Originally posted by lynn cates
View Post
This is a quote from Halse's written deposition:
"On Saturday, the 29th of September from instructions I received I directed a number of Police Officers to patrol the City all night."
Naturally, detectives and non-assigned officers would receive specific instructions each day, depending upon many factors. The McWilliams report clarifies that the City Police had augmented its forces on its eastern border since August and would explain Halse's and the others presence in that area as a result of that policy.
As far as it being the result of a tip...well, the police got a lot of these during the murders. Appendex 2, Scotland Yard Investigates list several hundred tips and suggestions that were found by Don Rumbelow that were sent to the City Police alone and there is no telling how many were long discarded before. They would have been running around in circles if they had acted on many of them. Their best defence was to do just what they did - strengthen the patrols along the eastern edge of the City. PC Long was spending his first night on beat in Goulston St. as well ( transferring from A Division)... so what did the Met police know?
What we're certain they did know was the notice of the 'Dear Boss' letter that very day (Sept. 29) from the Central News Agency. While they eventually seemed to consider it a hoax, this may not have been the case at that time. As was previously mentioned, this was a Saturday night coupled with the letter writer's promise that they would 'soon hear' from him. No matter what hindsight tells us, they would have been foolish at that time to not take that into account.
A credible tip could be possible, but its speculation; while we do know that Fraser had ordered intensified patrols since August.
Leave a comment: