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The Secrets of the Special Reports

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  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    Just to add one further point about the fact that someone appears to have noted the time of receipt within the date stamp.

    Why would they have done this?

    I have, so far, found no other examples of such a thing, either in the JTR MEPO file or other police files although there is admittedly only a small selection of files - at least that I have located - containing special reports received by the Executive Branch.

    The stamp would have borne the date of receipt which is normally quite adequate. What extra information is added by the fact that the report came in to the Executive Branch during the early afternoon?

    It is for that reason that I wondered if the report came in very late on Friday night, in fact during the early hours of Saturday morning, but the date stamp had not been switched over to the next day so it was stamped by the clerk as 31st August, with the time of 50 minutes after midnight written on - or intended to be written on - in to indicate this. Of course, if that was the intention, the chap has made a mess of it because 12:50pm indicates the afternoon (while 12:50am would have indicated the early hours of Friday morning). There was, in fact, no way of doing it other than altering the date from 31 Aug to 1 Sept and then noting 12:50am.

    But that is idle speculation - and perhaps there was some unusual reason due to urgency of circulating the report why it was felt necessary to note that it came in at 12:50pm (or 12:30pm if you prefer).

    Could the time have been written first and then the stamp placed over it?

    Also I support the POSSIBILITY of t being just after midnight, It is one that many get mixed.

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  • Monty
    replied
    I've only dipped in and out of this thread.

    Are you querying the date and time stamps?

    Monty

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  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    From the few characters on the stamp that can be made out, and from other date stamps in the file, I believe that the stamp probably says:

    METROPOLITAN POLICE

    31 AUG 1888

    EXECUTIVE BRANCH
    Thanks David.

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    I have, so far, found no other examples of such a thing, either in the JTR MEPO file or other police files although there is admittedly only a small selection of files - at least that I have located - containing special reports received by the Executive Branch.
    I already need to correct this statement. I've been looking at some previously unreviewed (by me) files and, as luck would have it, I think I have now found another example, quite possibly by the same person because the handwriting looks similar and it appears to be another form of Executive Branch date-stamp, of 9 July 1887. This comes from MEPO 3/139 and, I think, says 1.30pm:
    Attached Files

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
    Hi David,

    As it's hard to get a story that wrong, indulge me for a moment.

    What if the Emperor had no clothes?

    What if the ELO story was accurate?
    Am happy to indulge, although we are a bit off-topic here. You are suggesting that three police constables, Dr Llewellyn and Henry Tomkins all colluded to present a false account of what happened that morning to the coroner. Plus Inspector Spratling joined in with it a bit later. A little hard for me to see what was in it for the doctor and the slaughterman frankly. But then we have Mrs Green's evidence that "She opened the window and saw three or four constables and two or three other men" as well as "the body of deceased lying on the ground". So was she in on the conspiracy? And what about Walter Purkiss who said that he too opened his window and "could see the deceased, and there were "two or three men there, besides three or four constables". Was he in on the conspiracy? And then what about Patrick Mulshaw who said he went to Buck's Row and saw the body on the ground along with "Three or four policemen" and "five or six working men". Was he also in on this conspiracy?

    Abberline also says that the statements of Tomkins, Britton and Mumford were taken separately and without any means of communicating with each other. And Tomkins said in his evidence that he was on the scene and saw the doctor. How far are you suggesting this conspiracy went? Up to Abberline?

    If what you are suggesting is true, Bethnal Green police station would have known that Mizen didn't call for the ambulance so his evidence would surely have been known to be untrue by senior officers.

    I'm sure I could go on but, in short, I don't see that such an attempt to falsify the events of that night in the way you are suggesting was possible. There were too many people around.

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    It is for that reason that I wondered if the report came in very late on Friday night, in fact during the early hours of Saturday morning, but the date stamp had not been switched over to the next day so it was stamped by the clerk as 31st August, with the time of 50 minutes after midnight written on - or intended to be written on - in to indicate this. Of course, if that was the intention, the chap has made a mess of it because 12:50pm indicates the afternoon (while 12:50am would have indicated the early hours of Friday morning). There was, in fact, no way of doing it other than altering the date from 31 Aug to 1 Sept and then noting 12:50am.
    Worth pointing out that the problem with this theory is that Acting Supt Davis signs and dates his comments beneath the date stamp as being "31.8.88" so he would (a) still have had to have been in the office after midnight and (b) have had to have put the wrong date to his notes. So I guess it is not really a runner.

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  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi David,

    As it's hard to get a story that wrong, indulge me for a moment.

    What if the Emperor had no clothes?

    What if the ELO story was accurate?

    Regards,

    Simon

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post

    No PCs Thain and Mizen flashing answering lanterns, no PC Mizen fetching the ambulance, no Dr. Llewellyn conducting a kerb-side examination, no slaughtermen standing by the body in Buck’s Row, no Inspector Spratling lifting up Polly Nichols' clothes at the mortuary to discover she had been disemboweled, and no apparent evidence of Polly’s ulster and long dress having absorbed the blood so conspicuously absent from outside Mr Brown’s stable gates.
    And no reliable source for the East London Observer's story?

    (but interesting nevertheless!)

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Dr. John Watson View Post
    David, yes I see your point about two different writers, but if you look at the line below, you see a "3" written in an entirely different hand - so that would mean 3 different writers, no?
    Well my own tentative interpretation is that it is a "5" not a "3 but, as for there being three different writers, yes, I don't disagree. I'm suggesting the possibility of the clerk who date-stamped the document as potentially being the person who noted the time of receipt.

