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  • The Bucks Row Project Summary Report.

    The Bucks Row Project Summary Report.


    Well here we are at last, the summary report on Bucks Row, long promised, also long delayed, but finally here.

    This is meant only as a summary of the work, the full details and arguments are part of a 530+ page book, “Inside Bucks Row”, available as a PDF file in late November. It’s a fully interactive work, linking to the internet to allow in depth study of the scene of the murder of Mary Ann Nichols.
    Enough of the plug, onto the summary report.

    The report is split into various subheadings, which I hope will give an overview of the work. We will begin with Timings and Witness Statements, as other issues are heavily dependent on these issues.

    1. Timings

    Although the first part of the project was a look at the various possible timings involved in the case, that is not what I mean here.

    Timings in this context applies to just how reliable are the various times quoted? The problems with time keeping and synchronization in the LVP are well know and have been discussed very often, both here and in other places.

    After carefully analysis my conclusion is that we cannot accept any of the times quoted in the Bucks Row Murder as being absolute and set in stone, we must in my view allow a margin of up to 5 minutes in either direction. I am sure this is not a surprise, nor news to most observers.

    However, what we can do is use relative times, that is how quickly after event A is event B likely to have occurred, in this case an example would be what is the quickest possible time PC Neil could arrive at the body of Mary Ann Nichols, after the carmen, Lechmere/Cross and Paul depart from the site and head West down Bucks Row.

    The conclusion reached, based on the evidence of the two carmen and Neil, is that the very fastest this could have occurred is between approximately 3 and 3.5 minutes depending on the exact pace walked by John Neil.


    2. The Variability and Validity of Witness statements.

    Part two of the project was of course an analysis of the various witness statements which are available to us today.

    The major issue we have is that the official transcript of the Inquest has not survived the 130 years from 1888 to 2018; We therefore have no option but to rely on the various and numerous newspaper reports. Many of these are syndicated, but still have odd differences between reports, sometime just typos, others may be the work of the papers editor.

    What we do see however is that the reports are very variable, often giving completely different accounts of the same events, such as just which of the slaughter men went to the murder scene first.

    On occasions Different names are sometimes used for the same person, Emily Holland / Jane Oram being an example.

    In some witness reports details are left out, such as addresses, this occurs with both Mulshaw and Llewellyn for instance.

    We also have reports which are not from the Inquest, such as that of Robert Paul in Lloyds Weekly 2nd September, and that of Harriet Lilley Echo 6th, both of these reports need to be treated with great caution, for differing reasons.

    In the case of Paul, because he shows a tendency to be anti police and to take the lead role. In the case of Lilley, caution needs to be shown because she was not called to the inquest. (In the case of Paul, much of what he says in the report can be corroborated by the testimonies of either Lechmere or Mizen).

    While of course we have little to work with except the witness statements as given by the press, we must not treat them as being set in stone, indeed we should consider all suspect to some degree unless there is secondary corroboration.

    We shall now move on to the question of the geography of the area and how it may have effected events.

    3. The road layout in 1888.

    The truth of the matter is that the road layout has altered greatly since 31st August 1888. Many of the roads which existed then are long gone. This includes parts of the route Lechmere may have taken from his home towards Bucks Row. The Home of Robert Paul is gone, as is the very last stretch of the road both he and Lechmere would have walked before entering Brady Street.

    4. Correcting the idea that cross must have been seen by Paul

    Once we have established the correct layout for the roads in 1888,(the 1893-96 OS map, available online at the National Library of Scotland is a great help here) we can start to look at the question of if Paul should, or indeed could, have seen Lechmere sooner than is reported.

    The very first thing we need to be clear about here is just what information do we really have.

    Robert Paul, never says when he first becomes aware of Lechmere, just that he sees a man standing in the road who is level with the body of Mary Ann Nichols.

    One point which is often overlooked, is that Paul is shown the body by Lechmere. So his description of Lechmere being level or close to the body is in all probability retrospective, that is Paul in all probability does not see the body at the same instances he sees Lechmere. Paul only becomes aware that Lechmere is level with the body after Lechmere tells him, that is after the event.

