Originally posted by Phil H
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Did Astrakhan Man exist?
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Actually...
Following on from Phil's point regarding the morning spats; I wonder if Hutchinson really did see 'Astrakhan' on the Sunday morning - who subsequently formed the basis for Hutchinson's account (if false)?
No evidence whatsoever, of course - just a bit of wild speculation! But an interesting thought..Last edited by Sally; 05-13-2011, 06:28 PM.
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Hi
As I have always said, Astracan was dressed for morning wear hense my belief that he was prepeared to venture to the lord mayors show the following morning, or was he?
Did he pre arrange to escort kelly to the event , who according to witnesses wanted to go?.
Was this pretense intended to gain Marys trust..? and the outfit went with the deceit?
Was the laughter that Hutchinson heard, be the result of the fancy gear he was wearing?,
Regards Richard.
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Originally posted by Ben View Post....
To my mind, there can be little doubt that Hutchinson was the man seen by Lewis, and that it was her evidence that prompted him to come forward and “legitimize” his presence near a crime scene at a time relevant to the murder....
By what mechanism?
I know we've agonised over when the Kelly Inquest was concluded, early afternoon, tea/suppertime?
Hutchinson walked into Commercial St. police station by 5:00pm ish, because he was giving his statement by 6:00pm.
No papers had gone to press inbetween this time. Besides, I can't see this class of people buying newspapers, was all they could do to scrape up a few pennies for a doss, bread & booze.
No-one came running from the inquest to find Hutch, "hey mate, you bin seen"!
We have no evidence anyone else knew Hutchinson's story, so whoever Lewis saw the description was not detailed enough to finger anyone, let alone Hutchinson.
Or, are you suggesting Hutch was actually at the inquest?, he just ommitted to tell the police.
Hutchinson gave his statement to Abberline, who just happened to have been at the Inquest.
So by which mechanism?
Regards, Jon S.Regards, Jon S.
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Hi Jon,
Hutchinson’s appearance at the police station so soon after the termination of the inquest cannot have been random coincidence. He could have come forward at any time between the murder being discovered and the termination of the inquest, but he chose to come forward just after the inquest came to an end - just after it was publicly divulged that Sarah Lewis had seen a man “waiting for someone to come out” of Miller’s Court, “coincidentally” tying in perfectly with his account of his own behaviour and location at that time.
This non-coincidence tells us that he learned of Lewis’ evidence through some channel. He wouldn’t have needed to absorb Lewis’ testimony in any great detail. It could have resulted from word of mouth – the type that allowed details of Leather Apron and John Pizer to spread like wildfire. In addition, there were reportedly crowds in Shoreditch that threatened to overwhelm the coroner’s office, and it could simply have been a case of Hutchinson noting that Sarah Lewis was one of the witnesses about to give evidence. But the sheer implausibility of the “random coincidence” explanation should be sufficient to nullify the suggestion that he did not learn of her evidence before he contacted the police.
All the best,
Ben
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Originally posted by Sally View PostOr that he was suspicious of Astrakhan, but not that he was the murderer! Hutchinson's account is contradictory - on the one hand, he attests that he was suspicious of Astrakhan; on the other hand, he wasn't suspicious that Astrakhan was the murderer; but on the other hand, he was apparently suspicious enough to hang around for the best part of an hour waiting to see if he came out of Kelly's room; but then again, he wasn't suspicious enough to report his suspicions to the police. Until Sunday of course. Which was well after the fact of his alleged long time mate Mary Kelly being murdered and eviscerated.
I don't believe Astrakhan existed. I think he was an invention by Hutchinson, for Hutchinson. As to why that was, I think it's very hard to reach a conclusion.
Personally, I see nothing indicative that Hutchinson was suffering from a mental disorder. Equally, if he'd been an attention-seeker or profiteer, his position would have been very much enhanced had he come forward earlier and appeared before the Kelly inquest hearing. This leaves us with Hutchinson attempting to throw suspicion on to Astrakhan as a means of drawing attention away from his own movements on the night under scrutiny. And try as I might, I can see no persuasive alternative to such a conclusion.
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Personally, I see nothing indicative that Hutchinson was suffering from a mental disorder.
