Harry D: It's one thing for a copper to have a tipple or two while on duty, it's another to be found drunk on duty.
You said that we've no need to speculate as to whether PC Long saw the rag at 2.20am because he testified to that. We only have his word for that as it's without corroboration.
Yes, thatīs true. Then again, the coroner did not ask for corroboration, did he? He was probably aware that the PC:s did their beats in solitude at the removes in time we are speaking about, and so he realized that the best he could get was Longs words for what had happened and what he had seen. And indeed, we are not asking corroboration for what Watkins saw, for what Harvey saw, for what Lamb saw etcetera - we simply accept that they were in all probability both correct and truthful, and we apply what they said to the case when we look at it.
But NOT Long - he is not to be believed.
That is of course total balderdash. We have no choice but to accept that what he said was the probable truth, just as we believe the other PC:s, unless there is reason to doubt them on record.
There is no such reason to doubt Long. There is nobody saying that the rag was there at 2.20, and there is no reason to think that the rag must have been present at 2.20. So there we are - we either accept the evidence as given, or we start tampering with it. There are no other options.
It's entirely possible that PC Long didn't check the stairwell because he was behind schedule, or that a piece of sodden rag wouldn't have necessarily grabbed his attention.
Yes, it is. And nobody is contesting this. But the fact of the matter is that Long admantly said that the rag was not there at 2.20. That does not mean that he was unsure, or that he had not loked. Instead, the i plications are quite clear - to be able to adamantly state that it was not there, he MUST have checked.
So itīs either that, or he lied. And he had no reason at all to lie, since it was not the duty of a PC to note every rag or piece of paper in every doorway; it would have been entirely allowed for him to say that he did not know.
Am I saying for a fact that the rag was there at 2.20am?
I would stay away from that if I were you. It is easy enough to get called a liar on these boards. as you may have noted. And in this case, it would carry relevance.
Of course not, but I have serious doubts that the killer was hanging around all that time.
Where would "around" be, Harry? And what makes you think that the killer would hesitate to stay out and about after having killed Eddowes, when he had no qualms about it after having killed Stride? My take on things is that he had a bolthole, and it would be every bit as secure to go there as it would be to walk the streets, as far as I can tell..
That leads me to believe that he deposited the apron during his escape, and PC Long missed/ignored it first time around.
I know. But the evidence is against you.
You said that we've no need to speculate as to whether PC Long saw the rag at 2.20am because he testified to that. We only have his word for that as it's without corroboration.
Yes, thatīs true. Then again, the coroner did not ask for corroboration, did he? He was probably aware that the PC:s did their beats in solitude at the removes in time we are speaking about, and so he realized that the best he could get was Longs words for what had happened and what he had seen. And indeed, we are not asking corroboration for what Watkins saw, for what Harvey saw, for what Lamb saw etcetera - we simply accept that they were in all probability both correct and truthful, and we apply what they said to the case when we look at it.
But NOT Long - he is not to be believed.
That is of course total balderdash. We have no choice but to accept that what he said was the probable truth, just as we believe the other PC:s, unless there is reason to doubt them on record.
There is no such reason to doubt Long. There is nobody saying that the rag was there at 2.20, and there is no reason to think that the rag must have been present at 2.20. So there we are - we either accept the evidence as given, or we start tampering with it. There are no other options.
It's entirely possible that PC Long didn't check the stairwell because he was behind schedule, or that a piece of sodden rag wouldn't have necessarily grabbed his attention.
Yes, it is. And nobody is contesting this. But the fact of the matter is that Long admantly said that the rag was not there at 2.20. That does not mean that he was unsure, or that he had not loked. Instead, the i plications are quite clear - to be able to adamantly state that it was not there, he MUST have checked.
So itīs either that, or he lied. And he had no reason at all to lie, since it was not the duty of a PC to note every rag or piece of paper in every doorway; it would have been entirely allowed for him to say that he did not know.
Am I saying for a fact that the rag was there at 2.20am?
I would stay away from that if I were you. It is easy enough to get called a liar on these boards. as you may have noted. And in this case, it would carry relevance.
Of course not, but I have serious doubts that the killer was hanging around all that time.
Where would "around" be, Harry? And what makes you think that the killer would hesitate to stay out and about after having killed Eddowes, when he had no qualms about it after having killed Stride? My take on things is that he had a bolthole, and it would be every bit as secure to go there as it would be to walk the streets, as far as I can tell..
That leads me to believe that he deposited the apron during his escape, and PC Long missed/ignored it first time around.
I know. But the evidence is against you.
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