The only evidence we have that Long was telling the truth is Long's. That is an argument from self. Long does not become truthful simply because he says he was. He either told the truth or he didn't. Sadly he would not be the first police officer to lie on oath and there is a need to assess his credibility in the round. You then "pays your money and you takes your choice" as the saying goes.
I can't allow the claim to go unremarked that Long would have had "no reason to lie" if he had missed the apron piece. If he had missed it because he had failed to make the previous circuit he would have had every reason to lie as his livelihood would have been at stake. Long was an 'A' Division officer seconded to 'H' Division. For a policeman patrolling alone the first shift on an unfamiliar area is truly frightening - you don't know the terrain, the local criminals, who can be trusted and who can't. The temptation to keep a low profile while you find your feet is strong. Others will form their own opinions but I see nothing in Long's history which marks him out as unusually capable, courageous or diligent - the opposite if anything. His failure to take his notebook to the inquest was inept and the reason for his eventual dismissal redounds greatly to his discredit.
Either the killer of Eddowes loitered within a radius of a few hundred yards of the crime scene for upwards of half an hour before off-loading incriminating evidence
or he reached safety and then ventured back out again to dispose of a trophy he had taken enormous risks in securing
or Long was lying
or he was mistaken.
It is a point hammered home by defence lawyers time and again that a witness can be certain (as Long said he was) and yet still be mistaken.
As it says in the Turnbull Guidelines:-
"a mistaken witness can be a convincing one and a number of such witnesses can all be mistaken".
I endorse Trevor's comment in an earlier post that a police officer's evidence should not be accepted at face value on the sole basis that he (or she) is a police officer.
I can't allow the claim to go unremarked that Long would have had "no reason to lie" if he had missed the apron piece. If he had missed it because he had failed to make the previous circuit he would have had every reason to lie as his livelihood would have been at stake. Long was an 'A' Division officer seconded to 'H' Division. For a policeman patrolling alone the first shift on an unfamiliar area is truly frightening - you don't know the terrain, the local criminals, who can be trusted and who can't. The temptation to keep a low profile while you find your feet is strong. Others will form their own opinions but I see nothing in Long's history which marks him out as unusually capable, courageous or diligent - the opposite if anything. His failure to take his notebook to the inquest was inept and the reason for his eventual dismissal redounds greatly to his discredit.
Either the killer of Eddowes loitered within a radius of a few hundred yards of the crime scene for upwards of half an hour before off-loading incriminating evidence
or he reached safety and then ventured back out again to dispose of a trophy he had taken enormous risks in securing
or Long was lying
or he was mistaken.
It is a point hammered home by defence lawyers time and again that a witness can be certain (as Long said he was) and yet still be mistaken.
As it says in the Turnbull Guidelines:-
"a mistaken witness can be a convincing one and a number of such witnesses can all be mistaken".
I endorse Trevor's comment in an earlier post that a police officer's evidence should not be accepted at face value on the sole basis that he (or she) is a police officer.
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