The discussion about what side of the street Pipeman and Schwartz were on has gotten me thinking about the confusion about whether BS man was saying "Lipski" to Pipeman or to Schwarz. If those two were on opposite sides of the street, it should have been clear whom BS man was talking to if Schwartz was looking at him. BS man was talking to whomever BS man was looking at, which should have been obvious if Schwartz and Pipeman weren't close to each other and if Schwartz was looking at BS man. So if Schwartz and Pipeman were on opposite sides of the street, then Schwartz probably wasn't looking at BS man when he said "Lipski". I don't know if this helps us to figure anything else out, but maybe someone will have a useful application for this idea.
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Herlock Sholmes
Hi Lewis,
That just about sums the possibilities up nicely. I think it likeliest is that Smith passed at around 12.35, then Eagle returned not long after then Fanny went onto her doorstep (mistaking Eagle’s steps for a Constable’s) She goes back inside just before 12.50. The incident occurs and is done by around 12.50. She hears Louis at a time that he believes is 1.00 but is actually 1
Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
Except Eagles route back to Berner Street wouldn't have taken him past Mortimer's house.
The only individuals that we are aware of who walked past Mortimer's house within that time frame, were Pc Smith, Goldstein and Schwartz.
I’d always taken it that Eagle had walked south on Berner Street when he came back but I have to admit, now that you mention it, I can’t recall why I assume it. Do you know of any information to say that he came from the other way RD?
LAVE went from the club to as far as the street and then back again. Even if he exited from the front door but reentered through the side door, he still didn't walk past Mortimer's house.
Agreed
BS MAN was seen by Schwartz when BS man was situated between Mortimer and the murder site; suggesting that IF it was Bs man that Mortimer had heard, then she should have heard Schwartz too.
But she only heard 1 man.
It wouldn’t have been impossible for FM to have been in a room at the rear of the building when BSMan passed so she didn’t hear him, then she came straight away into the front room and so could have heard Schwartz, though I’m certainly not pushing this one.
This may have been Schwartz IF BS man had remained SOUTH of Mortimer's location.
This supports BS man having walked BACK to assault Stride.
PARCELMAN - unknown entity in terms of which direction he went after leaving Stride.
Surely he went into Fairclough Street as Schwartz initially thought that he might have been following him?
There is of course a scenario whereby Parcelman waits for Eagle to go back inside the club at 12.40am and then gestures Stride into the yard. He then cuts her throat and then leaves heading NORTH directly past Mortimer's house.
But wouldn’t Eagle have seen Stride if she was loitering around?
This would be between 12.42-12.44am and correspond to the time that Mortimer comes to her door just after she heard the killer pass by.
Sorry to be a broken record on this RD but we don’t know what time she went onto her doorstep.
That would mean that Mortimer hears the murderer Parcel man as he heads NORTH.
He turns left just past Mortimer's house and through the passageway that leads directly into Back Church Lane.
Mortimer then comes to her door at 12.45am and Stride is already dead.
To further the possibility that Parcelman was the killer and the man heard walking past Mortimer's house, there's also a chance that Parcelman and Schwartz were the same man.
At 11.20pm that’s a bit of a brain-frazzler! We have Schwartz becoming a man that he himself must have invented! Come on RD, have mercy.
If there's a chance Parcelman was the killer and thought he had been seen; what better way that to divert attention and invent a story that coincides with the approximate time the woman was murdered but with the emphasis on what occurred SOUTH of the club.
Perhaps the focus should be on the idea that the killer was heard leaving the scene by Mortimer and she just missed seeing him as she came to her door and he darted left through into Backchuch Lane.
Worth consideration
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
Except if she was standing at the door nearly the whole time, she would have seen PC Smith pass her house, not heard him, and she would have seen Stride and Parcelman, which she did not.
These people were not spotted by Letchford, his sister, Lave, Eagle or Brown, and they were collectively on the street, it would seem, for a fairly brief period and those periods overlap.
Why I am being told that the no one witnessed what Schwartz did because the event was so short in time, but Fanny's nearly the whole time claim must be dismissed because she missed a few minutes of that half hour?
Moreover, in the other news report she clearly indicates she was out once, for 10 minutes by her reckoning. While I can only speculate, it strikes me that this news article (which is repeated in a few papers, but it's clearly the same article), she may have said something along the lines like "I was at my door between 12:30 and 1:00 ..." meaning at some point between those times, not from A to B, but the reporter presents it as if she were there the whole time. If she was there nearly the whole time, then she should have seen the murder given it happened between those times.
