Originally posted by MrBarnett
View Post
Pizer's account of the incident was as follows:
"Last Sunday week I was accosted in Church-street by two females, unknown to me. One of them asked me, ‘Are you the man?’ – presumably referring to the Buck’s-row murder. I said ‘God forbid, my good woman."(Evening Post, 12 September 1888)
Or as told in the Echo of the same day:
"On Sunday week last, while I was walking through Church-street, two women accosted me. I did not know them. One of them accused me of committing the crime in Buck's-row. The other, the elder of the two, however, said, "You are not the man, are you?" I said, "I know nothing about it."
But frankly it doesn't matter. If the woman had come up and accused Pizer of being Leather Apron, he could just have thought she was crazy and thinking of someone else. The chances of his knowing at that time that the newspapers were saying that "Leather Apron" was the murderer are slim.
Further, it doesn't even matter if Pizer DID know or suspect at the time that he was called Leather Apron. In the end, he said at the inquest that this was what he was known as.
So, basically, end of story.
Comment