    Lechmere on the other hand says that he becomes firstly aware of the body, as he comes close to it position in Bucks Row, he only then becomes aware of Paul, whom he estimates is some 40 yards behind.

    That is what we have, no more, no less.

    Yet a case is constantly made that Paul should have seen Lechmere earlier; given that we do not know at what point Paul first becomes aware of Lechmere, this is a strange proposition to make.

    In the full work, I look at the various speeds the two men may or could have been walking at that morning, the possible distance they may have been apart when Paul left his home in Foster Street., With that done, it is clear that there is every possibility that they would not have been aware of each other until well into Bucks Row.

    This is even more probably when we take into account the possible lighting that morning. Both Paul and Lechmere say it was dark, and PC Neil adds that he needed to use his lamp to see the body clearly. The question of lighting in Bucks Row is unfortunately one for which no definitive conclusion can be drawn on, it was however dark.

    A further point which needs to be considered is one of personal perception, if this was a route Paul took every day, he may well have switched off so to speak, true he said the spot was a possible trouble spot, which may lead to his switching back on as he walked along Bucks Row, and could account for him noticing Lechmere at this point.

    The next issue, may or may not be somewhat controversial, those which immediately follow on from it certainly are.

    5. Pc Neil the Centre of all things.

    Here I will go back to the issue of relative time, and doing such suggests that John Neil may be viewed as the most important witness of all. Every event from the moment that Lechmere becomes aware of Paul until the arrival of the ambulance can be related to back to John Neil. And even the murder itself happens after his pass at 3.15.

    Let me explain: we know the carmen did not, see, hear or pass PC Neil as they went West down Bucks Row, we also know that PC Neil was not aware of them.

    We can therefore assume that he was not within sigh of them as they passed along Bucks Row. From this we can asses where he may have been for this to occur.

    Some claim that he may have been skiving, either with the constable in Great Eastern Yard or at Harrison, Barber, but there is absolutely no evidence to back such ideas up.

    If we therefore disregard this possibility, we have to look at where Neil could be to allow mutual non-detection.

    It would help if we knew is exact beat of Neil, which we don’t. However we can look at the various possibilities, from the very short route as shown in the documentary “The Missing Evidence”, the medium length route as in “CSI Whitechapel by Begg and Bennet, up to the longer route in the Echo 20th September.

    While I personally favour the later, we need to look at the possible positions in ALL the alternative beats.

    Here I was not looking for the furthest away Neil could have been, but the closest. We end up with Neil being positioned either in the Whitechapel Road, or in the very bottom few yards of Thomas Street, or in a yard in Bakers Row or in the top section of Queen Ann Street or in Cross Street between Queen Ann and Thomas Streets.

    Using a reasonable walking pace for the carmen and the regulation beat speed for Neil we can say that the closest that Neil could have been to the body after the carmen left was about 3.5 minutes away at 2.5mph.
    Of course it has been suggested in this forum that 3mph may have been walked at night, and I have allowed for this possibility too, which would reduce that time by about 30seconds.

    From here we can estimate the quickest time Paul and Lechmere could have reached Mizen relative to the Neil’s arrival at the body, and thus estimate when he (Mizen) should have arrived back at Brown’s Yard, and did he come close to this estimate, based on Neil’s testimony.

    We can then also estimate when Mizen could have arrived back with the ambulance from Bethnal Green police Station.

    We can also estimate when Thain would have arrived, when he would have got to Dr Llewellyn. We can then compare these estimates to the testimony of Llewellyn.

    We now move onto what certainly are two controversial areas.

    6. The so called Scam.

    In “Inside Bucks Row”, I give 5 separate explanations for the differences in the accounts of Lechmere, Paul and Mizen. I propose a scenario that is highly controversial, in that it is Mizen, who does not tell the truth, he lies there is no other term to use.

