I needed to research. While the extra pair of shoes and no luggage for an overnight says "dancing" to me, I have no idea if such places existed. On the other hand, during Prohibition here in the States, when things were very much stricter than they are today, speakeasies were certainly available for people to attend.
I don't know what was in Blackfriars in 1888.
Sorry, David, I know we've wandered far from your intended subject of the police action on this one.
curious
Some interesting points. Not sure if there would be any dance clubs. However, if the widow was of the middle classes I would have thought she would have to be careful to protect her reputation, i.e. considering that this was an era when, for this social group, holding hands with a man who was not her husband, or a relative, or someone she was engaged to, would be considered a breach of etiquette!
However, would such stringent rules apply to, say, the lower middle classes? I would agree that she wasn't in the upper crust, otherwise she would presumably have been returning home in a carriage.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWhat I'm serious about is that I'm disappointed that no-one has even suggested that PC Duffin might have been lying about what two men, found standing over a dead body in the street, who disappeared from a possible crime scene, said to him before they walked off into the distance.
It's one rule for PC Duffin and another rule for PC Mizen.
Pierre
Comment
-
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostHi drstrange,
The point that David was making on discovering and posting this incident was that Mizen has been criticised for allowing CL and Paul to go on their way without taking their details. To be honest most people (including myself) thought that Mizen was in error and it had been suggested (by myself and others) that he might have lied about what what CL and Paul told him to cover for that error. David showed, however, that as per the Police Code a Police Officer is only obliged to take details if an accident or a crime had been reported. This was the case in Buck's Row as it was in Blackfriars Road.
It's frustrating because I think that we'd all agree that the two men, especially Top Hat Man, deserved a serious question or two. As with Nichols, who was later found to have been murdered, the police would have wanted to question CL and Paul about events with the benefit of hindsight. The big difference of course is that CL and Paul turned up at the Inquest whereas our two mystery men have vanished.Last edited by Pierre; 09-04-2017, 12:49 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut we only know that with hindsight John. Duffin wouldn't have been blessed with 20/20 vision. That's why I said "The officer, when he arrives on the scene, cannot possibly know what has happened to her".
Same for Mizen. The body lying on the ground wasn't reported to him as a criminal case or accident so he couldn't possibly have known it would turn out to be a murder.
Explaining why neither of them needed to take particulars.
If The Code didn't impose strict liability then additional words have to be read into it. You bravely argue that it would require a case to be reported to him as a criminal case. I do not think that can be the case. I mean, consider a scenario where PC Mizen discovers a woman lying in the street with blood dripping from her neck and a man stood over her carrying a knife dripping on blood:
PC Mizen: "What's going on here."
Stan Slasher: " Its okay officer, this isn't an accident or a criminal case".
PC Mizen: "Okay sir. I best be on my way. Sorry to have troubled you."
Do you see a problem with the above scenario?
That's why I say he would be have been expected to act reasonably, taking into account all the circumstances of the case. Now, I don't say it was likely that he would have faced misconduct charges, even though he was informed there was a woman lying, possibly dead, at least according to Cross, so realistically a crime or accident could have taken place.
Ultimately, it's whether PC Mizen believed there was risk he could've have been in trouble. And considering this was arguably an unprecedented crime, which attracted a lot of press interest, that may have been the case.Last edited by John G; 09-04-2017, 12:34 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostThis is correct.
That is why I started this in the police officials and procedures thread.
Here we have an officer who literally finds two men standing over the body of a woman lying on the pavement in the dark. The woman could be dead or drunk or anything else. The officer, when he arrives on the scene, cannot possibly know what has happened to her or that she has a diseased heart. She might have been murdered or there might have been an accident. At least one of the men, possibly both, leave the crime scene, with one of the men telling a direct lie in order to provide an excuse to leave. The officer, apparently, takes no details of the men.
All seems eerily familiar to me.
Not "eerily familiar". Just the same indication: lack of evidence for a crime.
With Mizen the lack of evidence is in the situation before he reaches the site. In the case of this PC the lack of evidence is in the situation where he is on the site.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut we only know that with hindsight John. Duffin wouldn't have been blessed with 20/20 vision. That's why I said "The officer, when he arrives on the scene, cannot possibly know what has happened to her".
