Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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Broad Shoulders, Elizabeth's Killer ?
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...on turning into Berner St. from Commercial Road & having got as far as the gateway where the murder was committed he saw a man stop & speak to a woman, who was standing in the gateway.
I've always found the bold bit interesting and note that believers in Schwartz generally ignore it or reject it. Not only do only these words suggest that Schwartz claimed to have watched the abuse of the woman from very close range, but it also becomes significant when we read that Schwartz subsequently crossed the road. That is because almost all if not all of the residences on Berner St, south of the gateway, were on the west side, that is, club side. So, why cross if he has already reached the gateway? Wasn't Schwartz walking down Berner St to see if his wife had completed the expected move of address while he had been out all day and half the night?
I wonder if it were actually the second man (Pipeman) who did the crossing of the road toward the gateway, where Schwartz still stood, having been signalled by the first man (BS). That would be closer to what we see in the Star account, where the two men are communicating, and the second man comes at Schwartz in a menacing manner. Had Schwartz been the one to cross the road and begin to walk away, he is no threat, and it would be best to let him go. Yet, that does not seem to be the case. Either he was pursued, or we have to imagine that our casual pipe smoker got so scared at the first man calling him a name, that he ran off. The problem with that scenario, aside from its believability, is that to flee in Schwartz's direction implies that he starts from a position north of Schwartz (closer to Commercial Rd) and thus moves closer to the man he is supposedly fleeing. The flight or fight response should have him fleeing to the north.
I don't think we can rely on Schwartz for the complete story. Swanson's "If Schwartz is to be believed", reflects a caution in relying on an uncorroborated witness.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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My read is that the phrase "If Schwartz is to be believed" expresses some doubt on Swanson's part, but the rest of the passage indicates that he doesn't have very much doubt. So he's allowing for the possibility that Schwartz isn't to be believed, but he thinks it's far more likely that Schwartz is to be believed. As Jeff mentioned, the rest of his statement isn't what I'd expect him to have said if he thought Schwartz wasn't to be believed. I don't think there's an implied second "if". To say that "the police report of his statement casts no doubt upon it" is not to say that the police report makes Schwartz' account a certainty.
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"If Schwartz is to be believed"...
There are 3 separate sections to the syntax of this statement that warrant assessment.
Firstly, the word "If"
Well, there is no question mark present and so Swanson is not asking a direct question. At face value this would suggest that Swanson is making a statement rather than being inquisitive.
However, when we add the next part; "is to be"...we have some context for the initial word "If"
This part of the phrase highlights and concerns timing.
The phrase "is to be" implies that at the point of writing, Swanson is suggesting that there is currently is some uncertainty, because he refers to a potential future event that has not yet transpired.
And when we then add the word "believed" the implication is that Swanson is highlighting a potential issue with truth and not Schwartz's interpretation of events.
Of course, when we add the following sentence referring to the police report having no doubt, it acts as a perfect counterbalance to what Swanson is saying.
it's a clever way for Swanson to acknowledge that there's no doubt in what Schwartz is saying from an official police perspective, with a drop of scepticism that aims to highlight that there is still belief to be found and therefore hint that Swanson himself has doubts.
He merges his professional and personal opinions in the first 2 sentences, but in such a subtle way that it does just enough to raise an eyebrow, but is careful enough to not rock the boat.
"If Schwartz is to be believed" comes from a personal opinion that something doesn't sit right, but is then followed with a sentence that confirms that the police report and statement given by Schwartz at the time of writing have no doubt in Schwartz. This serves to highlight the official police line at the time.
It would seem that Schwartz was believed initially, and at the time Swanton wrote what he did, the police STILL had no doubt...OFFICIALLY.
But somewhere at the 11th hour, something went wrong for Schwartz, and the man who should have been the prime witness ends up not even attending the inquest and ultimately dissappears from history; like he never existed in the first place.
Perhaps he was given a change of identity to protect him and his family?
Unlikely, seeing as Schwartz is an enigma PRIOR to the murder also.
