Originally posted by Fisherman
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And on that point, you were gainsaid by An ex-murder squad leader, who phrased it "certainly, he couldn´t have run away, having realized that there was somebody else in the street".
That there was someone else in the street a distance away and out of sight. Even if Paul had heard CL walking or even running away he couldn’t have connected this action to anything criminal until he’d arrived at the scene, found the body and decided that Nichols was dead. By which time CL would have been gone.
Regardless if he was correct or if you are, calling his deduction idiotic, it applies that there can be no doubt that this can be looked upon in a very different manner from the one you suggest.
As can any aspect of the case.
There is also another aspect to consider in this matter: If Lechmere, predisposing that he was the killer, had subdued Nichols and cut her very severely in the abdomen and in the neck, then if he decided - as I suggest - to bluff it out, then he would need to cover up the wounds so that Paul could not see what had happened. He would also need not to move the body, since that would give away that had happened.
Without taking these precautions, he could not pull the bluff of.
What bluff is this? He called Paul over to inspect the body. He might reasonably assume that Paul might check her pulse and discover that she was dead. What if Paul had tried to check the pulse in her neck.....leading to him finding that her throat had been cut? Can we seriously believe that CL deliberately called someone over to view a corpse whilst at the same time pretending that it wasn’t a corpse?!
Don´t you think it is very odd that this is perfectly in line with the evidence? The wounds WERE covered up by the clothing and when Paul suggested that they should prop the body up, Lechmere simply refused.
Did he cover the throat wounds?
I know EXTREMELY well tat you can offer innocent alternative explanations. As always.
When someone is overwhelmingly likely to be innocent....yes we can.
But the fact must go before the fiction here, and the facts tell us that the precautions Lechmere would have needed to take were in place - covered up wounds and a refusal to move the body.
If is is coincidences, it is coincidences that are in line with what I suggest.
Nope. Because you’ve invented a requirement to pretend that the corpse wasn’t a corpse you can make things ‘fit.’
On the whole, far from thinking that I need to agree with you on this point - and what you asked was whether there was one single point that gave me reason to doubt that Lechmere was the killer - I find there is every reason not to do so.
You have as much right to be wrong as anyone Fish.
It does not mean that I rule out that Lechmere´s pshychological disposition was one that would have urged him to leg it, but I do know that psychopathic killers will not panic, like to play games and are very apt liars. And more than ninety per cent of serial killers are psychopaths, so it pans out in this discipline too.
Play games...yes. Insinuate themselves into investigations....yes. Enjoy the thrill....yes. Put themselves in a position where they would certainly have to face the police in possession of the murder weapon and possibly with the victims blood on them....no.
I thnk we are all at risk to reason that the killer would have done this or that, and then we lean against how we think we would have done ourselves. But as long as we are not psychopathic serial killers ourselves, we really do not reason in the way they do.
Even psychopaths have intelligence. If they wish to continue having their ‘fun’ then they need to remain at large.
So if this is your strongest point against Lechmere being the killer, I must say that I consider it a very weak point instead, and no reason whatsoever for me to reconsider.
And yet you can go to any lengths to create mysterious scenarios and scams to counteract something that CL would have been unlikely in the extreme to do in the first place. Something that anyone at the time with even the barest modicum of intelligence would have seen would have placed him in a position that he probably wouldn’t have been able to get out of alive.
Consider - yes, already done. Reconsider - no.
I never expected you to reconsider. You’ve come too far for that!
That there was someone else in the street a distance away and out of sight. Even if Paul had heard CL walking or even running away he couldn’t have connected this action to anything criminal until he’d arrived at the scene, found the body and decided that Nichols was dead. By which time CL would have been gone.
Regardless if he was correct or if you are, calling his deduction idiotic, it applies that there can be no doubt that this can be looked upon in a very different manner from the one you suggest.
As can any aspect of the case.
There is also another aspect to consider in this matter: If Lechmere, predisposing that he was the killer, had subdued Nichols and cut her very severely in the abdomen and in the neck, then if he decided - as I suggest - to bluff it out, then he would need to cover up the wounds so that Paul could not see what had happened. He would also need not to move the body, since that would give away that had happened.
Without taking these precautions, he could not pull the bluff of.
What bluff is this? He called Paul over to inspect the body. He might reasonably assume that Paul might check her pulse and discover that she was dead. What if Paul had tried to check the pulse in her neck.....leading to him finding that her throat had been cut? Can we seriously believe that CL deliberately called someone over to view a corpse whilst at the same time pretending that it wasn’t a corpse?!
Don´t you think it is very odd that this is perfectly in line with the evidence? The wounds WERE covered up by the clothing and when Paul suggested that they should prop the body up, Lechmere simply refused.
Did he cover the throat wounds?
I know EXTREMELY well tat you can offer innocent alternative explanations. As always.
When someone is overwhelmingly likely to be innocent....yes we can.
But the fact must go before the fiction here, and the facts tell us that the precautions Lechmere would have needed to take were in place - covered up wounds and a refusal to move the body.
If is is coincidences, it is coincidences that are in line with what I suggest.
Nope. Because you’ve invented a requirement to pretend that the corpse wasn’t a corpse you can make things ‘fit.’
On the whole, far from thinking that I need to agree with you on this point - and what you asked was whether there was one single point that gave me reason to doubt that Lechmere was the killer - I find there is every reason not to do so.
You have as much right to be wrong as anyone Fish.
It does not mean that I rule out that Lechmere´s pshychological disposition was one that would have urged him to leg it, but I do know that psychopathic killers will not panic, like to play games and are very apt liars. And more than ninety per cent of serial killers are psychopaths, so it pans out in this discipline too.
Play games...yes. Insinuate themselves into investigations....yes. Enjoy the thrill....yes. Put themselves in a position where they would certainly have to face the police in possession of the murder weapon and possibly with the victims blood on them....no.
I thnk we are all at risk to reason that the killer would have done this or that, and then we lean against how we think we would have done ourselves. But as long as we are not psychopathic serial killers ourselves, we really do not reason in the way they do.
Even psychopaths have intelligence. If they wish to continue having their ‘fun’ then they need to remain at large.
So if this is your strongest point against Lechmere being the killer, I must say that I consider it a very weak point instead, and no reason whatsoever for me to reconsider.
And yet you can go to any lengths to create mysterious scenarios and scams to counteract something that CL would have been unlikely in the extreme to do in the first place. Something that anyone at the time with even the barest modicum of intelligence would have seen would have placed him in a position that he probably wouldn’t have been able to get out of alive.
Consider - yes, already done. Reconsider - no.
I never expected you to reconsider. You’ve come too far for that!
It is unlikely in the extreme that a guilty CL would have acted so suicidally stupidly!
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