Originally posted by Elamarna
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Blood oozing
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Since none of you seem to be able to get things right, I think I will leave you to your ramblings, and have a nice shower and a cup of tea. Then I will look in again and see if any of you has come up with anything even remotely useful and interesting.
Why do I have such grave misgivings...?
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostYawn. He clearly says that ALL these timings could be possible, but that seven minutes to his mind is less likely than three or five. His idea was there not that the bleeding would "stop in about seven minutes" - it was very clearly that it would do so in three or five minutes.
Itīs all a question of reading and understanding fairly basic things.Last edited by John G; 05-14-2017, 09:22 AM.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostLast edited by John G; 05-14-2017, 09:15 AM.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThe problem being that you donīt know what he would have answered if I added eight or nine minutes. Can I tire of you in three, five or seven seconds? Yes, I can tire of you up to that amount of time. Whether I can tire of you beyond seven seconds is left unanswered (but you may guess what applies).
Once more, I spoke to J P-J. I know quite well that he would not call a halt after seven minutes.
You, on the other hand, did NOT speak to him, leaving you to speculate wildly and wrongly.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostIf you think that J-P-J is blissfully unaware of the mechanisms of bleeding, then thatīs your choice.If you think I am ignoring Biggs, you are daft. I use him as an example of how NOT to approach a medico, as per Trevor Marriott.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostSince when is that a leading question? It is a question whether the blood could keep running for as much as three, five or seven minutes. He would be a complete idiot to be led anywhere by that, since he hass his own view very clear, and that wonīt topple over on account of any question about specific times.
For your information, he is not a complete idiot.
Even experts can be led and confused by badly worded questions you know.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostWhy do you want me to answer that question, after having mocked my lacking knowledge of medical insights and having stated that I am "playing an expert"?
What use would it be for me to answer it?
This is despite him asking me four questions earlier in this thread demanding yes or no answers, which I gave him.
Why does he refuse to answer it? Because he realises that if he answers it honestly then that's the attempt to frame Lechmere, on the basis of the blood timings, finished.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostHe would, Iīm sure, had said the same about eight or nine minutes - not impossible, but given what we know, even less likely. And with every added minute, the likelihood is diminshed, meaning that Lechmere fits the evidence nicely, whereas the Phantom killer fits it less well.
Despite his own question to the expert going no higher than 7 minutes in respect of post-mortem "bleeding", Fisherman now introduces 8 or 9 minutes into the answer. Payne James never said it and, indeed, read properly, he has basically ruled it out but now Fisherman thinks his answer needs a re-tuning.
For, let's face, it if PC Neil could have arrived no earlier than 6 minutes after Paul first walked into Bucks Row that doesn't really give Lechmere much time to commit the murder does it? And Fisherman sees that. Sixty seconds isn't quite enough. He needs 2 or 3 minutes. So 7 minutes is out the window and we need a slightly larger window of time. 8 or 9 minutes is perfect. Still just enough time to exclude anyone other than Lechmere.
The fact that Payne-James didn't say anything about 8 or 9 minutes is not important. For Fisherman, the fact that the murder was most likely committed within 8 or 9 minutes of Neil's appearance but unlikely to have been 15 or 20 minutes before that is all he needs to frame Lechmere for the murder.
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I'm confused as to why Payne James, a respected forensic scientist, would say that Nichols would most likely, or perhaps very likely, be completely exsanguinated in seven minutes. That clearly doesn't take into account any blood still trapped in the body, and must surely be wrong if the victim was still bleeding when the ambulance arrived.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostYou are ever so welcome. Sorry I could not help out with a mistake on my behalf.
Having now spent several hours look at press reports I can find 4 which all use the same basic wording, with minor variations. There is therefore a probability that they all come from the same original source.
As I have said before there are many mistakes in these early reports ranging from simply confusion to exaggeration and pure invention.
For those reasons I see no overriding reason to accept that the profusely comment is any different. We therefore need to compare it to the ACTUAL statements given by PC Neil. On those grounds it does not appear consistent.
In addition to the 4: Star Pall Mall Gazette Evening News all of 31/08 and the East London Advertiser 01/09 a shorter version is carried the the Weekly Herald a week later.
Steve
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostReading and understanding is no "failing" - it is a useful thing.
SteveLast edited by Elamarna; 05-14-2017, 09:46 AM.
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6Originally posted by Fisherman View PostIf you think that J-P-J is blissfully unaware of the mechanisms of bleeding, then thatīs your choice.If you think I am ignoring Biggs, you are daft. I use him as an example of how NOT to approach a medico, as per Trevor Marriott.
While I disagree with much of what Trevor says, one thing he does well is to seek opinions from more than a single expert in his books. Credit where credit is due and on medical experts Trevor has those whom both agree with him and who disagree on certain issues.
It's his intepretation of what they say I often have issues with.
Looking at Biggs, yes some of the questions are very loaded as were some of yours to Payne-James, some the replies were general replies as well.
However there were specific questions about each of the c5.
What could be seen was the actual questions asked, the additional information supplied and the full replies. (Or course some stuff may not have made the final cut; but there is plenty there, a whole chapter in two of his books).
That to my way of thinking is a far better way of using medical experts than the method which hides the information supplied and the majority of the exchanges behind the cloak of confidentiallaity.
Steve
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