In summary, it is clear that the police took Schwartz seriously and had no doubt in him, even up to the point that Swanson wrote what he did...
...but Swanson himself clearly has some doubt because he begins with the phrase "If Schwartz is to be believed..."
That phrase is Swanson's way of telling us there is something wrong in his own personal belief in Schwartz, but that not to the extent that he's prepared to go in opposition to the official police line at the time of writing.
He is perhaps the window into the world of Schwrartz and gives us some reasoning; albeit subjective, that he personally doesn't believe Schwartz.
It would be interesting to see if the official belief in Schwartz changed as a result of what Swanson wrote.
If the timing fits, then I would suggest it was Swanson himself who threw the spanner in the works and managed to cast doubt in Schwartz from an official perspective."Great minds, don't think alike"
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
So, the doubts must refer to existing evidence, although the identification of Pipeman might have changed thinking, had it ever occurred. Your phrase "their current way of thinking" suggests you understand the Met police to have been a monolithic entity, with no significant differences of opinion, within.
The Star chose to publish this "tittle-tattle", effectively undermining their own scoop of the previous day. Why would they? A hypothetical equivalent would have been the Evening News publishing this:
In the matter of the fruiterer who said he sold grapes to a male companion of the deceased woman, the Leman St police have reason to doubt the truth of the story.
This does not explain why the sentence appears in the report, nor why we don't see a similar sentence for other witnesses. It is Schwartz and Schwartz alone, who merits a disclaimer.
If there were ever doubts then it makes more sense that these ‘doubts’ occurred early on until the evidence gleaned from the ongoing investigation showed that he was telling the truth.
I think that, to the ‘crusade against Charles Cross’ we can add a ‘crusade against Israel Schwartz.’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
There were no doubts by the time that Swanson wrote his summary.
No doubts from an official police perspective at the time, but Swanson himself is seemingly unconvinced; hence his opening line.
If there were ever doubts then it makes more sense that these ‘doubts’ occurred early on until the evidence gleaned from the ongoing investigation showed that he was telling the truth.
On the contrary. It seems that the complete opposite is the case, and doubt was very much present when Swanson wrote his summary; but NOT in an "official" sense. Swanson isn't questioning anything; he's instead making a subtle statement. It's therefore not a question of self-doubt from Swanson's perspective, but rather a way of planting his personal belief into the mix without questioning the official police line.
I think that, to the ‘crusade against Charles Cross’ we can add a ‘crusade against Israel Schwartz.’
I think that the police had Schwartz as their number 1 witness from the moment he gave his statement, and that this continued to be the case for some time....until the uncertainties surrounding Schwartz's account began to come to the forefront, because not a single word he said could be proven, verified or corroborated.
Not a single word.
"Great minds, don't think alike"
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Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
Lechmere is very much a case of "The boy who cried wolf" in that it's now immensely difficult to question the likes of Schwartz, because of the superficial impact that Lechmere has had on the case.
I think that the police had Schwartz as their number 1 witness from the moment he gave his statement, and that this continued to be the case for some time....until the uncertainties surrounding Schwartz's account began to come to the forefront, because not a single word he said could be proven, verified or corroborated.
Not a single word.
This is all very simple and requires no complications. Schwartz saw an incident. Not a single, smidgeon of doubt can be placed against him.
Can anyone give me a valid reason why Schwartz would have lied without veering off into conspiracy land?
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Looking at Schwartz.
I’d start with the fact that the majority of witnesses are honest (if occasionally mistaken) I’d also suggest that when witnesses are found to have lied their motive for doing so is usually fairly obvious; no convoluted plots - because they were somewhere they shouldn’t have been, because they were trying to protect someone, because they were up to something. They had a vested interest in lying. Although motives aren’t usually discovered until later we know that we have no known motive for Schwartz to have lied, even just about why he was in Berner Street that night. We don’t know if the police followed up on his story of checking to see if their house move had occurred but they could have.