    I provide numerous pieces of evidence to back this up, this incudes Witness statements, Press reports, timings and the interpretation of Official Police Reports. It should be noted that this option for the scam is actually backed by early comments attributed to Mizen himself.

    7. The Blood Evidence.

    This is another very controversial area, It has been claimed that this theory actually places Lechmere at the murder site when the Wounds area inflected on Mary Ann Nichols, let me be very clear here, IT DOES NO SUCH THING.

    The theory at first appears to be very persuasive, apparently backed by the noted medic Jason Payne-James. However one needs to look carefully at what he actually says, which is far from conclusive.

    The hypothesis produced by Researchers fails on several fronts, firstly it uses open ended arguments, no fixed point is given for bleeding to stop. Secondly “bleeding” is not defined clearly.

    Thirdly bleeding under pressure, given the nature of the wounds to Nichols will cease in all probability before John Neil can possibly arrive at the body, and certainly long before Mizen arrives.

    The actual descriptions used to support the idea that Neil and Mizen see flowing blood are open to question. Neil says the flow is oozing, yet press descriptions of “Profusely bleeding” are used as if they are direct quotes from Neil. There is no evidence at all to suggest that is the case, and indeed it can be argued that as used in the Lloyds Weekly account on 2nd, it is clearly not a quote at all, but journalistic licence.

    It seems clear that the theory of being at the “eye of the storm” fails completely. At best the evidence indicates that the attack takes place close to the arrival of Lechmere, maybe less than 5 minutes before, it certainly indicates no more than that. It is not the smoking gun.

    We can now turn to other equally controversial issues,

    8. [B]The Mortuary[/B

    The evidence given by Spratling & Enright, that they had not instructed the removal of clothing, appears to undermine the testimony of Helson who claims the body was undressed in his presence. Indeed the testimony of all 3 officers is in direct contradiction of that of the two mortuary attendants, Spratling later claims not only did he not tell the attendants to undress the body, but that he gave specific instructions not to undress the body. Such statements were not needed if the body was still clothed when Helson arrived.

    In effect it appears to be a direct attempt to blame the attendants for something which Helson claims did not occur, the body being undressed with no Police present.

    It seems very probable that the body was undressed, at least to some extent, before Helson arrived, and that the police simply were out of their depth and did not take control of the situation.

    9. The Slaughter Men.

    That the slaughter men did not tell the whole truth seems very clear. There are different stories about who went with whom to the murder site and when, and who stayed behind in the yard. It could be of course that they were just covering up for the fact they left the yard unattended. Alternatively it could be a simply a matter of being economic about the hours actually worked.

    Or maybe that the police were skiving at the yard, and the slaughter men were merely covering for them.

    Alternatively and more controversially perhaps is the suggestion that a pimping operation was operating from or near to the yard. The response about girls coming to the yard from Both Tomkins and Mumford is interesting when taken along with the comments of Mrs Green, who goes over the top perhaps to say there are no such girls in the area. This appears to be in contradiction to the comments of the police themselves in their report of the 19th September: “Bucks Row is a narrow quiet thoroughfare frequented*by prostitutes for immoral purposes at night ”

    Finally it cannot be ruled out that the workers were involved somehow in the murders, it was certainly believed to be the case by locals immediately after the murder, and hinted at by press, the Echo in particular. The police however investigated and said there was no evidence against the men, but who knows.

    All is covered in some depth in the full report.

    10. The Doctor

    While not wishing to disrespect Llewellyn, some of his comments are very unlikely to say the least. His assertion that the abdomen wounds were first, while possible is unlikely, and there are no details of the wounds which he claims would lead to instantaneous death. His comment that the blood had gone into the “loose tissue” again seems highly unlikely and appears to be produced to account for what he believed to be the lack of blood he observed.

    However it seems he did not carry out a full study of Nichols clothing or the large amount of blood which had been absorbed by such and had even clotted between the layers of clothing according to Helson.

