Originally posted by drstrange169
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To begin with, it is kind of strange to write "No" when the commented phrase is "She bled as Mizen saw her too". Because we have it in record that she did, it is a proven thing that the PC claimed this.
So why would anyone say "No"...? It is refusing to accept the facts.
What you should have said, Dusty, is "Yes". "Yes, she bled as Mizen saw her, but I think that he may not have seen that blood until half an hour later", THAT is what you should have said. Instead, you allowed your dislike for the Lechmere theory get the better of you, and misrepresented the facts rather badly.
That's the first part of the lesson.
The second is when you say "It is your theory that Mrs Nichols bled when Mizen arrived". It is of course not my theory at all, but instead something that is written in the sources. We have it on record.
A theory is a suggestion about how to fill in the blank spaces inbetween the facts we have, and not the facts as such. They form the connecting points of the theory. My theory is that Lechmere was the killer of Nichols and the Ripper and Torso killer in the same person, and I use the facts to connect the dots and form a theory.
There are sources that suggest that Mizen saw the blood as he arrived the first time to Bucks Row, minutes only after the carman had left. And there are sources that seemingly suggest that Mizen saw blood running half an hour after the carman had left, that is to say after Mizen himself had fetched the ambulance.
Only one of these suggestions will be correct. The key to understanding which one of them is that Mizen said that the blood was STILL RUNNING and LOOKED FRESH as he saw it.
"Still running" implicates an ongoing process to which there had been no halt. Mizen was of the meaning that Nichols had bled since she was cut up until the moment when he saw and described the blood flow. Did he think that she had bled for half an hour and kept bleeding as he helped lifting her onto the ambulance? Only if he too was a simple man, I´d say. Did he think that the blood would be fresh at that stage, half an hour after she was cut? Only if he was a simpleton, I´d say.
And why did he feel it was relevant to offer the information that the blood was "still running" as she was lifted onto the ambulance? Because it could help narrowing down the time when she had been cut? Only if he was a simple man.
However, if he described the FIRST occasion (and let's be frank, he did), then he is offering vital information that could help narrow down the time window we are looking for 131 years after the murder.
Last lesson: Am I saying this because I want to dupe people into believing that Lechmere was the killer? No, I am saying it because it represents what I think everybody but the simplest of men can understand to be the truth. In fact, to fit with what Jason Payne-James said, it would be better if she did NOT bleed as Mizen arrived, but had bled out in the 3-5 minutes that involved the leaving of the carmen and the arrival of Neil. If we go on those timings, we get a clear picture in which no other killers than Lechmere and Paul are possible, and Paul was second to Lechmere on the spot.
So it is not about trying to deceive people or entice them into Lechmere land. It is about correctly and honestly representing what I believe to be the truthfullest and likeliest description of the events. You may find that a hard concept to understand, though, simple man that you tell me you are.
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