So now you are questioning the news report, which is fair enough. But clearly, as you say, if she immediately went out, she would have seen both PC Smith and also Stride and Parcelman. Unless, as some have suggested, it wasn't PC Smith, but then if she immediately went out and the footsteps were not PC Smith, she would have realised her error and said she saw a man walking along Berner, which she didn't. So she couldn't have gone out immediately in the literal sense, but rather it was the next thing she did although it was technically shortly after hearing the footsteps. And that is what I suggested, which means there's a bit of time for PC Smith to see Stride and Parcelman, and for them to move to somewhere she does not see them. Wickerman suggests they move into the ally by the club, so out of her sight, I suggested they moved south to Fairclough. But clearly, Stride and Parcelman move from where PC Smith sees them to some location Fanny cannot in the time between PC Smith passing her house and her coming out.
Clearly, if the reporter was aware that PC Smith had seen Stride, he would know her body could not yet be in the yard. But being incomplete on that doesn't matter since it's the bits that Fanny tells him that matters at the moment, and she tells him she went out after hearing the footsteps of a PC, and that Stride wasn't in view when she did so. That tells us there was a delay, sufficient for Stride to vacate the location PC Smith saw her, before Fanny comes out.
It's hard enough dealing with statement made by a witness after they've come through the editing of a reporter. Now we have a reporter presenting what someone said someone else told them ... Basically, all this tells us really is that at some point before 1:00 Charles' sister may have stood at her door for some unknown amount of time, and he says she didn't see anyone. You'll forgive me I hope if I don't carve that 12:50 into stone.
There is another risk I believe we are all taking with this report. Do we know for a fact that the subject of the report is Fanny Mortimer?
The consensus at this forum seems to be that this rather dubious report, in which Fanny is not quoted or named, should be preferred to a direct quote from the witness. I find that odd, to say the least.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
In previous discussions you have expressed your disapproval when stated times aren’t stuck to.
On your second point, it was me that talked about ‘Smith time’ and ‘Diemschitz time’ not necessarily being aligned (applying to all stated times). We can’t assume that they used the same clock. Why is it that you keep talking about 35 minutes? From his own words we get that his beat took 25 or 30 minutes. (Let’s pick 30 for the sake of this discussion) Also from his own words he said that he passed at around 12.30-12.35. (Let’s pick 12.35 for the sake of this discussion)
So he passes at 12.35…walks for 30 minutes…and arrives back at 1.05. And as we can’t know which clock Smith set his time by it’s absolutely possible that he believed that it was nearer to 1.00 than 1.05. He might even have thought that it was just after 1.00 but he simply rounded it back to 1.00 feeling that a couple of minutes hear or there would make no difference.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Isn't that the majority view, that Pipeman came out from the doorway?
It's just laughable.
It can't be absurd, when Schwartz reached the east side then the doorway of the Nelson pub is now opposite, so any man stepping out from there is 'opposite' to Schwartz.
...feeling rather timid of getting mixed up in quarrels, 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,...
The majority view is the convenient view, but it ignores the fact that as Schwartz steps of the kerb, the Nelson is not a few doors off.
You likely meant 'doesn't', but which correspondence do you mean?
https://www.casebook.org/dissertatio...0proper%20name.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by Sunny Delight View Post
To be fair the first one is ambiguous but I think the press report- as problematic as they can be- helps clear up that Pipeman came out of the Nelson. Therefore he was on the same side as Stride and BS man.
Why do you suppose this man would have seen Schwartz as an intruder on activity at the gateway, and lunged at him with a knife, or a pipe, or any implement you care to name?Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
That is the way it is worded, but those are not the words of Schwartz. The reporter has structured the sentence, possibly based on Schwartz being told he was in Berner St. because that is where the body was found, and he had seen a woman assaulted in a street, on his way home.
Schwartz couldn't read street signs as they were in English.
It may be a case of the interviewee and the interviewer feeding off each other.
Schwartz saw a woman assaulted at the entrance to an alley, in some badly lit street as he was rushing home.
Schwartz later learns the body of a woman is found dead in an alley, in Berner St.
Therefore, Schwartz assumes he was in Berner St., that the assault he witnessed was the prelude to a murder.
Schwartz only thinks he was in Berner St. because that is where everyone says the body was found.
Thats a pretty poor example, the Board School has replaced 9 addresses (25-41) on the east side, c/w No.23 just before Hampshire Court. That is roughly 140 ft, as opposed to 3 doors = approx. 45 feet on the west side.
A few doors off refers to the distance from Dutfields yard to the doorway of the Nelson, 3 doors away.