However, if Hutchinson invented A Man to deflect suspicion from himself, then the inference is that he killed Mary Kelly. Since I think that the man who killed Kelly also killed at least the other women in the C5, that makes him the Ripper. The Ripper must have suffered from a mental disorder -we don't really know what form this took, only how it manifested itself.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostA policeman is a policeman, Frank, and as such, I fail to see why approaching such a man and giving the story would not count? The opportunity may even have presented itself as some sort of "inbetween solution" if he felt intimidated by the thought of going to the authorities and placing himself in Dorset street on the morning of the murder.
What I really wouldn’t get is that the policeman in question did nothing with what GH told him. As I’ve said, I don’t believe that at that stage of the case, with the pressure on the police to solve the case and with the latest and most gruesome murder in the series just behind them, any PC would fail to do anything with GH and his account. In light of the fact that on Saturday the date and time for the inquest were fixed for Monday, this would make it even harder to believe. Yet, this is what GH’s account suggests.As for your point that Hutchinson made it his business to remember all details in order to be able to supply the police with an elaborate description, I of course see the relevance in it - but I am not at all sure that this was his purpose.
Nor am I sure that he did put very much of an effort into it. Some people master the art of remembering details better than others, quite simply, and establishing either of these propositions of yours as given truths is something I would not do.
BTW, the fact that he gave an elaborate description of Mr. A. isn’t necessarily the reason why I believe he didn’t tell the truth and nothing but the truth. One of the little things that make me to believe this is that, even though Mr. A. had his had hat somewhat over his eyes and GH looking him in the face and towards the light of the lamp, he was still able to see that Mr. A. had bushy eye brows.Presented that way, yes, there are odd elements involved. But there are also a lot of holes involved. At the end of the day, the possibility remains that he did contact that policeman, and whatever steps he in his turn took is something that we do not have on record. There is no way near enough information accessible to make any call of a lie on Hutchinson´s behalf, and we must add to this that even if the Sunday morning PC story was a fabrication, then that fabrication may have come about as the result of a wish on Hutchinsons behalf to retrospectively somewhat shape up on his late arrival to the police station.
But people DO turn back every now and then. They DO lean on lampposts and they ARE sometimes passed by other people at close range. I see nothing strange with that.The convenience lies in the ammunition it provides those who say that Hutchinson MUST have been the loiterer with! What could be more convenient to make this identification? It jumps at us, and yells "OBVIOUS!"The most impressive feat on Lewis´behalf is that although we can be pretty damn sure that she saw the man just for a very brief moment (as implied by the fact that she asserted the police that she could not describe him), we still have people thinking that her testimony points to a man that stood around watching the court the way Hutch said he did.
After all, he was on the south side of Dorset Street, while she was on the north side and she walked towards him. She apparently had no reason to take special interest in him and it was dark, so wouldn’t be able to describe a whole lot about what he looked like, but behaviour, posture, movement and such is easier to remember. And apparently the man’s posture and gaze caused her to depose that her man was looking up the court as if waiting for someone to come out, without being able to tell more about his appearance than that he was not tall, but stout and wearing a wideawake hat. Why she didn't give these 3 features in her police statement, I don't know - we can only speculate, but I don't find it a 'roaring' discrepancy that should raise suspicions.It is somehow accepted that the loiterer spent a longish time doing this, whereas the truth of the matter is that Lewis testimony only places him there for the briefest of times, perhaps only for a second or two. If she had observed him for any more prolonged period of time, then she would reasonably not have told the police that she could not describe a single thing about him!
But that doesn’t matter. The fact is that what she stated she saw of ‘her man’ fits with Hutchinson’s account.The major mistake lies in the fact that the police would immediately know that something was wrong if they spotted the omission.And Hutchinson did more than ommitt seeing Lewis - he told the press that the only persons he saw was a lodger and a PC. And THAT was decidedly daft if he was hoping to be accepted as telling the truth.I am very seriously suggesting that Sarah Lewis was not a very truthful witness. I am suggesting that she was a teller of tall tales and a woman who succumbed to her wish for fifteen minutes in the limelight. I hope you see what I mean now, Frank!Which is why I like you so much. Let me assure you that much as I challenge YOUR views, I think they are perfectly viable and expressed in a very correct manner!
All the best, Christer!