    I respectfully suggest that he did his best, but that he was simply out of his depth, the very fact that he had to return and carry out a second examination, at the request of Baxter of the body, strongly suggests that his first examination was less than through.

    11 The Press

    There is little doubt that the press as a whole saw two agendas here apart from simply reporting the news. There was an immediate attempt to link this murder to earlier one of Tabram and Smith and a drive for sales which fuelled sensationalism.
    Secondly there was an opportunity to attack the police force and thus by implication the commissioner Sir Charles Warren, a man unpopular with large sections of society following “Bloody Sunday”.



    12 The Police.
    The police response can be divided into two distinct areas: pre and post the arrival of Abberline.

    The initial response was very poor, from allowing the removal of the body from the scene before a senior officer arrived, in this case by Kirby, up to and including the debacle at the mortuary and the initial search of the area, which was much criticised by Baxter.
    Put simply the local inspectors Spratling and Helson appear to have been completely unable to control the situation or even record the events adequately.

    They also seem to initial link the murder to Gangs, for which there appears to have been little or no actual evidence of.

    Once Abberline arrives, this starts to change, he interjects at the inquest when Baxter asks questions, providing sensible solutions, such as sending for items of clothing.

    There is the real possibility that the police were aware of the real course of events at the meeting between Mizen and the carmen, that the event is described in the report of 19th September as per that of the two carmen, and not as per Mizen is intereresting.



    Of Course it is not possible to look at the Bucks Row murder, without looking at the candidature of Charles Lechmere.

    While on several issues: the “Scam” and “Blood” theories, I conclude that the arguments made for each, which relate to Lechmere are much weaker than is sometimes suggested, he does remains a viable candidate for the killer of Mary Ann Nichols.

    That is simply that he lived local and had opportunity, if he left home earlier than he claimed to that morning.

    However, and it is a very big however, being viable, does not mean that he is probable. At present there appears to be very little actual evidence, if any which points in his direction.

    He is just another of those whom lived locally and discovered a body, he is not in any way, shape or form unique in that.

    Of course it may well be that there is other evidence, either not discovered or no published, such may of course change things completely.

    This summary report, does not touch on the history of the murder site, whiCh is covered in great detail in the complete work, nor the comments of foreign Press also touched upon in the complete work.




    Steve Blomer 17/10/18

  • #2
    Nice work, Steve. No doubt a USB stick containing the text of Fisherman's response will shortly become available
    Kind regards, Sam Flynn

    "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
      Nice work, Steve. No doubt a USB stick containing the text of Fisherman's response will shortly become available

      Thanks Gareth,

      well one would hope that a response in detail, would wait until the actual book is read, there are few details in the above summary, just the conclusions.
      and true to my word, i do not rule Lechmere out do I?


      Steve

      Comment


      • #4
        A mammoth effort - well done, Steve. I can't wait to get my mits on the full version.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
          A mammoth effort - well done, Steve. I can't wait to get my mits on the full version.
          hi Gary,

          yes almost finished, just a few hundred more refs and hyperlimks to put in.

          price will still be 6.99 for the Full PDF.

          i think you may enjoy the map section


          Steve
          Last edited by Elamarna; 10-17-2018, 03:58 AM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
            hi gary,

            yes almost finished, just a few hundred more refs and hyperlimks to put in.

            price will still be 6.99 for the Full PDF.

            i think you may enjoy the map section


            Steve
            I love a map! And any book that even mentions horse slaughtering gets a thumbs up from me.👍

            Comment


            • #7
              So far, much seems to hinge on the phrase " it can be argued that..."

              ...which is not very surprising. Many things can be argued. For example, it can be argued that headlines like "Correcting the idea that Cross must have been seen by Paul" points to something rather different than an unbiased position of the author. And a take that is a bit strange overall, since what has been suggested is instead that the two should have HEARD each other. The only time it has been said that one of them would have been likely to see the other man is when Lechmere passed outside the brewery in Bath Street and Paul may have been in the process of exiting his house. Anyway, if I write a 560 pages + book in reply, I can always head my reaction to the matter "Spanking Steve".

