Dr Strange
I quite agree there is nothing unusual about the pair, but Lechmere alone? That’s another matter.
Allow me to address the issues you raised.
Did Lechmere hear Paul?
Daily Telegraph’s report of his inquest testimony….
‘He then heard the footsteps of a man going up Buck's-row, about forty yards away, in the direction that he himself had come from.’To be honest whether he heard or whether he saw is immaterial for the case. Paul in his newspaper interview says he saw Lechmere rather than heard him.
Lechmere says he left home at 3.30 or 3.20 (depending on which report you choose) and we know fairly accurately how long it would have taken him to walk the short distance to Bucks Row. We know the time Paul says he left home and he says he knew he was late for work – indeed as Lechmere also claimed. If they both knew they were late for work then presumably they had clocks. In any case if we put Lechmere’s timings to Pauls’ timings they do not add up.
You can claim their clocks were out. All I will say is that given the timings we have – and that is all we have to go on – there is a discrepancy. If here was no discrepancy the case would be weaker. But there is a discrepancy and you can’t do better than that!
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!
If you think the scenario was similar to Dimschutz’s discovery of Stride then think again. Stride was seen by various people on the street and numerous people were seen on the street also.
The nature of Dimschultz’s discovery of Stride was quite different to the discovery of Nichols. Dimschutz raised the alarm in the building adjacent – did Lechmere?
There was no notion in 1888 about not disturbing crime scenes. According to Lechmere’s testimony he was unsure whether it was a crime scene:
"She looks to me to be either dead or drunk; but for my part I think she is dead."
(Daily Telegraph version)
As for the Mizen conversation, Paul initially claimed to have done all the talking. In his inquest testimony he didn’t really go into any details. He is a poor witness to rely on to corroborate Lechmere’s version of that conversation.
The significant point here is that after leaving the body and bumping into Mizen, Mizen claimed Lechmere said one thing, while Lechmere claimed he said something else altogether. Just brushing this aside is in my opinion slightly ridiculous.
The Old Montague Street route is most definitely the shortest – it has been measured. When I first looked at this case I knew immediately which was the shortest route based on my own knowledge of the streets and I have never been a professional driver (as Lechmere was essentially) nor have I lived in that specific area (near by but not so I would have to walk that route).
The Hanbury Street route took him down Dorset Street or one street away. Whatever route he took would have taken him by some bad areas according to Booth’s map.
There is nothing exotic about Lechmere as a suspect – he is the pretty much the most mundane, ordinary and inconspicuous suspect there is.
I quite agree there is nothing unusual about the pair, but Lechmere alone? That’s another matter.
Allow me to address the issues you raised.
Did Lechmere hear Paul?
Daily Telegraph’s report of his inquest testimony….
‘He then heard the footsteps of a man going up Buck's-row, about forty yards away, in the direction that he himself had come from.’To be honest whether he heard or whether he saw is immaterial for the case. Paul in his newspaper interview says he saw Lechmere rather than heard him.
Lechmere says he left home at 3.30 or 3.20 (depending on which report you choose) and we know fairly accurately how long it would have taken him to walk the short distance to Bucks Row. We know the time Paul says he left home and he says he knew he was late for work – indeed as Lechmere also claimed. If they both knew they were late for work then presumably they had clocks. In any case if we put Lechmere’s timings to Pauls’ timings they do not add up.
You can claim their clocks were out. All I will say is that given the timings we have – and that is all we have to go on – there is a discrepancy. If here was no discrepancy the case would be weaker. But there is a discrepancy and you can’t do better than that!
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!
If you think the scenario was similar to Dimschutz’s discovery of Stride then think again. Stride was seen by various people on the street and numerous people were seen on the street also.
The nature of Dimschultz’s discovery of Stride was quite different to the discovery of Nichols. Dimschutz raised the alarm in the building adjacent – did Lechmere?
There was no notion in 1888 about not disturbing crime scenes. According to Lechmere’s testimony he was unsure whether it was a crime scene:
"She looks to me to be either dead or drunk; but for my part I think she is dead."
(Daily Telegraph version)
As for the Mizen conversation, Paul initially claimed to have done all the talking. In his inquest testimony he didn’t really go into any details. He is a poor witness to rely on to corroborate Lechmere’s version of that conversation.
The significant point here is that after leaving the body and bumping into Mizen, Mizen claimed Lechmere said one thing, while Lechmere claimed he said something else altogether. Just brushing this aside is in my opinion slightly ridiculous.
The Old Montague Street route is most definitely the shortest – it has been measured. When I first looked at this case I knew immediately which was the shortest route based on my own knowledge of the streets and I have never been a professional driver (as Lechmere was essentially) nor have I lived in that specific area (near by but not so I would have to walk that route).
The Hanbury Street route took him down Dorset Street or one street away. Whatever route he took would have taken him by some bad areas according to Booth’s map.
There is nothing exotic about Lechmere as a suspect – he is the pretty much the most mundane, ordinary and inconspicuous suspect there is.
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