“Well, this time you say something I very much agree with: you do not “discount” a witness statement because of the failure of its originator to come forward prior to the inquest.”
Moreover, this outcome only has any validity if the police harboured doubts about Hutchinson’s honesty and motivation for coming forward. Otherwise it makes no sense for the police to have cited his failure to appear at the inquest “under oath” as a reason for discounting his statement. What I find confusing is that you appear to acknowledge this obvious commonsense reality, but then you go straight back to repeating the mantra about Hutchinson being championed as a “straightforward, unshaken man with a truthful agenda”. This makes me wonder if perhaps you are still missing the point, which is that if the police came to discredit Hutchinson’s statement on account of his failure to come forward earlier and attend the inquest under oath, they cannot have considered Hutchinson himself to have been an honest, squeaky clean witness.
This most assuredly qualifies as a “bad word to say about him” because a failure to come forward soon after the murder and before the inquest impacts very directly and very negatively on the question of Hutchinson’s integrity, whereas it has nothing whatsoever to do with any putative “honestly mistaken wrong night” theory. Inferentially, therefore, the police clearly concluded that he was a “liar and perceived timewaster” and not an “honestly mistaken man”.
“He was streetwise and cunning, and had loads of experience. His word would have carried immense weight.”
He was a respected detective in a nascent police force with no experience of serial killers and serial killer investigations, and as I mentioned earlier with my allusion to his 1903 Pall Mall Gazette interview, it seems very likely that at some point between the 12th November 1888 and 1903, he revised this positive opinion of Hutchinson and threw in his lot with the “discreditors”.
“The police may STILL have placed more reliance on Hutch than on Cox.”
"You do not “discount” a witness statement because of the failure of its originator to come forward prior to the inquest", remember?”
“you do not “discount” a witness statement because of the failure of its originator to come forward prior to the inquest unless you entertain doubts about his credibility and/or motivation for coming forward.”
“If the article does anything, it shows us that belief was invested in Hutchinson as late as a week after he testified. If he had been a timewaster in the eyes of the police, that would not have been the case, I´d say!”
All the best,
Ben
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