              Too little is presented on this summary in many a way - for example, the supposedly damning evidence that Mizen must have lied is only spoken about but not given any shape. It can be argued that the author wishes to sell his opus rather than do such a thing.

              There are also matters that seem exaggerated, like how it is said that it is stated that the blood evidence "actually places Lechmere at the murder site when the Wounds area inflected on Mary Ann Nichols" ( a few misspellings there, but I think I got the gist of it. I had a harder time with "asses" ), and I think this seems to refer back to the docu more than anything else. What I say is that Lechmere was with the body as it bled, and Neil and Mizen was too, and this very likely puts the carman on the spot at a time that is consistent with him being the killer. Not much time is left to allow for the dreaded Phantom killer at any rate, if the process was a normal one.

              So it seems that corrections will be due where misunderstandings are present, just as it may be necessary to once more explain that I or Edward did not make the docu. It is a damn good one, but there are things in it that I would not have added myself, and therefore any criticism based on the docu will be a tad treacherous.

              I look forward to having a copy of the book presented to me.
              Last edited by Fisherman; 10-17-2018, 07:52 AM.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
                Thanks Gareth,

                well one would hope that a response in detail, would wait until the actual book is read, there are few details in the above summary, just the conclusions.
                and true to my word, i do not rule Lechmere out do I?


                Steve
                Well, since he CAN´T be ruled out, that is the absolute minimum of applied logic one would have hoped for.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                  and this very likely puts the carman on the spot at a time that is consistent with him being the killer.
                  What about Louis Diemschutz? He was the man on the horse and cart that found Stride.

                  Heck, he could have been riding Stride's corpse around in the back for a bit while he was at it.
                  Bona fide canonical and then some.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Batman View Post
                    What about Louis Diemschutz? He was the man on the horse and cart that found Stride.

                    Heck, he could have been riding Stride's corpse around in the back for a bit while he was at it.
                    come now Batman-lets be realistic.

                    Hes going to kill her somewhere else, load her on his cart bring her where he worked/socialized, dump her and then go yelling for help?

                    so forget that ridiculous scenario.

                    perhaps more realistic is he killed her there. possible. but he goes yelling for help and is seen/heard doing so. Lech is seen standing by the body before hes trying to raise the alarm. huge difference to me.


                    not only that, if diemschitz killed her their where he found her (and of course was the ripper) he probably could have performed more of the signature mutilations. unlike the probable killer who couldnt because he was disturbed by diemshitz/schwartz.
                    "Is all that we see or seem
                    but a dream within a dream?"

                    -Edgar Allan Poe


                    "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                    quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                    -Frederick G. Abberline

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
                      come now Batman-lets be realistic.

                      Hes going to kill her somewhere else, load her on his cart bring her where he worked/socialized, dump her and then go yelling for help?

                      so forget that ridiculous scenario.

                      perhaps more realistic is he killed her there. possible. but he goes yelling for help and is seen/heard doing so. Lech is seen standing by the body before hes trying to raise the alarm. huge difference to me.


                      not only that, if diemschitz killed her their where he found her (and of course was the ripper) he probably could have performed more of the signature mutilations. unlike the probable killer who couldnt because he was disturbed by diemshitz/schwartz.
                      Yes. I think it highly unlikely that JtR was one of the ones who discovered a body. However, I think it likely he might have turned up in the crowds for a gloat at the shocks he was giving people.
                      Bona fide canonical and then some.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                        So far, much seems to hinge on the phrase " it can be argued that..."

                        ...which is not very surprising. Many things can be argued. For example, it can be argued that headlines like "Correcting the idea that Cross must have been seen by Paul" points to something rather different than an unbiased position of the author. And a take that is a bit strange overall, since what has been suggested is instead that the two should have HEARD each other. The only time it has been said that one of them would have been likely to see the other man is when Lechmere passed outside the brewery in Bath Street and Paul may have been in the process of exiting his house.

