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Broad Shoulders, Elizabeth's Killer ?
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Originally posted by GBinOz View Post
WADR, the reference is to Schwartz's perspective after he had crossed the street.
I cannot see what difference it makes as to which side of the street he was on, but am resolute that Pipeman was on the north western corner of the intersection of Berner and Fairclough.
The difference it makes concerns how similar the accounts we have are, and therefore how confident we can be as to Pipeman's location. More below.
Pipeman was sheltering in the doorway lighting his pipe when Schwartz first spotted him. He emerged in response to the same sounds of the quarrel that prompted Schwartz to turn to see what was the matter. At that stage Schwartz and Pipeman were on the opposite corners, both about equidistant from BSman and both clearly visible.
Now having said that, I'll add that I accept everyone's right to change the story to smooth off the rough edges.
WADR, I think that Pipeman emerged from the doorway to see a man with a woman in distress and another man attempting to leave the scene. I don't believe that he had sufficient information at that stage to determine who had attacked whom. Schwartz's conflicting stories do not assist us in this regard.
Hi Andrew,
There is no doubt that Schwartz changed his story. Why, we don't know, but perhaps he was trying to look less cowardly?
Interesting that you place Pipeman to the north east of Schwartz. This would have him perhaps in the region of the Hampshire Ct passageway. That would be an alternative if not for the designation that he was outside a public house.
As always, I appreciate your out of the box thinking, even if I find myself unpersuaded.
Cheers, George
Not only why but when did he change his story, is a crucial question. Consider the following.
The reporter's Hungarian was quite as imperfect as the foreigner's English, but an interpreter was at hand, and the man's story was retold just as he had given it to the police.
What if this is the truth?
It is, in fact, to the effect that he saw the whole thing.
The whole thing? Is that why the Star editorial says...?
...the story of a man who is said to have seen the Berner-street tragedy, and declares that one man butchered and another man watched, is, we think, a priori incredible.
What did Schwartz tell the police, when he first arrived at the station?
As for Pipeman being near Hampshire Court passageway, I've explained several times why I think that is compatible with the Star account.
Coroner: Was she on the pavement?
Smith: Yes, a few yards up Berner-street on the opposite side to where she was found.
So, Stride and Parcelman stood near enough to the entrance to Hampshire Court. I think this is no coincidence.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by DJA View Post
BS Man returns and pulls Stride out of the lane and leaves after yelling "Lips,see!"
Sutton slips out the front door and into the dark lane.
He holds out cachous,medicine for her lips,on white tissues which were just visible in the dark.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
Ah, allow me to rephrase my statement.
I meant to say that Mortimer couldn't have been at her door BEFORE 12.47am, because she didn't see, Letchford, Smith, Stride, Parcelman, Lave, Eagle, Bs Man, Schwartz or Pipeman.
All of the above were in the street BEFORE 12.47am.
Which means that Goldstein had to have walked down Berner Street AFTER 12.47am.
Mortimer heard 1 man walk past her door, if she came to her door immediately afterwards, then it was Goldstein who she heard and as she opened her door, he hurriedly increased his pace and she saw him just as he glimpsed up towards the club.
That is consistent with the time between her hearing him, to the point she saw him.
Note that he doesn't see her, which means he was already past her door when she saw him.
Sturdy may have been already dead in the dark of the yard, but Mortimer couldn't have been at her door prior to everyone else (excluding Goldstein) being in the street.
If she was there any earlier, then she would have heard or seen the assault on Stride IF it happened.
Your argument for Mortimer not being at her door prior to 12:47 seems to be based on the assumption that the Schwartz incident occurred at precisely 12:45. However, we don't know that. Maybe it occurred at 12:41, and she came to her door at 12:43. Or maybe she came to her door at 12:41, closed the door at 12:50, and the Schwartz incident happened after that. There are other possibilities too.
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
We are told that when Schwartz first sees Pipeman, the man is lighting his pipe. If the man was using the doorway as a shelter, he would be mostly or totally invisible to BS man. For Schwartz to have supposed Lipski was called at Pipeman, means that Pipeman was visible to BS, or we need to make the heroic assumption that Schwartz didn't have the nous to realize that the two men were not visible to each other.
I find myself at a loss to understand how this is changing the story. When Schwartz was within a couple of yards of the Fairclough intersection he would have had an uninterrupted view of the doorway of the Nelson, an Pipeman sheltering there to light his pipe. As the noise of a quarrel attracted Schwartz's attention, and he turned to see what was happeneing, Pipeman also heard the noise of the quarrel and stepped out to gain a view of what was happening. At that time both Schwartz and Pipemn would have been visible to BSman, but it would be difficult to determine at whom a shout might have been directed.
The whole thing? Is that why the Star editorial says...?
...the story of a man who is said to have seen the Berner-street tragedy, and declares that one man butchered and another man watched, is, we think, a priori incredible.
What did Schwartz tell the police, when he first arrived at the station?
