Bridewell:
"The evidence ties Cross/Lechmere to the place where Polly Nichols was found, because he found her. My recollection is that the links to the other sites amount to speculation based on the route he is likely to have taken to work etc. "
My recollection, Bridewell, is that you are an ex-copper yourself? Then you would know what parameters the police look for in cases like these, right? Evidential links? Fine, Iīm all for them. But 124 years down the line, they may be hard to find, which is why the completely amazing fact that the murdersites were situated along the two main thoroughfares to Broad Street, counting from Buckīs Row is something that looks very useful. And the same goes for the Berner Street site, being situated very close to a place he arguably had verygood reason to visit on the weekends. And when does that murder occur? Oh yes - on a weekend.
You know just as well as I do that when a suspect answers to this pattern, AND can be firmly tied to one of the murder sites at the pertinent time, then we have a case here that it would be malpractice not to investigate. Add to it that the guy in question used an alias, Bridewell, and THEN tell me that he is a weak candidate, looking at it from a police-investigation point of view!
It is when somebody exhibits these things that we may hear the DSI in our favourite tv show say that "we have made a breakthrough". Then there are the unrealistic episodes where all these parameters only are coincidental and the real crook stays undetected in the longest. But those scripts belong mainly to Hollywood. I like the realistic stuff better, where clear indicators of lies and a pattern of movements, tallying with the deeds, give away the perpetrator.
And that is what we seemingly have here.
The best,
Fisherman
"The evidence ties Cross/Lechmere to the place where Polly Nichols was found, because he found her. My recollection is that the links to the other sites amount to speculation based on the route he is likely to have taken to work etc. "
My recollection, Bridewell, is that you are an ex-copper yourself? Then you would know what parameters the police look for in cases like these, right? Evidential links? Fine, Iīm all for them. But 124 years down the line, they may be hard to find, which is why the completely amazing fact that the murdersites were situated along the two main thoroughfares to Broad Street, counting from Buckīs Row is something that looks very useful. And the same goes for the Berner Street site, being situated very close to a place he arguably had verygood reason to visit on the weekends. And when does that murder occur? Oh yes - on a weekend.
You know just as well as I do that when a suspect answers to this pattern, AND can be firmly tied to one of the murder sites at the pertinent time, then we have a case here that it would be malpractice not to investigate. Add to it that the guy in question used an alias, Bridewell, and THEN tell me that he is a weak candidate, looking at it from a police-investigation point of view!
It is when somebody exhibits these things that we may hear the DSI in our favourite tv show say that "we have made a breakthrough". Then there are the unrealistic episodes where all these parameters only are coincidental and the real crook stays undetected in the longest. But those scripts belong mainly to Hollywood. I like the realistic stuff better, where clear indicators of lies and a pattern of movements, tallying with the deeds, give away the perpetrator.
And that is what we seemingly have here.
The best,
Fisherman
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