                        Too little is presented on this summary in many a way - for example, the supposedly damning evidence that Mizen must have lied is only spoken about but not given any shape. It can be argued that the author wishes to sell his opus rather than do such a thing.

                        There are also matters that seem exaggerated, like how it is said that it is stated that the blood evidence "actually places Lechmere at the murder site when the Wounds area inflected on Mary Ann Nichols" ( a few misspellings there, but I think I got the gist of it. I had a harder time with "asses" ), and I think this seems to refer back to the docu more than anything else. What I say is that Lechmere was with the body as it bled, and Neil and Mizen was too, and this seemingly puts the carman on the spot at a time that may well be consistent with him being the killer. Most likely, not much time is left to allow for the dreaded Phantom killer at any rate.

                        So it seems that corrections will be due where misunderstandings are present, just as it may be necessary to once more explain that I or Edward did not make the docu. It is a damn good one, but there are things in it that I would not have added myself, and therefore any criticism based on the docu will be a tad treacherous.

                        I look forward to having a copy of the book presented to me.


                        First things first, this is merely a summary of the findings and suggestions of the whole work.

                        The phrase starting "correcting" is in relation to the claim made in the Documentary suggesting that they if Lechmere were telling the truth, they should have been walking almost in tandem.

                        Nice to see that we agree that the one place one may have seen the other is the same, as Lechmere passed the bottom of Foster Street, but of course that would depend on the lighting, and the exact timing.

                        Of course there is little detail full stop, indeed almost none on the issue of the Scam, that is not the purpose of a Summary Report. It is not intended to be detailed in any way. the details are in the full report.

                        With regards to the Wounds & Blood, (sorry for the misspellings, "asses" just demonstates how useless spellcheckers are, when you don't bother to actually read the words), the claims made about Blood are very clear, on this site I beleive the phrase used was "at the eye of the storm".

                        Yes there is a very good possibility that blood was flowing when Lechmere was present, and if so it was also bleeding when Paul was present.
                        If Neil or Mizen saw bleeding is a very different matter, much revolves around what is meant by bleeding.

                        The wounds are not that contentious, I beleive we only disagree on which came first and which were the primary cause of death, either is possible, although there is evidence which suggests one is more likely than the other.

                        I see the "Phantom Killer" back again, oh well!

                        The documentary makes many statements about Bucks Row, that are inaccurate or over egging the pudding, which are accepted by many as being fact. There being no serious written publication on this murder at present, the documentary assumes the position of the leading work on Bucks Row, and assesment and criticism of it is fully justified.

                        It is of course made very clear that the program is the responsability of the production company alone, and that you did not make the documentary, and in no way are responsible for its content, other than your own words.

                        Any factual mistakes contained in the final work will be corrected immediatly, I will be grateful to any who point such out. However at ppresent I am aware of none that are required.

                        "Inside Bucks Row" is not aimed primarily at Edward or your goodself, it is an indepth apprasial of the evidence.
                        One would hope that even if you do not accept the first part of the work, you will find the considerable appendicies useful.

                        I am very afraid that you do not get presented with a copy, but I am more than happy to personlise a copy for you.


                        Steve

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Good work Steve, good luck with the magnum opus.

                          I was going to ask a question on this thread, but I think it's probably better if I stick on the Polly Nichols board.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                            Well, since he CAN´T be ruled out, that is the absolute minimum of applied logic one would have hoped for.
                            The logic shows that like several others, he cannot be ruled out. of course that depends on whom one includes as victims.

                            That however is very differentfrom making a strong case in favour of any candidate, and I include all in that assesment.


                            Steve

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by barnflatwyngarde View Post
                              Good work Steve, good luck with the magnum opus.

                              I was going to ask a question on this thread, but I think it's probably better if I stick on the Polly Nichols board.

                              Thank you, I will go and take a look.
                              The idea of this thread was primarily to provide the conclusions, not in depth debate, that will no doubt follow in the next couple of months

                              Steve

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