Jonathan
What I said was that if your assessment of Macnaghten was true - that he had deliberately misled his colleagues (not just Anderson) about the identity of the lead suspect in the most high profile unsolved murder case in the history of the Metropolitan Police, (and he could not be sure that Druitt was the actually definitively guilty) and had been prepared to mislead the Government by including Ostrog in his list - then he was appalling.
That is the only conclusion anyone could come to.
But I don't accept that he deliberately misled his colleagues or that he was prepared to mislead the Government - so I don't think he was appalling.
I think Macnaghten was vain and a bit silly. That has no real bearing on how polite and accommodating he was with junior colleagues such as Wensley the Weasel.
What I said was that if your assessment of Macnaghten was true - that he had deliberately misled his colleagues (not just Anderson) about the identity of the lead suspect in the most high profile unsolved murder case in the history of the Metropolitan Police, (and he could not be sure that Druitt was the actually definitively guilty) and had been prepared to mislead the Government by including Ostrog in his list - then he was appalling.
That is the only conclusion anyone could come to.
But I don't accept that he deliberately misled his colleagues or that he was prepared to mislead the Government - so I don't think he was appalling.
I think Macnaghten was vain and a bit silly. That has no real bearing on how polite and accommodating he was with junior colleagues such as Wensley the Weasel.
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