Every attempt to accuse Schwartz of lying requires speculation and imagination, but these are things that you can apply to almost any witness. ‘Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.’ The claim that a man placed himself at the scene of a knife murder when he wasn’t there, in the middle of a series of murders with the public baying for blood, and with no one to back him up in any claim not to have been the murderer, is the most extraordinary of claims. So what is our extraordinary evidence? No one saw the incident. Yes, at 12.45am in a dimly lit, empty backstreet. No one heard it. Yes, with no one else outside and with the woman not making any great noise. That’s it. That’s the evidence against Schwartz which justifies a claim that he wasn’t there. Would anyone dare to call it extraordinary? What about strong? Reasonably strong? Fair? I’d use ‘feeble.’ Or ‘non-existent.’
What about a claim that he was there and up to no good? Simple question - why bother placing himself at the scene. Just keep quiet. No one could place him there.
None of this holds water. None of it justifies all of these contortions and limbo dancing under the evidence just to try and demonise one witness. View the evidence as it’s presented to us. Nothing about the story that we have of what occurred that night raises as much as an eyebrow from me. I’m not remotely suspicious or concerned that there was something occurring that we haven’t noticed.
Only one important question remains. Who killed Elizabeth Stride?
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
Lechmere is very much a case of "The boy who cried wolf" in that it's now immensely difficult to question the likes of Schwartz, because of the superficial impact that Lechmere has had on the case.
I think that the police had Schwartz as their number 1 witness from the moment he gave his statement, and that this continued to be the case for some time....until the uncertainties surrounding Schwartz's account began to come to the forefront, because not a single word he said could be proven, verified or corroborated.
Not a single word.
Schwartz' account was unverified and uncorroborated from the beginning, it didn't become that way later on, so I don't see that as a reason for the police to have more doubt later than they had had previously.
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
We have Inspector Abberline still talking of Schwartz as a valid witness at the beginning of November! Was he just talking out of his backside? This tells us all that we need to know without looking between any lines. Swanson isn’t being mysterious or dropping hints he’s stating something clear and straightforward without the need of implying an added ‘if.’ “If Schwartz is to be trusted, and the evidence leaves us with no doubt…” ie “Therefore we believe that Schwartz can be trusted.” No talk of ‘let’s wait and see,’ or ‘maybe more evidence will arise.’ This is 3 weeks after the murder. The investigation is done…what else can they expect to find unless someone comes forward with previously unheard information? Swanson is talking of the moment, after 3 weeks of investigation. The police have arrived at their conclusion and their conclusion is that Schwartz was telling the truth (as he clearly was.)
This is all very simple and requires no complications. Schwartz saw an incident. Not a single, smidgeon of doubt can be placed against him.
Can anyone give me a valid reason why Schwartz would have lied without veering off into conspiracy land?
IIRC, you recently mentioned it as a possibility that the Schwartz incident occurred considerably earlier that Schwartz said. I have said that I think Swanson's statement shows he has a least a little bit of doubt, and maybe it's doubt of this nature. As Jeff pointed out, the main point of Swanson's statement was to say that BS man was more likely than Parcelman to be Stride's killer. If that's what he's talking about, then the time of Schwartz incident is important. If it happened considerably earlier than Schwartz thought, then Parcelman would have been with Stride after BS man was, and in that case Parcelman would be the more likely killer. So if Swanson had doubt, it may have been mostly about the time Schwartz gave rather than about whether the incident happened.
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Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
Hi Herlock,
IIRC, you recently mentioned it as a possibility that the Schwartz incident occurred considerably earlier that Schwartz said. I have said that I think Swanson's statement shows he has a least a little bit of doubt, and maybe it's doubt of this nature. As Jeff pointed out, the main point of Swanson's statement was to say that BS man was more likely than Parcelman to be Stride's killer. If that's what he's talking about, then the time of Schwartz incident is important. If it happened considerably earlier than Schwartz thought, then Parcelman would have been with Stride after BS man was, and in that case Parcelman would be the more likely killer. So if Swanson had doubt, it may have been mostly about the time Schwartz gave rather than about whether the incident happened.
