Evidence to prove a suspect valid

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  • Scott Nelson
    replied
    Did Le Grand know Albert Bachert?

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  • Lechmere
    replied
    Tom are you doing a lecture tour to promote the pre publication of your (Le Grand) book?
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  • Lechmere
    replied
    Tom
    I haven't suggested Batchelor was particularly significant in the grape story - I was picking you up on a comment you made about Batchelor's altercation with Le Grand.
    I haven't seen the Le Grand Lusk letter that states that he worked for the WVC in October 1888, so that will be interesting.

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  • curious4
    replied
    Facts

    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    Hi Curious. Your statement that "it's not a proven fact" that there were no grapes is a loaded statement. It's not a proven fact that Stride wasn't lying on a bicycle. So from that perspective you're correct. But there's as much evidence as a bicycle being present as there are grapes. None of the relevant witnesses actually saw any grapes - Diemshitz, Spooner, the doctors, the police, etc. Le Grand believed there were grapes found because of what the press reported, so that's why he came up with that story. I'm guessing Packer did not sell cachous.

    I see you're not familiar with Packer's various statements to the press and police. That's okay. That's why I'm writing a book. But it shocks me that anyone would still think there's any truth at all to the grape thing. It's rather like still thinking the women were all murdered by a left-handed man.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott
    Hello Tom,

    Why has no-one mentioned the bicycle before! :-D. I am familiar with the fact that Packer changed his story and don't deny that he seemed to be a man who was easily manipulated. However, to say that it is a fact that he was lying when he said he sold grapes to Stride's companion is wrong. Not proven, as the Scots say.

    I wish you all success with your book. I am sure it will make fascinating reading!

    Best wishes,
    C4

    P.S. As for the killer being left-handed, most lefties were forced at the time from childhood to use their right hands, so perhaps we can land on ambidextrous?
    Last edited by curious4; 02-20-2014, 03:30 AM.

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Correct.
    The desire to take the path of least resistance is stronger than the will to face problems that require a solution.
    If you eliminate the grapes altogether you are left with just as many questions as if you acknowledge their existence.

    Much emphasis is placed on what Dr Phillips said about there being no evidence of grapes in her stomach. But, after 38 hours what would he expect to see?

    First, the 'fact' her handkerchief bore fruit stains supports the argument, and is consistent with a female spitting the seeds & skins into a handkerchief, as opposed to a man who might spit them into the street.

    Secondly, the existence of the grape stalk, how it got there is debatable, but it was there.

    Third, we have two witnesses who described her holding grapes in her right hand. Granted they were both foreigners, but Diemshitz was well able to speak clearly and make himself understood.
    Kozebrodski, although speaking English "imperfectly", must have been able to recognise grapes when he saw them. I'm assuming grapes are sold in Poland just the same as England.

    The newspapers continued to mention that Stride had grapes well into mid November, and the Arbeter Fraint published Friday Oct. 5th, after the grape issue had been dealt with at the Inquest repeated the story. What this indicates is that the issue was not settled at the inquest.



    All the other victims (Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes, & Kelly) were covered in clotted blood, but no-one else ever described those same clots as looking like "grapes".
    Why?, because clotted blood looks just like clotted blood.

    So what we can deduce is, that 'facts' do exist which are consistent with Stride having grapes.
    Circumstantial evidence exists for either argument, but solid proof is lacking on both sides.
    It will remain a debatable issue.
    Diemshitz said she did not have anything in her hand. That's his official statement. The press statement has him saying she held grapes. It also has Dr. Blackwell saying Stride was almost decapitated. If you want to call the former 'evidence' then you have to call the later evidence as well, and then out goes the old chestnut that she had a 'shallow' cut.

    A handkerchief with fruit stains in no way supports the notion she was eating grapes before her death. The idea that she spat out the skins is absolutely absurd. Or that she swallowed no seeds. There were no seeds, stems, or skins discovered in the area by the way.

    Then you have the problem of the rain. The very thing that would have led Abberline to dispose of Packer's statement altogether. Or one of many things I should say, but pretty much the dead giveaway that he was lying.

    Bottom line is, Packer did not sell Stride grapes. That was concluded then and nothing has changed.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Tom

    Maybe you have located a raft of previously undisclosed sources
    Well, yeah. There was only about three known newspaper articles about Le Grand before I brought him back from the dead. There's now 300 or more. Not to mention the non-press stuff Debs has dug up.

