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  • Heinrich
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    "on the face of it her story sounds ridiculous; what a child would make up ... blotchy face and carroty moustache indeed."

    Please don't be offended but a blotchy face was not uncommon for one who ate and drank a bit too much. In fact, the official description of General Frank Millen included "blotchy face."

    Carrotty moustache? That would be a reddish colour. Very common amongst the Irish. Check out the description of "Red" Jim McDermott.
    Not a bit offended, Lynn, just not persuaded this Indentikit caricature ever existed outside Mary Cox's mind.

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    blotchy et carrotty

    Hello (again) Heinrich.

    "on the face of it her story sounds ridiculous; what a child would make up ... blotchy face and carroty moustache indeed."

    Please don't be offended but a blotchy face was not uncommon for one who ate and drank a bit too much. In fact, the official description of General Frank Millen included "blotchy face."

    Carrotty moustache? That would be a reddish colour. Very common amongst the Irish. Check out the description of "Red" Jim McDermott.

    Cheers.
    LC

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    drinking material

    Hello Robert. What? No single malt?

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    additions

    Hello Heinrich.

    "The "event" was the night of the murder, Lynn, whereas the imagined detail was a man with a blotchy face and a carroty moustache (Lord help us) carrying a jug of ale, no less. Now did she see the beer or only smell it one wonders?'

    No, I mean if I undergo event X and then add to it, the initial event is X. The addition/s is/are merely the accretion/s.

    Put another way, it makes no sense to talk about an addition unless there is SOMETHING to add to.

    "Where are you getting this information from, Lynn; it was not part of his autopsy report."

    Try Evans and Rumbelow, "Scotland Yard Investigates."

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Heinrich
    replied
    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    And your point is? Are you suggesting that the fact that the witnesses didn't know the people they saw with Kelly personally they must have been inventing them? How does that work then?
    An identification of a person well-known to a witness is more reliable than a description of someone never before seen, Sally.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    Yes, Heinrich, because he had noting to hide
    Had he been charged, Sally, his lawyer would have wanted someone like you on the jury.


    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    I have shown elsewhere beyond reasonable doubt that Joseph Barnett murdered Mary Kelly. ...

    Don't be silly Heinrich - of course you haven't. If you had, then don't you think the case would be solved by now?
    I believe I have solved the Mary Kelly murder.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    We'd all be congratulating you for your powers of astute insight.
    That would be welcome.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    Everything that you have suggested in support of your belief is either pure speculation or hearsay.
    Not as speculative as you suggest, Sally, as I relied on direct testimony, not hearsay.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    In addition, you also dismiss:
    An alibi which was checked out by the police. If you think the police wouldn't have suspected Barnett as the recently estranged partner of Kelly at the time and accordingly made sure that he wasn't the culprit your view is unrealistic. If there had been the slightest evidence that Barnett might have been involved he wouldn't have been released from custody.
    There was enough evidence to win a conviction of Joseph Barnett had the Metropolitan Police been minimally competent.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    The witness testimony of two witnesses - for which you have so far failed to offer explanation.
    Uncorroborated.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    Barnett had nothing to do with Kelly's murder. There is no evidence whatever to implicate him. He was innocent. Get over it.
    The weight of evidence in the Mary Kelly murder is unquestionably against Joseph Barnett.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    It's not in the autopsy report. It's in a letter sent by Bond to the Home Office, dated Nov 10th 88. The relevant paragraph reads:

    "Rigor mortis had set in, but increased during the progress of the examination. From this it is difficult to say with any degree of certainty the exact time that had elapsed since death as the period varies from 6 to 12 hours before rigidity sets in. The body was comparatively cold at 2 o'clock and the remains of a recently taken meal were found in the stomach and scattered about over the intestines. It is therefore pretty certain that the woman must have been dead about 12 hours and the partly digested food
    would indicate: that death took place about 3 or 4 hours after the food was taken, so one or two o'clock in the morning would be the probable time of the murder".
    This is most unreliable as everything he writes is qualified and he was relying on a state of rigor mortis which can ever only be a broad approximation. As for the partly digested food, this is of use without knowing at what time the meal was taken.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    No, it isn't. There is every reason to believe her testimony, as she had no obvious motive for lying.
    Pathological liars do not need a motive and even normally honest people can be mistaken. We should not take every witness at their word.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    Bridewell, eye witness accounts are notoriously unreliable so we have to weigh several aspects.

