I’m aware of course that continuing this ‘alibi’ discussion is pointless. I’d suggest that everyone, no matter how they feel about Druitt as a suspect, can understand the point and it’s why not one single person has stepped up to say “yes I agree that Druitt had an alibi.”
Druitt obviously and very clearly has no alibi with the evidence as it stands at the moment. Repeatedly mentioning Abberline is also pointless and just requires this repetition - he had retired and wasn’t in London at the time and we have no evidence at all that he was still ‘in the loop’ in any way.
The suggestion that some alibi ‘might’ have existed is the same as the old saying “and if my auntie had b***s then she’d have been my uncle.” I think that Lechmere is among the weakest of suspects but imagine the response from those that favour Lechmere if I’d tried: “ok, we have no evidence that he had an alibi but he might have had one that we don’t know about so we can say that he had an alibi and dismiss him.”
What if Druitt’s friends had been questioned? Could a question be more pointless? What if Lechmere’s friends and family had been questioned? Someone might have given him an alibi. Or someone might have said that he hated prostitutes and came home one night with blood on him claiming to have been in a fight. How much time should we waste on this kind of fanciful stuff? It gets us nowhere.
We know that Druitt was in Dorset during the day on the 30th and we know that he was in Dorset at some point in the day on the 31st. That’s all that we know. The likeliness or unlikeliness is down to individual opinion but I think we should be a little wary here. I’ve speculated that he might have had some pre-arranged work-based meeting in London, or he might have had some kind of Blackheath Club meeting (we know that he was treasurer and wanted the club to purchase some land so he could have had business related to this) I’m speculating of course but a Barrister having a meeting in London is hardly the stuff of science fiction. But more importantly when we are investigating whether a person was or wasn’t a serial killer we have to consider that their thought processes might not align with those of the rest of us. To claim that we might know the thought processes of such a person isn’t believable.
I don’t think that it’s outrageous to request proof for an assertion. The false assertion is that Druitt had an alibi. So…..
Could we see evidence please. This would include the time that the game started and ended. The travel from cricket ground to station. The train times. The times to get from station to Bucks Row etc.
If an ‘alibi’ cannot be established evidentially it’s about useful as a pool table on a yacht. Druitt’s suggested alibi is entirely mythical as everyone but one person can see apparently.
Druitt obviously and very clearly has no alibi with the evidence as it stands at the moment. Repeatedly mentioning Abberline is also pointless and just requires this repetition - he had retired and wasn’t in London at the time and we have no evidence at all that he was still ‘in the loop’ in any way.
The suggestion that some alibi ‘might’ have existed is the same as the old saying “and if my auntie had b***s then she’d have been my uncle.” I think that Lechmere is among the weakest of suspects but imagine the response from those that favour Lechmere if I’d tried: “ok, we have no evidence that he had an alibi but he might have had one that we don’t know about so we can say that he had an alibi and dismiss him.”
What if Druitt’s friends had been questioned? Could a question be more pointless? What if Lechmere’s friends and family had been questioned? Someone might have given him an alibi. Or someone might have said that he hated prostitutes and came home one night with blood on him claiming to have been in a fight. How much time should we waste on this kind of fanciful stuff? It gets us nowhere.
We know that Druitt was in Dorset during the day on the 30th and we know that he was in Dorset at some point in the day on the 31st. That’s all that we know. The likeliness or unlikeliness is down to individual opinion but I think we should be a little wary here. I’ve speculated that he might have had some pre-arranged work-based meeting in London, or he might have had some kind of Blackheath Club meeting (we know that he was treasurer and wanted the club to purchase some land so he could have had business related to this) I’m speculating of course but a Barrister having a meeting in London is hardly the stuff of science fiction. But more importantly when we are investigating whether a person was or wasn’t a serial killer we have to consider that their thought processes might not align with those of the rest of us. To claim that we might know the thought processes of such a person isn’t believable.
I don’t think that it’s outrageous to request proof for an assertion. The false assertion is that Druitt had an alibi. So…..
Could we see evidence please. This would include the time that the game started and ended. The travel from cricket ground to station. The train times. The times to get from station to Bucks Row etc.
If an ‘alibi’ cannot be established evidentially it’s about useful as a pool table on a yacht. Druitt’s suggested alibi is entirely mythical as everyone but one person can see apparently.
Comment