Hello Lechmere,
Re: hearing footsteps quote.
I'm stupid. Of course! Fishman quoted it in the first post.
Re: timings.
Most clocks weren't synchronized, so using one man's time against anothers
has no practical purpose unless there was a striking clock heard by both men. For example,
"Policeman George Myzen said that at a quarter to four ..."
(The Star/Daily News)
"Robert Paul said ... On the Friday he left home just before a quarter to four..."
(Daily News)"
"Police-constable Neil, 97 J, who found the body, reports the time as 3:45."
(The Times)
RE: "As for time of death you know better than Llewellyn?"
He said the body had been dead less than half an hour which puts it almost exactly at the time Lechmere was with the body.
Again you can’t do better than that!"
Except, there was no medical ability to give an accurate T.O.D. under an hour, without the use of C.S.I. teams, there still isn't.
When a "favoured" time of death is decided upon this should never be offered to the investigating authorities as a single point in time. It must be used to construct a "bracket of probability", giving an earliest and latest time between which the doctor feels that death must have occurred.
... It is futile mentioning any time in units of less than an hour, even when the death was quite recent. A medical witness who attempts to determine the time of death from temperature estimation in minutes or fractions of hours is exposing himself to a severe challenge to his expertise which may well amount to near ridicule ..."
Polson, Gee and Knight, The Essentials of Forensic Medicine, (1985), Pergamon Press.
Re: Mizen conversation
Poor witness Paul may be, but witness he was. He accused Mizen of being derelict in his duty. Couple that with the claim Mizen initially denied seeing them,
"These officers (Mizen) had seen no man leaving the spot to attract attention,"
and Mizen, justly or unjustly is definitely a suspect witness.
RE: "The Old Montague Street route is most definitely the shortest "
I'm sure your right, but on the map, the Hanbury/Spital/Primrose etc. is so
damn close I can't tell.
The Hanbury/Primrose route does not take him down Dorset Street and I stand by my original contention that it was quick AND safe.
Re: hearing footsteps quote.
I'm stupid. Of course! Fishman quoted it in the first post.
Re: timings.
Most clocks weren't synchronized, so using one man's time against anothers
has no practical purpose unless there was a striking clock heard by both men. For example,
"Policeman George Myzen said that at a quarter to four ..."
(The Star/Daily News)
"Robert Paul said ... On the Friday he left home just before a quarter to four..."
(Daily News)"
"Police-constable Neil, 97 J, who found the body, reports the time as 3:45."
(The Times)
RE: "As for time of death you know better than Llewellyn?"
He said the body had been dead less than half an hour which puts it almost exactly at the time Lechmere was with the body.
Again you can’t do better than that!"
Except, there was no medical ability to give an accurate T.O.D. under an hour, without the use of C.S.I. teams, there still isn't.
When a "favoured" time of death is decided upon this should never be offered to the investigating authorities as a single point in time. It must be used to construct a "bracket of probability", giving an earliest and latest time between which the doctor feels that death must have occurred.
... It is futile mentioning any time in units of less than an hour, even when the death was quite recent. A medical witness who attempts to determine the time of death from temperature estimation in minutes or fractions of hours is exposing himself to a severe challenge to his expertise which may well amount to near ridicule ..."
Polson, Gee and Knight, The Essentials of Forensic Medicine, (1985), Pergamon Press.
Re: Mizen conversation
Poor witness Paul may be, but witness he was. He accused Mizen of being derelict in his duty. Couple that with the claim Mizen initially denied seeing them,
"These officers (Mizen) had seen no man leaving the spot to attract attention,"
and Mizen, justly or unjustly is definitely a suspect witness.
RE: "The Old Montague Street route is most definitely the shortest "
I'm sure your right, but on the map, the Hanbury/Spital/Primrose etc. is so
damn close I can't tell.
The Hanbury/Primrose route does not take him down Dorset Street and I stand by my original contention that it was quick AND safe.
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