Originally posted by Chris
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We are all too trusting that these police officials recalled the facts correctly. Yet we have clear examples that such was not the case.
We have no need to agonize over a convalescing policeman if Swanson's memory failed him with respect to this 'Seaside Home', maybe the identification took place elsewhere.
The fact remains that within a decade of Kelly's murder Macnaghten, then Griffith's, had referred to a policeman as a witness. None of which is readily recognizable in surviving testimony.
The idea of a citizen witness did not surface until 1910, a clear 30+ years after the murders, unless Anderson's allusions to 'moral proof' be references to this citizen witness.
Presently, we are required to envisage a citizen witness and a detained lunatic being both transported out of London to Brighton to face each other, and then returned to their rightful places. The 'identification' of Sadler was not so contrived so why promote this strained scenario at the Seaside Home?
Something is amiss...
Regards, Jon S.
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