Caz:
"The problem I have with Fish's favoured scenario ..."
Singularis? Really?
"... is that Lechmere would be coming forward to identify himself, not only as the first man to find the body (and therefore potentially the last man to be with her while she was alive)..."
He did not need to identify himself as the first man to find the body, Caz - Paul did that for him. And after that, why would he not acknowledge this? What possible use could he have of saying that PAUL was the first one? Can you see what that would have done to the picture of the carmen at the inquest?
Ah, yes, you can. So you realize what I mean, yes? A very dissatisfied coroner would get extremely wary of such a thing in no time at all. Only the thickest would employ such tactics.
"... but crucially as someone who told a blatant and provable lie to the first policeman he came across - because the truth was bound to come out and it was very different."
No, Caz. The truth was NOT bound to come out. A DISCREPANCY was what was bound to come out - and it DID come out. A perplexed juryman asked Lechmere whether he had really told Mizen about a second PC - and Lechmere cooly denied it. Ever so stylish!
So, Caz, what the coroner got on his hands was NOT the truth you speak of, was it? I say today that we can see what the truth was, but you and a whole bunch of others say that I may be wrong; Mizen may have misheard, Mizen may lie etcetera - all the usual baconsaving stuff to help Lechmere.
And you are correct - I cannot be sure! And you cannot be sure!
... which begs the question: Where is that truth you claim Lechmere knew must come out? With Paul neatly shoved to the side out of earshot, Lechmere needn´t worry about a thing. He would have known Paul and Neil would corroborate HIS version and not Mizen´s - since there had been no PC around, just like our accomodating carman told the inquest.
" I just don't believe that Mizen, or his superiors, would have left it there, had he been so deliberately and cynically lied to by such a crucial witness in this murder case"
"Crucial witness", Caz? apparently the inquest, the police and the papers did not agree. "Carman Cross" was never seen as a crucial witness, other than when it came to establishing that he had really been the one that found the body. Once he had done that, they bothered him no more. Thank you, Mr Cross - on you go now, shoosh!
Mizen, I agree, would have been consternated. But as long as he did not suspect Lechmere of foul play himself, he may very well have thought that he must have misheard "Cross", quite simply. And after having let him pass on the murder night without taking his name, maybe Mizen felt it was best not to wake any slumbering bear.
The moment any of the inquest members, the coroner or any of the policemen in place had seen through the scam - if that was what it was - it would have been another story. But not one of them did, apparently. Just like I keep saying, it was a very good scam, one that nobody seems to have commented on for 124 years. And THAT is beyond belief...
The best,
Fisherman
"The problem I have with Fish's favoured scenario ..."
Singularis? Really?
"... is that Lechmere would be coming forward to identify himself, not only as the first man to find the body (and therefore potentially the last man to be with her while she was alive)..."
He did not need to identify himself as the first man to find the body, Caz - Paul did that for him. And after that, why would he not acknowledge this? What possible use could he have of saying that PAUL was the first one? Can you see what that would have done to the picture of the carmen at the inquest?
Ah, yes, you can. So you realize what I mean, yes? A very dissatisfied coroner would get extremely wary of such a thing in no time at all. Only the thickest would employ such tactics.
"... but crucially as someone who told a blatant and provable lie to the first policeman he came across - because the truth was bound to come out and it was very different."
No, Caz. The truth was NOT bound to come out. A DISCREPANCY was what was bound to come out - and it DID come out. A perplexed juryman asked Lechmere whether he had really told Mizen about a second PC - and Lechmere cooly denied it. Ever so stylish!
So, Caz, what the coroner got on his hands was NOT the truth you speak of, was it? I say today that we can see what the truth was, but you and a whole bunch of others say that I may be wrong; Mizen may have misheard, Mizen may lie etcetera - all the usual baconsaving stuff to help Lechmere.
And you are correct - I cannot be sure! And you cannot be sure!
... which begs the question: Where is that truth you claim Lechmere knew must come out? With Paul neatly shoved to the side out of earshot, Lechmere needn´t worry about a thing. He would have known Paul and Neil would corroborate HIS version and not Mizen´s - since there had been no PC around, just like our accomodating carman told the inquest.
" I just don't believe that Mizen, or his superiors, would have left it there, had he been so deliberately and cynically lied to by such a crucial witness in this murder case"
"Crucial witness", Caz? apparently the inquest, the police and the papers did not agree. "Carman Cross" was never seen as a crucial witness, other than when it came to establishing that he had really been the one that found the body. Once he had done that, they bothered him no more. Thank you, Mr Cross - on you go now, shoosh!
Mizen, I agree, would have been consternated. But as long as he did not suspect Lechmere of foul play himself, he may very well have thought that he must have misheard "Cross", quite simply. And after having let him pass on the murder night without taking his name, maybe Mizen felt it was best not to wake any slumbering bear.
The moment any of the inquest members, the coroner or any of the policemen in place had seen through the scam - if that was what it was - it would have been another story. But not one of them did, apparently. Just like I keep saying, it was a very good scam, one that nobody seems to have commented on for 124 years. And THAT is beyond belief...
The best,
Fisherman
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