Originally posted by Phil Carter
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What I actually wrote and what you may be paraphrasing is: "On balance, whilst it is true that he doesn't overtly endorse Anderson, he expands on the incident Anderson describes and he doesn't pooh pooh it."
Just for clarification, I am not saying that Swanson was simply repeating and adding details to a story told to him by Anderson, the reliability of that story therefore resting on Anderson. I am simply saying that Swanson added details to the account Anderson provided in The Lighter Side... For all I know those details could be from his own first-hand experience of the event Anderson was writing about, and some details he provides can certainly be interpreted to suggesting that they were.
What you have to ask yourself is whether or not Swanson would have accepted without question a tale about the identification of "Kosminski", even if that tale was told him by Anderson? Would you accept a story which flew in the face of what you and all your colleagues believed to be the case, and on top of which did not conform to what you understood to be sensible police procedure?
That's what you seem to be suggesting that Swanson did. And maybe he did. But was he really so gullible? Would he really have accepted a **** and bull story hook, line and sinker, without questioning the source at all. Without asking so much as who else was there. Without getting their perspective?
I am not prepared to accept that, not without good evidence of his gullibility.
One small point regarding Jim Swanson, if his claim that Swanson refused to divulge the name of Jack the Ripper is true, if Swanson ever said anything remotely like wild horses never dragging the name from his lips, doesn't that mean he knew or thought he knew the identity of the murderer? Doesn't it mean that the family believed he knew the identity of Jack the Ripper? I mean, why on earth would the family think he wouldn't divulge the name of the Ripper if they didn't think he actually knew it?
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