In the police account, Schwartz is unsure if the two men are known to each other. In the press account, the second man is shouting a warning to the man with the woman, seemingly in regard to the presence of the 'intruder'. That could make sense if the second man was out on the street, not if he is coming out of the Nelson doorway, in which case he would have no idea what was or had been going on.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post
Except Eagles route back to Berner Street wouldn't have taken him past Mortimer's house.
There is of course a scenario whereby Parcelman waits for Eagle to go back inside the club at 12.40am and then gestures Stride into the yard. He then cuts her throat and then leaves heading NORTH directly past Mortimer's house.
On the hand, Parcelman's whereabouts after Smith, is in need of explanation, and "he conveniently went away so Stride could go stand in the gateway" is not an explanation I take seriously.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
I'd say that even if my #1 is a reasonable possibility, it's the least likely of the 4 possibilities that I gave, so I won't I won't challenge that.
If Letchford passed through at about 12:30, the Schwartz incident could have happened after that but before PC Smith passed through, as Letchford could have been there at 12:25 or even a couple of minutes earlier, and Smith might have passed through as late as 12:40. Or Letchford was really there at 12:35 and the Schwartz incident happened before that.
I think that Eagle could have been BS man, but the fact that Eagle seems to be there at about the time that BS man might have been there isn't surprising. The Schwartz incident could have happened at any time prior to almost 1:00, so anyone who was in the area before that has a potential overlap with it.
Goldstein crossed while Fanny was at her door, and under this scenario, Fanny closed her door before the Schwartz incident. The 2 events could have occurred as little as 2 minutes apart, or as much as about 12 minutes apart.
I can't get 12 minutes to fit with that quote. In the case of 2 minutes, there was a discussion a few pages back regarding what the extent of blood flow at time of the discovery suggested about the time of the murder. Interested to hear your thoughts on that.
As an aside, do Mortimer's words suggest the previous row at the club occurred outside, not inside the club? If yes, I wonder if that has anything to do with the front door being locked.
I don't completely understand your 2nd paragraph, in particular what "both" refers to, but I will say that Swanson putting Goldstein there at about 1:00 must be a broad approximation, because he can't have thought that Goldstein passed at the same time that Diemschutz arrived. And most things can be in sync with Mortimer's times, depending on which Mortimer times one uses.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
Really?
These people were not spotted by Letchford, his sister, Lave, Eagle or Brown, and they were collectively on the street, it would seem, for a fairly brief period and those periods overlap.
Or are you suggesting that PC Smith was never there, and so Stride and Parcelman were never there either? If Stride was never there, how did she end up there?
Why I am being told that the no one witnessed what Schwartz did because the event was so short in time, but Fanny's nearly the whole time claim must be dismissed because she missed a few minutes of that half hour?
But, let's go with your idea that Fanny was out on multiple occasions, and that means there are periods of time when she's inside. Given the Schwartz event, including Stride arriving on the scene and presumably getting murdered, could all be done in the space of about 3 or 4 minutes, then she missed it because she must have been inside at that time. You're saying she was inside for some of it, so things that she didn't see must have happened while she was inside. Where's the problem?
I don't agree she indicates she was only out once. Going to her unbolted door at a certain point does not preclude her having been there earlier. Furthermore, why would she tell one reporter a story that contradicted what she told another? I'm not sure what you mean about seeing the murder, which was not possible from her location.
And I didn't say she told one reporter something that contradicted the other, I suggested that how she phrased it on one occasion may have been misinterpreted by one reporter, making the news reports contradictory. What I was trying to do was see if there is a reasonable way one might speak where the intention of the speaker is consistent, but that could lead to one reporter drawing a different conclusion as to what he meant than the other (i.e. the reporter may have misinterpreted her meaning).
For example, let's say I was outside from 10:42 to 10:47. During a conversation, if someone asked me "did you go outside" I might reply "yes, I was out between 10:30 and 11:00" if at the time I didn't spend too much time trying to recall the exact details (but during a second conversation with someone else, I happen to be more precise and say I was out for around 7 or 8 minutes around 10:40ish; because I can't recall the exact duration, but recall it was around 10:40ish when I went out).
The first person will likely interpret my less than precise conversational language as indicating I was out for the entire 30 minutes, while the 2nd person has a better (but not 100% accurate) idea of what I did.
So those two people, when then describing what I said I did will describe conflicting situations, but it wasn't me who intended to say different things, rather it comes down to differences in the precision with which I responded to their questions, with the first version lacking sufficient detail.
Now I don't know that's what happened, obviously, but that sort of thing happens quite a bit, which is why when police interview witnesses they go over the same things a lot to ensure they are getting a clear picture of a person's statement and none of the important details are getting confused due to poor or imprecise wording. News reporters don't do that as they just want a statement and to file a report, they don't want to spend ages going over all the subtle nuances of language.
