Frank:
"From Mizen’s testimony alone it may seem that way, yes, but not from those of Cross and Paul. Cross stated they both spoke to Mizen and that’s what Paul states as well. "
Robert Paul delivered a newspaper interview in which he forgot to mention Lechmere beyond the touching of the body. After that he awarded himself the main role, leading on that he had taken all the decisions and that he alone had spoken to Mizen. At the inquest, he was somewhat humbled by the present authorities and told another story in many a way. There goes his credibility!
Lechmere was a liar, who gave the police an alias. There HIS credibility joins that of Robert Paul.
Mizen was a policeman, who had devoted himself to serving society. No matter how ambitious that sounds, this is what policemen are normally about. He had no reason at all to lie as far as we can tell, and he would probably not have misheard things to such an extent as to in retrospect award Lechmere the honour of having provided the Buck´s Row PC. Even if he did, it remains that Lechmere, if innocent, would have had absolutely no reason to speak in a passive manner about the woman HE had found, leading on that somebody else had done so. The clincher is that Mizen remarks, at the inquest, that "Cross" had not told him that it was a murder or a suicide.
Why was Mizen consternated by this? Lechmere told the inquest that it was too dark to see the blood, and so how could he have told Mizen? Exactly, he could not. But Mizen was of the meaning that Lechmere had told him that a PC awaited his help in Buck´s Row, and that PC would NOT have been oblivious of what had struck Nichols down! Therefore, Mizen points out that it was a strange thing that the carman did not alert him to the nature of the errand, probably to defend why he did not rush to the scene as fast as he could.
The devil is in the details, Frank!
The best,
Fisherman
"From Mizen’s testimony alone it may seem that way, yes, but not from those of Cross and Paul. Cross stated they both spoke to Mizen and that’s what Paul states as well. "
Robert Paul delivered a newspaper interview in which he forgot to mention Lechmere beyond the touching of the body. After that he awarded himself the main role, leading on that he had taken all the decisions and that he alone had spoken to Mizen. At the inquest, he was somewhat humbled by the present authorities and told another story in many a way. There goes his credibility!
Lechmere was a liar, who gave the police an alias. There HIS credibility joins that of Robert Paul.
Mizen was a policeman, who had devoted himself to serving society. No matter how ambitious that sounds, this is what policemen are normally about. He had no reason at all to lie as far as we can tell, and he would probably not have misheard things to such an extent as to in retrospect award Lechmere the honour of having provided the Buck´s Row PC. Even if he did, it remains that Lechmere, if innocent, would have had absolutely no reason to speak in a passive manner about the woman HE had found, leading on that somebody else had done so. The clincher is that Mizen remarks, at the inquest, that "Cross" had not told him that it was a murder or a suicide.
Why was Mizen consternated by this? Lechmere told the inquest that it was too dark to see the blood, and so how could he have told Mizen? Exactly, he could not. But Mizen was of the meaning that Lechmere had told him that a PC awaited his help in Buck´s Row, and that PC would NOT have been oblivious of what had struck Nichols down! Therefore, Mizen points out that it was a strange thing that the carman did not alert him to the nature of the errand, probably to defend why he did not rush to the scene as fast as he could.
The devil is in the details, Frank!
The best,
Fisherman
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