Same for Mizen. The body lying on the ground wasn't reported to him as a criminal case or accident so he couldn't possibly have known it would turn out to be a murder.
Explaining why neither of them needed to take particulars.
A policeman M is on site B, being told by carman C that a woman is on site D. Not seeing a crime. Not taking details.
A policeman D is on site F directly, not seeing a crime. Not taking details.
This is obvious.
The situations were many:
PC X not seeing C (crime) > no details.
Why is that interesting?
Comment
-
Originally posted by John G View PostHi Curious,
Some interesting points. Not sure if there would be any dance clubs. However, if the widow was of the middle classes I would have thought she would have to be careful to protect her reputation, i.e. considering that this was an era when, for this social group, holding hands with a man who was not her husband, or a relative, or someone she was engaged to, would be considered a breach of etiquette!
However, would such stringent rules apply to, say, the lower middle classes? I would agree that she wasn't in the upper crust, otherwise she would presumably have been returning home in a carriage.
However, I suspect there have always been "fast sets" who did as they pleased -- drank, smoked, danced, partied, but who perhaps went out of town to do so. As long as the town busybodies didn't hear about it, the reputation was probably ok.
Victorian rules were so horrible for widows that a young widow's life was over almost before it began.
curious
Comment
-
Originally posted by curious View PostVery interesting, John. Thanks.
Nothing about widows, and according to "Gone with the Wind," widows in the U.S. at least were allowed almost nothing. Scarlett, being Scarlett, and it being a time of war, did not allow widowhood to keep her from living a full life. There is always what is "proper" and what people really do.
Do you think that with an estate of just over 100 pounds Mrs. Byrne was not really in the upper crust but in the "respectable" class?
See, that was one of my questions: did clubs for people of both genders exist there in Blackfriars at the time? That was what I meant I needed to research. While the extra pair of shoes and no luggage for an overnight says "dancing" to me, I have no idea if such places existed. On the other hand, during Prohibition here in the States, when things were very much stricter than they are today, speakeasies were certainly available for people to attend.
I don't know what was in Blackfriars in 1888.
Sorry, David, I know we've wandered far from your intended subject of the police action on this one.
curious
Comment
-
Originally posted by John G View PostAnd we both know, David, that a strict reading of The Code meant that he was required to take particulars in a criminal case and, on that basis, he was in clear violation of his responsibilities.
If The Code didn't impose strict liability then additional words have to be read into it. You bravely argue that it would require a case to be reported to him as a criminal case. I do not think that can be the case. I mean, consider a scenario where PC Mizen discovers a woman lying in the street with blood dripping from her neck and a man stood over her carrying a knife dripping on blood:
PC Mizen: "What's going on here."
Stan Slasher: " Its okay officer, this isn't an accident or a criminal case".
PC Mizen: "Okay sir. I best be on my way. Sorry to have troubled you."
Do you see a problem with the above scenario?
That's why I say he would be have been expected to act reasonably, taking into account all the circumstances of the case. Now, I don't say it was likely that he would have faced misconduct charges, even though he was informed there was a woman lying, possibly dead, at least according to Cross, so realistically a crime or accident could have taken place.
Ultimately, it's whether PC Mizen believed there was risk he could've have been in trouble. And considering this was arguably an unprecedented crime, which attracted a lot of press interest, that may have been the case.
They weren't clairvoyant or mind readers.
Your dead wrong on this."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
Comment
-
Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostI still think it's a pity that, while Top Hat Man was away, Duffin didn't get any background information from the other man?
curious
Comment
-
Originally posted by John G View PostAnd we both know, David, that a strict reading of The Code meant that he was required to take particulars in a criminal case and, on that basis, he was in clear violation of his responsibilities.
The hypothetical example you have given about "Stan Slasher" is misguided because that involves actually arresting a criminal. It's got nothing to do with taking particulars.
The total flaw in your thinking can be shown by the fact that the post-mortem of Georgina Byrne could have shown that she was strangled (and thus murdered).
So on your weird reading of the Police Code, PC Duffin, who you agree did the right thing in not taking particulars, now stands guilty of a misconduct charge even though absolutely nothing had changed from his perspective!!!
That's just madness.
Comment
Comment