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  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi David,

    East London Observer, 1st September 1888—

    On discovering the body . . .

    "Constable Neale [sic] at once called for assistance, and with the help of some scavengers who were cleaning the roads at the time, managed to carry the body to the mortuary, which is situated in the Pavilion Yard close by. Mr. Edmunds, the keeper of the mortuary, was in attendance, and assisted by the officer and the scavengers, undressed the poor creature and placed her in one of the black coffins lying about the mortuary."

    No PCs Thain and Mizen flashing answering lanterns, no PC Mizen fetching the ambulance, no Dr. Llewellyn conducting a kerb-side examination, no slaughtermen standing by the body in Buck’s Row, no Inspector Spratling lifting up Polly Nichols' clothes at the mortuary to discover she had been disemboweled, and no apparent evidence of Polly’s ulster and long dress having absorbed the blood so conspicuously absent from outside Mr Brown’s stable gates.

    It sure is a bugger's muddle.

    Regards,

    Simon

    Leave a comment:


  • Dr. John Watson
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    For the reasons given in the above post, I don't think one should compare the handwriting of the time notation with the handwriting immediately above it because they will almost certainly have been written by two different individuals. I grant you, however, that it is unclear if it is a "5" or a "3".
    David, yes I see your point about two different writers, but if you look at the line below, you see a "3" written in an entirely different hand - so that would mean 3 different writers, no? On the other hand, although the questioned number appears in a stamped box, isn't it possible the writer is the same person who wrote the lines above?

    By the way, I greatly appreciate posters like yourself who seek out original documents and use them to illustrate a point, as in this case. Shows you're not content to simply recycle or reinterpret the work of others. Keep it up!

    John

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Just to add one further point about the fact that someone appears to have noted the time of receipt within the date stamp.

    Why would they have done this?

    I have, so far, found no other examples of such a thing, either in the JTR MEPO file or other police files although there is admittedly only a small selection of files - at least that I have located - containing special reports received by the Executive Branch.

    The stamp would have borne the date of receipt which is normally quite adequate. What extra information is added by the fact that the report came in to the Executive Branch during the early afternoon?

    It is for that reason that I wondered if the report came in very late on Friday night, in fact during the early hours of Saturday morning, but the date stamp had not been switched over to the next day so it was stamped by the clerk as 31st August, with the time of 50 minutes after midnight written on - or intended to be written on - in to indicate this. Of course, if that was the intention, the chap has made a mess of it because 12:50pm indicates the afternoon (while 12:50am would have indicated the early hours of Friday morning). There was, in fact, no way of doing it other than altering the date from 31 Aug to 1 Sept and then noting 12:50am.

    But that is idle speculation - and perhaps there was some unusual reason due to urgency of circulating the report why it was felt necessary to note that it came in at 12:50pm (or 12:30pm if you prefer).

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Let me repost my post #15:

    "I have been looking at this again and I now think it is most likely to be 12:50pm. Having said this, if Spratling was searching for a weapon (and bloodstains) around Buck's Row between 11am and 12pm on that day, as he says he was, then it was quite an achievement for him to complete his report (which includes details of this search), have it approved by his superintendent and then get it to Whitehall by ten minutes to one."

    The evidential support that Spratling was carrying out searches between 11am-12pm on that day is best seen in the Evening Standard report of 4 Sept (also in the Morning Advertiser):

    "Did you examine Buck's row? - Yes; between five and six o'clock in the morning, and also the railway and yards abutting on the street.

    Did you examine the street for blood stains, I mean? - Yes, between eleven and twelve o'clock I examined Buck's row and Queen street, but found no blood stains in either. I subsequently, in company with Sergeant Godley, examined the East London District Railway embankment and the Great Eastern Railway yard for blood stains and weapons, but found none
    ."

    Leaving aside the mention of Queen Street (which I assume means Queen Anne Street), the above evidence is corroborated by the reports in the Star, Echo and Daily News. The Telegraph report (repeated word for word in the LWN) alone suggests that all the searches were done at 6am but from the above exchange that appears to have been an erroneous conjoining of two separate answers.

    In his report, Spratling says: "The Stations and premises of the East London Railways, all the wharves and encloses in the vicinity have been searched but no trace of any weapon could be found there". This appears to be a reference to a search carried out after the search of Buck's Row and Queen [Anne] Street which he said was done between 11 and 12.

    It may also be noted that the Illustrated Police News report or Spratling's evidence states:

    "Witness, continuing, stated that he returned to the mortuary about noon on Friday."

    So it was extremely impressive for him to have completed and signed his report, had it counter-signed by Superintendent Keating, and for it then to have received at Whitehall by 12:50pm that day, and even more so by 12:30, if that is indeed what happened.

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Dr. John Watson View Post
    That's it exactly. 12:30 PM. Compare the questioned number with the "3" written on line above it.
    For the reasons given in the above post, I don't think one should compare the handwriting of the time notation with the handwriting immediately above it because they will almost certainly have been written by two different individuals. I grant you, however, that it is unclear if it is a "5" or a "3".

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    But the 7's are nothing alike.

    However are they written by the same person?
    While I am no handwriting expert, and can't swear to this, I believe that the writing at the top is probably in the hand of the author of the report (i.e. Inspector Spratling). The writing at the bottom is definitely that of Acting Superintendent (Inspector) Davis, because he has signed it.

    If the time noted is intended indicate the time the report was received by Executive Branch then we can eliminate the top handwriting. However, I assume that the document was date-stamped by a clerk in the Executive Branch and it may be that a clerk has also written the time of receipt on. Otherwise it would be the handwriting of Davis.

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