Richard:
"Fisherman.
Please give the investigating police some credit, they were not fools, they were present in the area in 1888, with people living in 1888, we were obviously not, so how can we judge?"
I give the investigating police a lot of credit, Richard. I think they did very well, considering what they were dealing with and the means at their disposal.
One of the policemen I give credit is Dew. Of him, you write that he was "braindead". I fail to see why you say so. I would say that the general picture of Dew was that his book is quite an accomplishment, giving a generally fari picture of his carreer, including the Whitechapel murders.
On my suggestion of a mistaken day on Hutchinson´s part, I can only say - once more - that we have it on record that his story was discredited, just as we have on record that Hutchinson was a man of some stature, who gave a very credible impression. So when the story was discredited, it must have been so either because it contained elements that made it useless in the investigation. Either it was a lie, or it was honest but mistaken (in all probability as to date).
Either way, Hutchinson was dropped from the investigation, and that tells us that the police did their job. I have never stated anything else.
In the case with Mrs Lewis, we have a glaring discrepancy inbetween police report and inquest testimony. I think that it points very much to the good Mrs Lewis telling porkies. But that does not mean that I somehow accuse the police of anything at all - as Lewis stepped into the inquest room, the police would reasonably have anticipated her to tell the coroner the exact same thing that she had told them. She didn´t, though. But that is not something that we can blame the police for, is it? Nor do I do so.
Did this discrepancy mean that the police put less trust in Lewis afterwards? Yes, it must have, although we do not have it on record. What the police thought of Lewis for changing her testimony is something we know nothing of. No verdict has been passed down to us. But to speculate that the police did not notice it would be futile. THAT would be to regard them as very bad professionals. Of course they noticed. And if it came as a surprise to them - and reasonably, it did - then they must have reassessed Lewis´testimony. And that would have lead them to either a decision that the discrepancy meant nothing, and that it was totally uncontroversial to suddenly present a description of a man you had professed emphatically to not being able to describe at all, including headgear and all and including his actions. Or they would have thought these additions very strange and unexpected, and decided that Lewis´inquest testimony must be treated with the greatest of care.
And in my world, and since I put much faith in the police, contrary to what you seem to suggest, the latter would apply. Analogically, I think that those who say that the police would not have cared about Lewis´ inquest revelations being totally different from her police report testimony, are the ones that paint the police out as utterly ignorant and uninterested in doing their job.
So you can put a lot of faith in my putting a lot of faith in the police, Richard. Likewise, just like the police did, I put much faith in Hutchinson. Lewis, though - no. And I don´t see the police doing so either.
The best,
Fisherman
"Fisherman.
Please give the investigating police some credit, they were not fools, they were present in the area in 1888, with people living in 1888, we were obviously not, so how can we judge?"
I give the investigating police a lot of credit, Richard. I think they did very well, considering what they were dealing with and the means at their disposal.
One of the policemen I give credit is Dew. Of him, you write that he was "braindead". I fail to see why you say so. I would say that the general picture of Dew was that his book is quite an accomplishment, giving a generally fari picture of his carreer, including the Whitechapel murders.
On my suggestion of a mistaken day on Hutchinson´s part, I can only say - once more - that we have it on record that his story was discredited, just as we have on record that Hutchinson was a man of some stature, who gave a very credible impression. So when the story was discredited, it must have been so either because it contained elements that made it useless in the investigation. Either it was a lie, or it was honest but mistaken (in all probability as to date).
Either way, Hutchinson was dropped from the investigation, and that tells us that the police did their job. I have never stated anything else.
In the case with Mrs Lewis, we have a glaring discrepancy inbetween police report and inquest testimony. I think that it points very much to the good Mrs Lewis telling porkies. But that does not mean that I somehow accuse the police of anything at all - as Lewis stepped into the inquest room, the police would reasonably have anticipated her to tell the coroner the exact same thing that she had told them. She didn´t, though. But that is not something that we can blame the police for, is it? Nor do I do so.
Did this discrepancy mean that the police put less trust in Lewis afterwards? Yes, it must have, although we do not have it on record. What the police thought of Lewis for changing her testimony is something we know nothing of. No verdict has been passed down to us. But to speculate that the police did not notice it would be futile. THAT would be to regard them as very bad professionals. Of course they noticed. And if it came as a surprise to them - and reasonably, it did - then they must have reassessed Lewis´testimony. And that would have lead them to either a decision that the discrepancy meant nothing, and that it was totally uncontroversial to suddenly present a description of a man you had professed emphatically to not being able to describe at all, including headgear and all and including his actions. Or they would have thought these additions very strange and unexpected, and decided that Lewis´inquest testimony must be treated with the greatest of care.
And in my world, and since I put much faith in the police, contrary to what you seem to suggest, the latter would apply. Analogically, I think that those who say that the police would not have cared about Lewis´ inquest revelations being totally different from her police report testimony, are the ones that paint the police out as utterly ignorant and uninterested in doing their job.
So you can put a lot of faith in my putting a lot of faith in the police, Richard. Likewise, just like the police did, I put much faith in Hutchinson. Lewis, though - no. And I don´t see the police doing so either.
The best,
Fisherman
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