Originally posted by JeffHamm
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I personally believe the issue relates to the grammar used.
I believe the statement was meant to read like this...
"If Schwartz is to be believed; and the police report of his statement casts no doubt upon it"...
So the wording is exactly the same, but the difference is the use of a semicolon instead of a comma.
If one reads the statement with a semicolon, the context becomes clear and there's no need to add or change the wording.
With a semicolon, it indicates that the writer is clarifying that the police statement casts no doubt upon the authenticity of Schwartz's account, but that they themselves have a doubt because they begin by using the word "If"
It's a way of appearing to keep an open mind, but also using subtle psychology to indicate that there is a doubt about Schwartz despite the initial police report having no doubt.
A nice way of laying a seed of doubt.
This to me sounds as though the police began by believing Schwartz, and they had no doubt he was telling the truth...but then something changed and the use of the word "If" is perhaps the seed that highlights that doubt and change.
We know that ultimately Schwartz never appeared at the inquest, for whatever reason.
The wording of the phrase "If Schwartz is to be believed..." is also interesting because the word "believed" indicates there's a question concerning the truth of Schwartz's statement.
Rather than say...
"If Schwartz is accurate..."
or
"If Schwartz is correct..."
These would then indicate a question over Schwartz's accuracy of what occurred; ergo, it wouldn't be a question of believing or truth, but rather a question of interpretation.
But because the phrase " If Schwartz is to be believed..."
The combination of the words "If" and "believed" at the beginning and end of the first sentence prior to any other grammar, is suggestive that the person who wrote the phrase did not believe Schwartz was telling the truth, reagrdless of the police report that did believe him in the first instance.
I think that after the initial statement and report on Schwartz, things then slowly began to unravel for Schwartz.
The phrase "If Schwartz is to be believed..." was a nail in the coffin.
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