    This is a sweeping generalisation, Heinrich.
    Nevertheless true.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    She admitted, in the first sentence, that she was a prostitute, which took considerable courage, and she comes across as a credible witness.
    Not to me, Bridewell.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    A conviction for assault does not negate this.
    Two convictions which does not help in establishing witness credibility.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    Some witnesses are mistaken (which you appear to have discounted in the case of Mrs Cox). Some tell lies, but not without a good motive for doing so. The remainder tell the truth to the best of their recollection. Unless I have misunderstood, you are accusing Mrs Cox of lying without giving any indication as to what her motive was for doing so.
    She could have been fibbing, or mistaken, or too drunk herself to distinguish fact from fiction. I do not know but I would not take her statement as infallible without some corroboration.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    Lack of corroboration would be an issue if Cox had been with others who denied seeing Blotchy. She was alone, so her account is uncorroborated. An uncorroborated account is not presumed, in law, to be a lie.
    Nor should it be taken as indisputable fact, Bridewell.

    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    If you are saying that she is lying, please adduce some evidence in support of that assertion; if you are unable to do so, her evidence is, prima facie, valid.
    Please, Bridewell, on the face of it her story sounds ridiculous; what a child would make up ... blotchy face and carroty moustache indeed. LOL

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  • Bridewell
    replied
    Originally posted by Heinrich View Post
    Bridewell, eye witness accounts are notoriously unreliable so we have to weigh several aspects.
    i) What is the character of the witness?
    Mary Cox had a criminal record for assault and had done time.
    ii) What were the conditions at the time?
    A dark miserable wet night.
    iii) Did the witness know the person she was identifying?
    Mary Cox never saw Blotchy Carroty before or since the murder.
    iv) Does the testimony have corroboration?
    No one else saw this man.


    In this case, it is easier to believe that Blotchy Carroty never existed except in the imagination of Mary Cox.
    No, it isn't. There is every reason to believe her testimony, as she had no obvious motive for lying.

    Bridewell, eye witness accounts are notoriously unreliable so we have to weigh several aspects.

    This is a sweeping generalisation, Heinrich. The reliability of eye witness testimony decreases over time, which is why police investigators endeavour to get a written account as soon as reasonably practicable. Mary Ann Cox made a written statement on the day of the murder. She admitted, in the first sentence, that she was a prostitute, which took considerable courage, and she comes across as a credible witness. A conviction for assault does not negate this.

    Some witnesses are mistaken (which you appear to have discounted in the case of Mrs Cox). Some tell lies, but not without a good motive for doing so. The remainder tell the truth to the best of their recollection. Unless I have misunderstood, you are accusing Mrs Cox of lying without giving any indication as to what her motive was for doing so. Lack of corroboration would be an issue if Cox had been with others who denied seeing Blotchy. She was alone, so her account is uncorroborated. An uncorroborated account is not presumed, in law, to be a lie. If you are saying that she is lying, please adduce some evidence in support of that assertion; if you are unable to do so, her evidence is, prima facie, valid.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bridewell
    replied
    Originally posted by Heinrich View Post
    The "event" was the night of the murder, Lynn, whereas the imagined detail was a man with a blotchy face and a carroty moustache (Lord help us) carrying a jug of ale, no less. Now did she see the beer or only smell it one wonders? LOL


    Where are you getting this information from, Lynn; it was not part of his autopsy report.
    Hi Heinrich,

    It's not in the autopsy report. It's in a letter sent by Bond to the Home Office, dated Nov 10th 88. The relevant paragraph reads:

    "Rigor mortis had set in, but increased during the progress of the examination. From this it is difficult to say with any degree of certainty the exact time that had elapsed since death as the period varies from 6 to 12 hours before rigidity sets in. The body was comparatively cold at 2 o'clock and the remains of a recently taken meal were found in the stomach and scattered about over the intestines. It is therefore pretty certain that the woman must have been dead about 12 hours and the partly digested food
    would indicate: that death took place about 3 or 4 hours after the food was taken, so one or two o'clock in the morning would be the probable time of the murder".

    Regards, Bridewell

    Leave a comment:


  • Sally
    replied
    No one else identified anyone by name in Mary Kelly's company after the positive identification by Maria Harvey of Joseph Barnett, Sally.
    And your point is? Are you suggesting that the fact that the witnesses didn't know the people they saw with Kelly personally they must have been inventing them? How does that work then?

    Furthermore, Joseph Barnett did not deny he was at the scene of the crime.
    Yes, Heinrich, because he had noting to hide


    I have shown elsewhere beyond reasonable doubt that Joseph Barnett murdered Mary Kelly. There is a long thread on Joseph Barnett where I provided the motive, means, and opportunity he had.

    Don't be silly Heinrich - of course you haven't. If you had, then don't you think the case would be solved by now? We'd all be congratulating you for your powers of astute insight. Everything that you have suggested in support of your belief is either pure speculation or hearsay. In addition, you also dismiss:

    An alibi which was checked out by the police. If you think the police wouldn't have suspected Barnett as the recently estranged partner of Kelly at the time and accordingly made sure that he wasn't the culprit your view is unrealistic. If there had been the slightest evidence that Barnett might have been involved he wouldn't have been released from custody.

    The witness testimony of two witnesses - for which you have so far failed to offer explanation.