I’d say that we should keep in mind any reasonable possibility. Witnesses can be mistaken. Perhaps the police, when talking to Schwartz, believed what he said but were a bit wary of how he estimated the time that he passed (if he didn’t have a watch on) They would also have something else to consider, as should we. Had he been drinking? How do we know that Schwartz hadn’t had 10 pints? The subject is never mentioned and Schwartz didn’t turn up for interview until hours later so how can we know? It’s hardly far-fetched for a man out on the street at 12.45 to have consumed at least some alcohol. If we saw someone today we would pretty much assume it. Of course, he may not have touched a drop. So maybe the police had a slight doubt about his time. So I’d say that it’s at least a possibility that Schwartz might have seen a confrontation between a man and a woman, at that spot, slightly earlier in the evening. 12.20/12.25 say.
I’ve never understood why some are so quick to disbelieve Schwartz simply because no one saw or heard the incident. Especially when we know that sounds can get lost in the background. When we know that people can be in different parts of a house. And when the witness tells us that no great noise was made. Where is the problem? There is none. It’s an invention; a piece of imagination. To give it even a bit of weight we need good evidence….we have none.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
We have Inspector Abberline still talking of Schwartz as a valid witness at the beginning of November! Was he just talking out of his backside? This tells us all that we need to know without looking between any lines. Swanson isn’t being mysterious or dropping hints he’s stating something clear and straightforward without the need of implying an added ‘if.’ “If Schwartz is to be trusted, and the evidence leaves us with no doubt…” ie “Therefore we believe that Schwartz can be trusted.” No talk of ‘let’s wait and see,’ or ‘maybe more evidence will arise.’ This is 3 weeks after the murder. The investigation is done…what else can they expect to find unless someone comes forward with previously unheard information? Swanson is talking of the moment, after 3 weeks of investigation. The police have arrived at their conclusion and their conclusion is that Schwartz was telling the truth (as he clearly was.)
This is all very simple and requires no complications. Schwartz saw an incident. Not a single, smidgeon of doubt can be placed against him.
Can anyone give me a valid reason why Schwartz would have lied without veering off into conspiracy land?
people also have a tendency to conveniently forget that schwartz is corroborated if indirectly in that his suspect fits the description of tje other witnesses that night and specifically in that his man was was wearing a peaked cap. A description that Abberline obviously put stock in (see my sig). like how cox is corroborated eventhough no one else saw mary with blotchy but they did hear her singing like cox did.
He had a reason to be where he was, his account is fairly innocuous and he showed no signs of being a timewaster/attention seeker.
Also, with schwartz, are we really going to believe a jew with a strong jewish appearance, ie religious conservative, new to a strange non jewish country who dosnt even speak the language yet, is going to lie to the police, putting himself and his family in legal danger (either for perjury or being a murder suspect) in a major murder investigation?!? really?
Theres not a jot of evidence hes not to be beleived."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
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
exactly herlock.
people also have a tendency to conveniently forget that schwartz is corroborated if indirectly in that his suspect fits the description of tje other witnesses that night and specifically in that his man was was wearing a peaked cap. A description that Abberline obviously put stock in (see my sig). like how cox is corroborated eventhough no one else saw mary with blotchy but they did hear her singing like cox did.
He had a reason to be where he was, his account is fairly innocuous and he showed no signs of being a timewaster/attention seeker.
Also, with schwartz, are we really going to believe a jew with a strong jewish appearance, ie religious conservative, new to a strange non jewish country who dosnt even speak the language yet, is going to lie to the police, putting himself and his family in legal danger (either for perjury or being a murder suspect) in a major murder investigation?!? really?
Theres not a jot of evidence hes not to be beleived.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 PostSwanson’s summary was written three weeks after the murder....
Mike.
That is what I first thought, but if we look over the reports in detail we see each report is in tabular form, and separate points begin by time and date format - eg; 3.45 am, 31st Aug.
