Hi Caz,
Well, it certainly doesn't rule out that picture or render it implausible or unlikely. I'm not insisting that it happened the way I've described, but the overconfident dismissal of such a possibility is simply not warrented given known behaviour of other serial killers. I didn't say I could link Hutchinson directly to any other crime scenes. Which suspects meet that criteria?
Yes, but if that led to other witnesses from previous murders being reintroduced to look him over and a link being established as a consequence, he'd be in serious trouble. He wasn't to know at that stage that only one witness was being used, apparently, in identity efforts, but the fear would have existed all the same if he was involved in the murders.
Whatever it was, it wasn't the "flash" you were suggesting earlier, and this is borne out by his attempt to drag her into a van. If it was a "flash", shw wouldn't have acquired the "detailed" description she did.
She probably did.
How do you know he had no "pressing need". For all you know, he may have been agitated by the recent tactic of witness suppressions, and felt compelled to explain his presence as a witness before he got dragged in as a suspect. I've told you before that Hutchinson may well have feared something that we, with hinsight, know to be without foundation; hindsight that wasn't available to Hutchinson in the wake of the murder.
And again, it needn't have been all about self-presevation. It could have been bravado (the same bravado that prompts some of them to wrote letters), the spreading a false leads, a desire to keep abrest of police progress.
But what's wrong with Hutchinson taking steps to "insure himself against any unwanted attention"? There's no appreciable difference between your scenario and mine. I just cut out the middle man and have Hutchinson looking out for himself, not an imaginary second party.
Best regards,
Ben
the ‘reality’ does not paint a picture of Hutch going to the police to save his neck if he believes they may have the means of placing him at more than one crime scene.
The very best description in the world from Lewis could only have put Hutch where she claimed he was and at the time she claimed she saw him
Blimey, I never knew you could read so much into it without actually being there. Now it has become a 'scuffle', during which the 13 year-old girl only thought to scream when she had already tried and failed to fend off this 5ft 10-11 man more than twice her age.
If she remembered all those other details of the incident, you'd think she would have remembered more about her own reactions in her bid for self-preservation
I just don't believe the most obvious method would have been to put himself at the mercy of a frustrated police force after the most horrific murder to date and admit that he had lurked in the court for that long, especially if he had no pressing need to do so.
And again, it needn't have been all about self-presevation. It could have been bravado (the same bravado that prompts some of them to wrote letters), the spreading a false leads, a desire to keep abrest of police progress.
So if the killer had some and a man in Hutch's position needed some, and the former wanted to insure himself against any unwanted attention
Best regards,
Ben
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