This is a thread about the actions of P.c. Mizen after he was spoken to by Charles Cross/Lechmere and Robert Paul. The starting point is an assumption that Cross/Lechmere and Paul were exactly what they claimed to be - innocent witnesses. That is a non-negotiable presumption for the purposes of this thread. If you are not comfortable in posting on a thread based upon such a premise, then don't post on it. Claims that either man was the killer and/or a liar are off-topic and will be treated accordingly. Please respect this.
According to The Times report of Cross's evidence:
'They (Cross & Paul) went to Bakers-row, saw the last witness (Mizen) and told him there was a woman lying down in Bucks Row on the broad of her back. Witness (Cross) also said he believed she was dead or drunk, while the other man (Paul) believed her to be dead. The constable replied, "All right"'.
According to the same newspaper's report of Paul's evidence:
"They agreed that the best thing they could do would be to tell the first policeman they met.......They looked to see if there was a constable, but there was not one to be seen......Witness and the other man (Cross) walked on together until they met a policeman at the corner of Old Montagu-street, and told him (Mizen) what they had seen."
According to the same newspaper's report of Mizen's evidence:
"He was on Hanbury-street, Bakers-row, and a man passing said, 'You are wanted in Bakers-row'. (The Star has the correct location - Bucks Row). The man, named Cross, stated a woman had been found there. In going to the spot he found Constable Neil, and by the direction of the latter he went for an ambulance. When Cross spoke to witness he was accompanied by another man, and both of them afterwards went down Hanbury-street. Cross simply said he was wanted by a policeman, and did not say anything about a murder having been committed. He denied that before he went to Bucks-row he continued knocking people up".
The primary duties of a police officer were, as they remain today:
The protection of life and property.
The maintenance of order.
The prevention and detection of crime.
The prosecution of offenders against the peace.
P.c. Mizen's first priority, in any situation, was expected to be the protection of life. Mizen is here told by two men that he is needed in Bucks Row, that a woman is lying on her back. One man (Cross) tells him the woman is either drunk or dead. The other (Paul) says that he believes her to be dead.
P.c. Mizen then has to deny a suggestion that he continued with his knocking-up (of householders for work). He also says that the two men "didn't say anything about a murder having been committed". Strictly-speaking, this is true - neither Cross nor Paul mentioned murder - but it side-steps the key issue that both men appraised him of the fact that a woman was lying on her back in the street.
P.c. Mizen, after being given this information, has one over-riding duty and that is to protect the life of the woman concerned - and, to that end, immediately to make his way to the scene. If he did so, all well and good, but did he?
According to The Star's report of Robert Paul's evidence:
Answering a juryman, witness said he did not tell Constable Mizen that another policeman wanted him. After Mizen had been told there was a woman lying in Buck's-row he went out and knocked at a door. He did not go towards Buck's-row to do this.
P.c. Mizen did not, therefore, go straight to Bucks Row as he should have done. This was "Neglect of Duty" under the discipline code - and punishable with dismissal.
There is a certain type of officer in the police service, often referred to as a 'uniform-carrier'. Such an individual does the bare minimum amount of work and off-loads as much responsibility as possible onto others. A delay in response, so as to ensure that another officer reached the body ahead of him, would be the typical response of such an officer in P.c. Mizen's situation. If Mizen was a uniform-carrier he had every reason to make subtle alterations to the information given to him by the two carmen in order to preserve his own neck. Robert Paul's evidence indicates that P.c. Mizen's response was not what it should have been.
I re-emphasise the basic premise of this thread - that Cross/Lechmere & Paul are honest witnesses and suggest that, based on their testimony, Mizen is a uniform-carrier.
Regards, Bridewell.
According to The Times report of Cross's evidence:
'They (Cross & Paul) went to Bakers-row, saw the last witness (Mizen) and told him there was a woman lying down in Bucks Row on the broad of her back. Witness (Cross) also said he believed she was dead or drunk, while the other man (Paul) believed her to be dead. The constable replied, "All right"'.
According to the same newspaper's report of Paul's evidence:
"They agreed that the best thing they could do would be to tell the first policeman they met.......They looked to see if there was a constable, but there was not one to be seen......Witness and the other man (Cross) walked on together until they met a policeman at the corner of Old Montagu-street, and told him (Mizen) what they had seen."
According to the same newspaper's report of Mizen's evidence:
"He was on Hanbury-street, Bakers-row, and a man passing said, 'You are wanted in Bakers-row'. (The Star has the correct location - Bucks Row). The man, named Cross, stated a woman had been found there. In going to the spot he found Constable Neil, and by the direction of the latter he went for an ambulance. When Cross spoke to witness he was accompanied by another man, and both of them afterwards went down Hanbury-street. Cross simply said he was wanted by a policeman, and did not say anything about a murder having been committed. He denied that before he went to Bucks-row he continued knocking people up".
The primary duties of a police officer were, as they remain today:
The protection of life and property.
The maintenance of order.
The prevention and detection of crime.
The prosecution of offenders against the peace.
P.c. Mizen's first priority, in any situation, was expected to be the protection of life. Mizen is here told by two men that he is needed in Bucks Row, that a woman is lying on her back. One man (Cross) tells him the woman is either drunk or dead. The other (Paul) says that he believes her to be dead.
P.c. Mizen then has to deny a suggestion that he continued with his knocking-up (of householders for work). He also says that the two men "didn't say anything about a murder having been committed". Strictly-speaking, this is true - neither Cross nor Paul mentioned murder - but it side-steps the key issue that both men appraised him of the fact that a woman was lying on her back in the street.
P.c. Mizen, after being given this information, has one over-riding duty and that is to protect the life of the woman concerned - and, to that end, immediately to make his way to the scene. If he did so, all well and good, but did he?
According to The Star's report of Robert Paul's evidence:
Answering a juryman, witness said he did not tell Constable Mizen that another policeman wanted him. After Mizen had been told there was a woman lying in Buck's-row he went out and knocked at a door. He did not go towards Buck's-row to do this.
P.c. Mizen did not, therefore, go straight to Bucks Row as he should have done. This was "Neglect of Duty" under the discipline code - and punishable with dismissal.
There is a certain type of officer in the police service, often referred to as a 'uniform-carrier'. Such an individual does the bare minimum amount of work and off-loads as much responsibility as possible onto others. A delay in response, so as to ensure that another officer reached the body ahead of him, would be the typical response of such an officer in P.c. Mizen's situation. If Mizen was a uniform-carrier he had every reason to make subtle alterations to the information given to him by the two carmen in order to preserve his own neck. Robert Paul's evidence indicates that P.c. Mizen's response was not what it should have been.
I re-emphasise the basic premise of this thread - that Cross/Lechmere & Paul are honest witnesses and suggest that, based on their testimony, Mizen is a uniform-carrier.
Regards, Bridewell.
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