    Originally posted by Lechmere
    Do you have a source for the WVC admitting that Le Grand worked for them?
    Would a letter from Lusk work? But just for the record, the police report that states unequivocally that Le Grand was employed by the WVC is enough for myself, Debra Arif, Rob Clack, and...well...pretty much everyone but you. So I don't suppose a letter from 1889 referring to Le Grand's Oct. 1888 vigilance committee work would impress you much. But I'm absolutely convinced that Le Grand was employed by the WVC.

    What does Batchelor have to do with the grapes?

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by curious4 View Post
    There is nothing which proves this 100% and it is therefore not a fact.
    Correct.
    The desire to take the path of least resistance is stronger than the will to face problems that require a solution.
    If you eliminate the grapes altogether you are left with just as many questions as if you acknowledge their existence.

    Much emphasis is placed on what Dr Phillips said about there being no evidence of grapes in her stomach. But, after 38 hours what would he expect to see?

    First, the 'fact' her handkerchief bore fruit stains supports the argument, and is consistent with a female spitting the seeds & skins into a handkerchief, as opposed to a man who might spit them into the street.

    Secondly, the existence of the grape stalk, how it got there is debatable, but it was there.

    Third, we have two witnesses who described her holding grapes in her right hand. Granted they were both foreigners, but Diemshitz was well able to speak clearly and make himself understood.
    Kozebrodski, although speaking English "imperfectly", must have been able to recognise grapes when he saw them. I'm assuming grapes are sold in Poland just the same as England.

    The newspapers continued to mention that Stride had grapes well into mid November, and the Arbeter Fraint published Friday Oct. 5th, after the grape issue had been dealt with at the Inquest repeated the story. What this indicates is that the issue was not settled at the inquest.



    All the other victims (Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes, & Kelly) were covered in clotted blood, but no-one else ever described those same clots as looking like "grapes".
    Why?, because clotted blood looks just like clotted blood.

    So what we can deduce is, that 'facts' do exist which are consistent with Stride having grapes.
    Circumstantial evidence exists for either argument, but solid proof is lacking on both sides.
    It will remain a debatable issue.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lechmere
    replied
    Tom

    Maybe you have located a raft of previously undisclosed sources, in which case I congratulate you, but otherwise…

    Is it true that Batchelor did not pursue his summons –or was it dimissed?
    Do we actually have a date for this event?
    Have you found a new source where Le Grand claimed to be employed by the WVC?
    Do you have a source for the WVC admitting that Le Grand worked for them?
    Do you have anyone else (besides White and Swanson) claiming that Le Grand worked for the WVC?
    Do you have any newspaper report that states that Le Grand worked for the WVC?
    Can you provide any proof that Le Grand was ever employed as a PI by anyone other than the Evening News in the aftermath of the Stride killing?

    What you do have is Swanson’s statement.
    So far as we can tell Swanson was acting on information provided by White.
    So far as we can tell White was acting on information provided by Le Grand.
    We now Le Grand was a liar and a con man.
    At the same time this was going on the WVC said they were being pestered by people who wanted to be taken on their books as PIs.
    Do the maths (or math).

    From what I can see you think that Le Grand was aware of the grape rumours before he found the grape stalk. So his grape story, whether it was true, partly true or false, was based on pre-existing stories?

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by curious4 View Post
    Hello Tom,

    Sorry, but it is not a proven fact that there were no grapes, it is just doubtful. Dr Phillips could have mistaken grape skins for potato skins (potatoes were often eaten with the skins on) and the grapes could have been seedless. Packer was first asked if he had seen anything suspicious and said he hadn't. Selling grapes to a man and a woman was something he did every day and, on the face of it, hardly suspicious. When he realised that the couple he had seen could have been the victim and her murderer, then they were of interest.

    This is conjecture, but so is saying that there were no grapes. There is nothing which proves this 100% and it is therefore not a fact.

    Best wishes,
    C4
    Hi Curious. Your statement that "it's not a proven fact" that there were no grapes is a loaded statement. It's not a proven fact that Stride wasn't lying on a bicycle. So from that perspective you're correct. But there's as much evidence as a bicycle being present as there are grapes. None of the relevant witnesses actually saw any grapes - Diemshitz, Spooner, the doctors, the police, etc. Le Grand believed there were grapes found because of what the press reported, so that's why he came up with that story. I'm guessing Packer did not sell cachous.