Notice as well, your interpretation that the "nearly the whole time" means in and out on multiple occasions is different from my interpretation of that phrase to mean "for most of the time between 12:30 and 1:00". This is what I'm getting at - what the reporter intended that phrase to mean, and what we think it means, are different. And that sort of "intended and interpreted" difference could very well have happened when the reporter was speaking with Fanny in the first place.
So, "immediately" is incorrect. Why then, should we have confidence that this report faithfully represents what Fanny said?
But setting that aside, why then do you think the "nearly the whole time" news article should have confidence placed in it over and above the other? Are you suggesting we toss out both news reports and that we should not have confidence in either? If so, doesn't that mean we've throw out Fanny (and all witnesses in fact) entirely?
Hence why Fanny did not see the murder?
I don't mind if you're happy to take the risk that the Schwartz stuff occurred when Letchford said his sister was at her doorstep.
However, given you are suggesting we should lack confidence in the news reports when the person themselves speaks directly to the reporter, why are you sufficiently confident in what Letchford's sister did given that information isn't just going through the filter of a reporter but also through another filter - her brother! Shouldn't we be even more wary of that statement? Also, as you've pointed out before, "PC Smith time" and "Deimshitz Time" are not the same thing, so doesn't that also apply to "Letchford Time" and "Schwartz Time"? Are those two 12:50s really the same time?
There is another risk I believe we are all taking with this report. Do we know for a fact that the subject of the report is Fanny Mortimer?
The consensus at this forum seems to be that this rather dubious report, in which Fanny is not quoted or named, should be preferred to a direct quote from the witness. I find that odd, to say the least.
But if that's sufficient to warrant setting something aside, we have no witnesses left.
Anyway, we clearly approach things from different perspectives, and I think we've both outlined our views clearly, which is the point of discussions after all.
- Jeff
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The variations of relative timings stated by each alleged witness is one area that is of course important to consider.
However, it's the Chronological timeline of events that is paramount.
Unless the correct sequence can be determined, then the attempt to understand the relative timings given by each individual becomes rather defunct.
"Great minds, don't think alike"
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
Rubbish. As almost all witnesses give estimated times by their own admission, why would I disapprove of someone not sticking to stated times?
You want to use your own estimate of when Smith returned and ignore what he himself said. It's ludicrous.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post...I doubt that Schwartz, translator or journalist could have cared less about the technical distinction between replaced addresses and actual doors from the white dot (Schwartz's location) to the entrance to Hampshire Court...
What has that to do with a passage nearly 150ft away?
It is neither a few doors off, nor even a doorway - the pub doorway in your case is over in Batty Street.
In the police account, Schwartz is unsure if the two men are known to each other. In the press account, the second man is shouting a warning to the man with the woman, seemingly in regard to the presence of the 'intruder'. That could make sense if the second man was out on the street, not if he is coming out of the Nelson doorway, in which case he would have no idea what was or had been going on.
Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
What I want to do is to avoid silly conspiracy theories. There was no cover-up, plot, conspiracy or subterfuge in Berner Street. Neither the Illuminati nor the Freemason’s were sneaking around. Stride wasn’t killed by a bloke that emerged from a drain or who was disguised as a Diemschitz horse. What happened was obvious….all else is nonsense.
I noticed two sailors. The shorter one was speaking to the deceased, and the tall one was walking up and down. So strange did it seem that I stopped and 'took account' of them. Then I heard the woman say several times 'No! no! no!' and the short sailor spoke in a low tone. The tall one was about 5 ft. 11 in. He looked like a Yankee. The shorter one was about 5 ft. 7 in. It struck me that they were there for no good purpose, and that was the reason I took so much notice of their movements.
Mylett was last seen outside The George, in Commercial Rd. about 2:30 am on 20th Dec. - were they BS-man & Pipeman?Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
One of the reasons I have a little doubt whether Stride was a Ripper victim, is the basic similarity between BS-man (short, chatty, active) & Pipeman (tall, quiet, loitering), with the two men last seen with Rose Mylett in December. The witness described them as:
I noticed two sailors. The shorter one was speaking to the deceased, and the tall one was walking up and down. So strange did it seem that I stopped and 'took account' of them. Then I heard the woman say several times 'No! no! no!' and the short sailor spoke in a low tone. The tall one was about 5 ft. 11 in. He looked like a Yankee. The shorter one was about 5 ft. 7 in. It struck me that they were there for no good purpose, and that was the reason I took so much notice of their movements.
Mylett was last seen outside The George, in Commercial Rd. about 2:30 am on 20th Dec. - were they BS-man & Pipeman?
"Great minds, don't think alike"
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