Frank"You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"
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Originally posted by Ben View PostI agree with your reasoning 100%, Frank.
To my mind, there can be little doubt that Hutchinson was the man seen by Lewis, and that it was her evidence that prompted him to come forward and “legitimize” his presence near a crime scene at a time relevant to the murder. I certainly share your suspicion that Hutchinson deliberately avoided any mention of Lewis in order to delay or prevent the police revelation that he only came forward in response to her evidence. It appears to have paid off, as you say, as there's no evidence that the Lewis-Hutchinson connection was ever established.
All the best,
Frank"You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"
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Originally posted by Rubyretro View PostHowever, if Hutchinson invented A Man to deflect suspicion from himself, then the inference is that he killed Mary Kelly.
All the best,
Frank"You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"
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Hutchinson
Humbly imposing my opinion here - the Daily News report (long one, not short one) of 14th november does contain some interesting details.
One (sorry Fisherman) detail is that the man was wearing spats - used to protect the shoes and therefore inferring that the night was a rainy one.
However, the most interesting point for me is that he states that while he was standing there a policeman passed the end of Dorset street and not one came down Dorset street. This is something the police could check for veracity.
He says that he told a policeman what he had seen but did not go to the police station and that he then told someone at the lodging house who advised him to go to the police station. This would be in character for a man who did not rush into things, but would think things through carefully before acting.
Greetings,
C4
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Hi Curious4,
I agree with your impression of Hutchinson as a person who “did not rush into things, but would think things through carefully before acting”, and I think this personality trait is suggested by his decision to invent the clearly bogus "Sunday policeman" encounter after his interview with the police. To my mind, he "carefully thought through" the potentially disastrous implications of a non-explanation behind the extremely late arrival of his evidence, and came up with the Sunday policeman in an attempt to claim that he had alerted the police before the inquest, which he clearly hadn't.
“However, the most interesting point for me is that he states that while he was standing there a policeman passed the end of Dorset street and not one came down Dorset street. This is something the police could check for veracity.”
Best regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 05-14-2011, 07:49 PM.
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[
Absolutely, although the verification of a policeman passing Dorset Street at that time would only support Hutchinson’s contention that he was there, not why he was there.
Ben[/QUOTE]
Too true, Ben !
If ever we want to think that, despite the corroboration of Mrs Lewis, Hutchinson was lying not only about A Man but about even being in Dorset Street at all that night, then the timing of the policeman passing is something which could be verified.
The alternative reading is that Hutchinson knew the policemen's beats off by heart.
Personally, I think that this was a detail that the Ripper himself must have made a point of learning.
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… if Hutchinson invented A Man to deflect suspicion from himself, then the inference is that he killed Mary Kelly.
That is, of course, Lesley, one interpretation, but by no means the only one which might account for Hutchinson inventing the chain of events involving Astrakhan.
The Ripper must have suffered from a mental disorder -we don't really know what form this took, only how it manifested itself.
Whilst I would have some difficulty in accepting that the Whitechapel Murderer was ‘normally functioning’ in the accepted sense of the term, Lesley, there are plenty of examples of sadosexual serialists who exhibited no overt indication of mental disorder. Sutcliffe springs immediately to mind in this context, as do Shawcross and Bundy.
The point I was attempting to convey in my earlier post relates to the phenomenon wherein perfectly innocent individuals insinuate themselves into major police investigations for the most irrational of reasons. Often such people are motivated by emotional needs which are strikingly similar to those associated with Munchausen Syndrome – a neurotic disorder in which the sufferer feigns illness and even resorts to self-harm in order to gain the sympathy and attention of others. Yet I see no such indication in the case of Hutchinson, either by reading his police and press statements or via the observations of those with whom he came into direct contact.
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Whilst I would have some difficulty in accepting that the Whitechapel Murderer was ‘normally functioning’ in the accepted sense of the term, Lesley, there are plenty of examples of sadosexual serialists who exhibited no overt indication of mental disorder. Sutcliffe springs immediately to mind in this context, as do Shawcross and Bundy.
I don't think that the Ripper showed any overt signs of mental illness either -but my point was only that he couldn't have been "normally functioning" as you say. To put it mildly, when I remember the state of MJK's body !
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