I realized, a person cannot consult four murder files then write a report for each one, on the same day. Swanson did have other duties to perform, not the least of which was monitoring the whole investigation.
The first report concern's the Tabram murder, it was written on paper with a September header. No date was provided, but as we know he was tasked with creating these reports by Warren, who gave Swanson absolute administrative control over the Whitechapel Murder cases on 15 Sept. 1888. Therefore, we know the Tabram report was written between the 15th-30th of September.
There are four separate reports; Tabram, Nichols, Chapman & Stride.
At the end of the Stride report Swanson writes - there are 994 Dockets besides police reports, (a docket can be anything from a Wanted poster to a suspect file).
He also managed to have a City Police report created, from his equal Insp. McWilliam, for the Eddowes murder.
Swanson then studied and created reports from the Nichols, Chapman & Stride files, following a similar format. Each one carries a 19th Oct. date, as do the index pages.
Each stamped with a Home Office 'Received by' date of 25 Oct.
The 19th October is when he finished the reports, to hand them to Warren, who sent them to H.O., not when he wrote them.
As the penultimate Inquest date was 5 Oct., it is possible Swanson waited to see if the inquest produced anything of substance (the last inquest was merely the Coroner's summary on 23 Oct.)
We do see Swanson making reference to a suspect in a "kind of Yankee hat", which was mentioned by ACB in a memo dated 4 Oct. 1888. So he likely wrote his Stride report after that date, but before the 19th.Last edited by Wickerman; 11-19-2024, 10:03 PM.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Mike.
That is what I first thought, but if we look over the reports in detail we see each report is in tabular form, and separate points begin by time and date format - eg; 3.45 am, 31st Aug.
I realized, a person cannot consult four murder files then write a report for each one, on the same day. Swanson did have other duties to perform, not the least of which was monitoring the whole investigation.
The first report concern's the Tabram murder, it was written on paper with a September header. No date was provided, but as we know he was tasked with creating these reports by Warren, who gave Swanson absolute administrative control over the Whitechapel Murder cases on 15 Sept. 1888. Therefore, we know the Tabram report was written between the 15th-30th of September.
There are four separate reports; Tabram, Nichols, Chapman & Stride.
At the end of the Stride report Swanson writes - there are 994 Dockets besides police reports, (a docket can be anything from a Wanted poster to a suspect file).
He also managed to have a City Police report created, from his equal Insp. McWilliam, for the Eddowes murder.
Swanson then studied and created reports from the Nichols, Chapman & Stride files, following a similar format. Each one carries a 19th Oct. date, as do the index pages.
Each stamped with a Home Office 'Received by' date of 25 Oct.
The 19th October is when he finished the reports, to hand them to Warren, who sent them to H.O., not when he wrote them.
As the penultimate Inquest date was 5 Oct., it is possible Swanson waited to see if the inquest produced anything of substance (the last inquest was merely the Coroner's summary on 23 Oct.)
We do see Swanson making reference to a suspect in a "kind of Yankee hat", which was mentioned by ACB in a memo dated 4 Oct. 1888. So he likely wrote his Stride report after that date, but before the 19th.
That's still after the police have interviewed all of the club members and the people living nearby then searched for ‘Lipski’ or anyone else potentially involved. At some point the police had no one else to interview, no more leads to follow so they would have to have arrived at a best conclusion, accepting it until such time as any new information is proffered. To me this surely has to point to Swanson saying, in effect “the evidence, as it stands, points to Schwartz being trustworthy and so that’s what we assume to be correct” How long would they have been willing to keep what would essentially have been an ‘open verdict’ if we are expected to believe that after a week, two weeks, three weeks they were still unsure about Schwartz? I just can’t see it. They would have interviewed Schwartz, seen that there was nothing inherently unbelievable in what he’d said, possibly after checking with his wife and finding that they had indeed just moved house and that he had every reason to walk along Berner Street around that time. I can’t see them expecting to find some piece of evidence to change their minds about him. Then we have Abberline at the beginning of November still voicing no doubt about Schwartz.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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