    Barnett had nothing to do with Kelly's murder. There is no evidence whatever to implicate him. He was innocent. Get over it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert
    replied
    Well Heinrich, I suppose it could have been a pot of anything. Milk is a good bet. Or a pot of the finest champagne. If Blotchy was one of Lynn's countrymen, it could have been porridge. Why on earth she thought it might be beer is quite beyond me.

    Leave a comment:


  • Heinrich
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    ...
    "Lynn, I am not a psychologist, but there is such a phenomenon as false memory whereby a person will recollect an event and add details which do not correspond to reality. Witnesses in such circumstances are simply mistaken."

    Quite. But that presupposes an initial event--it is not made up of whole cloth.
    The "event" was the night of the murder, Lynn, whereas the imagined detail was a man with a blotchy face and a carroty moustache (Lord help us) carrying a jug of ale, no less. Now did she see the beer or only smell it one wonders? LOL

    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    "Thomas Bond did not give an opinion about the time of death, Lynn."

    Actually, he placed TOD between 1.00 and 2.00.
    Where are you getting this information from, Lynn; it was not part of his autopsy report.

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    folk music

    Hello Jon.

    "Obviously Lynn, ...because Cox killed Mary, to shut up that blasted singing!!"

    Indeed. Irish folk music CAN have such an effect--Scots, NEVER. (heh-heh)

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    punctus contra punctum

    Hello Heinrich.

    "Mary Cox's testimony does not harmonize with anyone else's, Lynn.'

    Indeed. But neither is it disharmonising.

    "Lynn, I am not a psychologist, but there is such a phenomenon as false memory whereby a person will recollect an event and add details which do not correspond to reality. Witnesses in such circumstances are simply mistaken."

    Quite. But that presupposes an initial event--it is not made up of whole cloth.

    "Thomas Bond did not give an opinion about the time of death, Lynn."

    Actually, he placed TOD between 1.00 and 2.00.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello (yet again) Heinrich. I think Sally's question is one of cui bono.

    Let's say that Cox was drunk or fuddled or a victim of poor lighting. Very well, but what is to be gained by the invention of Blotchy?

    Cheers.
    LC
    Obviously Lynn, ...because Cox killed Mary, to shut up that blasted singing!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Heinrich
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    "The onus is on those who believe in Blotchy Carroty carrying a jug of ale to provide the evidence, Lynn."

    Quite. The argumentative onus is ALWAYS on the positive assertor. Notwithstanding, my personal custom is to accept evidence as stated UNTIL it cannot be made to harmonise with another item.
    Mary Cox's testimony does not harmonize with anyone else's, Lynn.

    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    "I couldn't guess what was in Mary Cox's mind, Lynn. False testimony is not uncommon."

    Right. Let's say the testimony is false. But why add Blotchy? If her lie was, say, to gain notoriety, surely it had come off just as well without such an interpolation?
    Lynn, I am not a psychologist, but there is such a phenomenon as false memory whereby a person will recollect an event and add details which do not correspond to reality. Witnesses in such circumstances are simply mistaken.

    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    "All we can be certain of is that Mary Kelly was last seen alive in the positively-identified company of Joseph Barnett. He most probably murdered her shortly afterward, before returning to his lodging to play cards or whatever."

    But would that not place her TOD well in advance of even Bond's earliest estimate?
    Thomas Bond did not give an opinion about the time of death, Lynn.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    No, we can't. Flatly, No.

    What we can be reasonably certain of is that Kelly was in the company of Barnett earlier that night.

    But to assert that Kelly was last seen alive in his company is to deny the witness testimony of Cox, and yes, Hutchinson. Not one, but both of these people would be required to have resorted to total invention for your assertion to have any foundation.
    No one else identified anyone by name in Mary Kelly's company after the positive identification by Maria Harvey of Joseph Barnett, Sally. Furthermore, Joseph Barnett did not deny he was at the scene of the crime.

    Originally posted by Sally View Post
    Where is your evidence? Where is your support for this theory?
    I have shown elsewhere beyond reasonable doubt that Joseph Barnett murdered Mary Kelly. There is a long thread on Joseph Barnett where I provided the motive, means, and opportunity he had in Post #285

    The whole thread is worth a read.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sally
    replied
    No...

    All we can be certain of is that Mary Kelly was last seen alive in the positively-identified company of Joseph Barnett. He most probably murdered her shortly afterward, before returning to his lodging to play cards or whatever.
    No, we can't. Flatly, No.

    What we can be reasonably certain of is that Kelly was in the company of Barnett earlier that night.

    But to assert that Kelly was last seen alive in his company is to deny the witness testimony of Cox, and yes, Hutchinson. Not one, but both of these people would be required to have resorted to total invention for your assertion to have any foundation.

    Where is your evidence? Where is your support for this theory?

    Leave a comment:

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