Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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I have read something similar before about Swanson: he was not writing a formal report.
Anderson, Swanson, Macnaghten and Du Rose never mentioned any incriminating evidence against their respective suspects.
No-one ever stopped them from doing so.
Indeed, in Anderson's case, he was invited to do so.
Anderson and Du Rose were writing memoirs.
It was they who made the claims; it was their decisions.
They could have mentioned evidence without even naming the suspect.
Macnaghten could have too.
They always mentioned something less than actual incriminating evidence and took quite a few lines to mention it, when in the same space they could have mentioned something actually incriminating.
It was not through choice that they failed to mention it.
There was no incriminating evidence.
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