I submit that contrary to the Star report, in the incident described by Schwartz, no-one was seen butchered while another man watched. Press sensationalisation. Schwartz saw what he thought was a domestic.
Cheers, GeorgeThe needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.
Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm
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Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
I doubt that the footsteps that Fanny heard before she went to the door were those of Goldstein. If they had been, surely she would have known that the footsteps she heard weren't those of a policeman.
Your argument for Mortimer not being at her door prior to 12:47 seems to be based on the assumption that the Schwartz incident occurred at precisely 12:45. However, we don't know that. Maybe it occurred at 12:41, and she came to her door at 12:43. Or maybe she came to her door at 12:41, closed the door at 12:50, and the Schwartz incident happened after that. There are other possibilities too.
She does however state herself about sering a man walk down Berner St with a black bag.
My suggestion is that the reporter attempted to combine Mortimer's sighting, with the sound of the man passing by her door, but incorrectly suggests himself that it was a Policeman.
In other words, because Mortimer didn't say about a Policeman passing her door, the reporter has assumed she meant a policeman, when she may have meant she heard someone walking past, went to her door and then saw the man with the bag.
I am suggesting it was all one sequence.
She goes to lock her door to go to bed, but hears someone walk past her door. Being a curious neighbour she then immediately opens her door and looks out to see a man walking hurriedly with a black bag.
The difference in pace is then significant because there's a change between "measured" footsteps to walking "hurriedly"...ergo, once Mortimer opens her door, there's a change of pace from Goldstein.
The clue being that at no point does Mortimer mention a Policeman.
The confusion being that the sequence is fragmented and the footsteps heard are never associated with Goldstein
"Great minds, don't think alike"
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
If the man was using the doorway as a shelter, he would be mostly or totally invisible to BS man.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Which side of the road was Pipeman on?
In the Swanson version we have Schwartz seeing Pipeman: “On crossing to the opposite side of the street, he saw a second man lighting his pipe. The man who threw the woman down called out apparently to the man on the opposite side of the road ‘Lipski’ & then Schwartz walked away…”
Of course this isn’t the most helpfully worded piece of descriptive writing but it’s what we have. So was Pipeman ‘on the opposite side of the road..’to BSMan or to Schwartz? A case has been made for both sides but I’m confident that the stronger argument is that Pipeman was on the club side of the road. One small point is that if Pipeman was on the opposite side of the club why would Schwartz only have seen him ‘on crossing…’ ‘Surely he couldn’t have failed to see him by simply looking straight ahead and before he’d even stepped from the pavement?
The clincher for me though is that if BSMan called out to the ‘man on the opposite’ then it’s clearly being stated that there was only one man on that side of the road. Therefore Schwartz and Pipeman must have been on opposite sides of the road.
In The Star version we get: “he crossed to the other side of the street. Before he had gone many yards, however, he heard the sound of a quarrel, and turned back to learn what was the matter, but just as he stepped from the kerb a second man came out of the doorway of the public house a few doors off, and shouting out some sort of warning to the man who was with the woman, rushed forward as if to attack the intruder.”
The ‘public house’ was clearly The Nelson beer house on the corner. So for me both versions clearly align on this point. At the moment that BSMan called out “Lipski” Schwartz was across the road and Pipeman was on the club side.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
If you look at the doorways in question you will see that they are only indented from the pavement by a very few inches. Not enough to provide any concealment for a man but enough perhaps to provide a break against the wind to allow a pipe but be lit or re-lit.
Plenty of room.Last edited by DJA; 11-12-2024, 12:29 PM.My name is Dave. You cannot reach me through Debs email account
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
If you look at the doorways in question you will see that they are only indented from the pavement by a very few inches. Not enough to provide any concealment for a man but enough perhaps to provide a break against the wind to allow a pipe but be lit or re-lit.
BS Man was in the process of swinging Stride about when he noticed Schwartz (and Pipeman) so BS Man could have been standing anywhere on that bit of pavement, allowing him a better view of the Nelson`s doorway. I don`t think he was walking up Berner Street with his right arm brushing the doors as he passed.
Also, the flame of a pipe being lit will draw the eye.
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Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View PostI meant to say that Mortimer couldn't have been at her door BEFORE 12.47am, because she didn't see, Letchford, Smith, Stride, Parcelman, Lave, Eagle, Bs Man, Schwartz or Pipeman.
Didn't Mortimer just say that she didn't see anything unusual? If correct and if she was indeed on her doorstep for the bigger of half an hour before 1 am, then she might very well have seen Letchford, Smith, Lave and Eagle at least.
Cheers,
Frank"You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View Post
Hi HS
BS Man was in the process of swinging Stride about when he noticed Schwartz (and Pipeman) so BS Man could have been standing anywhere on that bit of pavement, allowing him a better view of the Nelson`s doorway. I don`t think he was walking up Berner Street with his right arm brushing the doors as he passed.
Also, the flame of a pipe being lit will draw the eye.
All good points showing that Pipeman would have been easily visible.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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