    I see you're not familiar with Packer's various statements to the press and police. That's okay. That's why I'm writing a book. But it shocks me that anyone would still think there's any truth at all to the grape thing. It's rather like still thinking the women were all murdered by a left-handed man.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Lechmere View Post
    Tom
    I hope you paint a better case than that in your (Le Grand) book and I hope you cover the obvious and clear objections to your theory that I raised, and which are pretty unanswerable, as you illustrated.
    That's the good thing about these boards - they give suspect theorists the opportunity to hone their theory in anticipation of what will fall down on them later.
    You've posted not a single 'obvious and clear objection', Lech. You've posted errors. Your notion that Le Grand was never employed by the WVC is case in point.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • curious4
    replied
    Grapes

    Hello Tom,

    Sorry, but it is not a proven fact that there were no grapes, it is just doubtful. Dr Phillips could have mistaken grape skins for potato skins (potatoes were often eaten with the skins on) and the grapes could have been seedless. Packer was first asked if he had seen anything suspicious and said he hadn't. Selling grapes to a man and a woman was something he did every day and, on the face of it, hardly suspicious. When he realised that the couple he had seen could have been the victim and her murderer, then they were of interest.

    This is conjecture, but so is saying that there were no grapes. There is nothing which proves this 100% and it is therefore not a fact.

    Best wishes,
    C4

    Leave a comment:


  • Lechmere
    replied
    Tom
    I hope you paint a better case than that in your (Le Grand) book and I hope you cover the obvious and clear objections to your theory that I raised, and which are pretty unanswerable, as you illustrated.
    That's the good thing about these boards - they give suspect theorists the opportunity to hone their theory in anticipation of what will fall down on them later.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    G'Day Tom

    Sorry I didn't realize that you had a book in the works on Le Grand, another one for the want list.
    That was the book I was writing when I got sidetracked by the research that led to me writing the Bank Holiday Murders. I published a good-sized essay on Le Grand a few years ago in one of the journals. I think it was Casebook Examiner. I left most of the juicy stuff out, but presently it's the best thing out there on him.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Planting evidence and publishing lies about a private citizen is pretty complex Tom, and its the stuff of novels.

    The reliance you choose to place in Packer's initial statement to police may be tempered by the fact that ordinary people had a mistrust of the authorities. When approached by a policeman the common response can be, "I saw nothing, heard nothing, did nothing". In other words, "go away and leave me alone".

    However, on being approached by the press, and in response to a little greasing of the palm?, who knows what a witness is prepared to say he saw.

    Due to these two opposing scenario's it is risky to place too much reliance on either possibility.

    It appears that you have not realized that Packer's claim to have sold grapes to Stride is a separate issue to Stride having grapes in her possession that night.
    Packer did sell grapes, and Stride could have obtained them somewhere else. The latter is not dependent on the former.

    Incidentally, I don't believe Packer's story either, but my reasoning is less complex.
    Packer's palms weren't greased directly by the press. They were greased by Le Grand, who was the one to approach him. There's absolutely nothing complex about anything I've said. Not sure what you're getting at? Le Grand paid Packer to lie. Plain and simple. You said it yourself his palms were greased. This is not guesswork and it sure as heck isn't a complex scenario. It was a common practice for Le Grand and one that occasionally backfired on him. It did not backfire in this instance. What IS guesswork is Le Grand's motives for doing so.

    Le Grand didn't publish lies about a private citizen in this case. He did so with Packer's full cooperation. Although now that you bring it up Le Grand would in fact publish lies about private citizens.

    And no, the grapes are not separate issues. It's a fact that Stride did not eat or possess grapes at the time of her death. It's a fact Packer lied about having sold them to her. It's a fact that he only did so after having been approached by Le Grand. It's a fact that in this same time frame Le Grand attempted to pass himself off as a detective. On and on I could go.

    Any scenario you pose other than the above is complex and weak by its very nature. Across the board and down the line everything I've stated is fully supported by the facts.

    What is not so readily apparent or obvious from the facts is Le Grand's motive for his various activities. I have my ideas on this...some pretty good ones in fact...but I readily admit that it is speculation.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Hi Lech. With all due respect, you do not know anything about Le Grand. You're way over your head here. And since you've made it clear that you've 'solved' the entire Ripper mystery to your own satisfaction, I don't see any point in elucidating you on the matter because you couldn't care less. Suffice it to say that you're wrong on all counts.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:

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