FrankO:
Not be gullible and ask the 2 men some check questions instead of asking nothing at all?
Gullible? Think again, Frank - why would a man that had killed a woman seek out a police? Mizen would have felt reassured that he was being told the truth.
It was only Pauls arrival that forced Lechmere to speak to Mizen - and thatīs a very complicated thing to see through.
Not continue to knock up, but instead trust his fellow PC in the sense that if he called for help, he in fact needed help and so, not let him wait longer than necessary?
Mizen could be relatively sure that it was not a very serious matter. The PC that had sent the carmen could not have banked on them doing what they were supposed to to begin with. Lechmere supposedly told him a story that did not sound unsettling. Finally, Frank, IF it had been an errand that called for immediate help. then Mizen would arguably have expected to hear his colleagues whistle.
This is interesting, Fish. Whatever happened to your following line of thinking??
“One detail that has gone missing in this discussion is how Mizen adds that "he" (not "they", for some VERY peculiar reason...?) did not say anything about any murder or suicide.
Have a look at this passage, and then you will see that thick-as-pigshit Mizen was rather a bright fellow. Any dumb PC would have reflected that Lechmere said nothing about a murder, since with a three-day retrospect, we would all know that it WAS a murder.
But Mizen instead realizes that the fellow PC that the carman had spoken of, would have sent him (Lechmere) and Paul to look for a fellow PC for the simple reason that he had discovered that the woman had had her throat cut.”
...
Mizen, bright and analytical as he obviously was - would surely have wondered WHY that fellow PC needed his assistence as he walked down Buckīs Row. And when he reached Neil, he was baffled about why he had not been told about the cut throat by the carmen, who to his mind MUST have known about it.”
And:
“Mizenīs line of thought was very logical:
1. A woman had been violently killed by knife.
2. A PC comes upon the body and sees what has happened.
3. The carmen appear, and the PC tells them what has happened and asks them to go for help.
4. ... so why did the carman not tell HIM, Mizen, what is was all about? Why casually speak of a woman that "had been found", leaving out the seriousness of the business?”
This sounds very logical indeed. But NOW you claim the logical next step would be NOT to check with Neil?!? You now even want to have us believe anything like that would be outright stupid?!? Very odd to say the least. But I’m sure you’re going to come up with something to try & explain how this would work.
I donīt see your problem - and I fear you donīt see the logic of what happened.
Mizen was sent for the ambulance, immediately. He had little choice but to get busy immediately.
But letīs explore your suggestion anyway - you think that Mizen would have spoken to Neil about himself having been deprived of the knowledge about how serious the errand was, is that correct? Sort of "What? A cut throat? But the men you sent to get me said nothing about that!"
In a sense, yes - it would have been a remark that Mizen COULD have made. Then again, if Mizen was told that another PC awaited him in Buckīs Row, then he would have expected this other PC to have the situation in hand. It would have been Neils errand, and if Neil chose to handle it with as little fuss as possible, perhaps not letting on exactly what had happened to the woman to the carmen, then it would have been his choice to make.
All we can tell is that Mizen was surprised that the carmen did not tell him, and that tells us that Mizen would have expected the other PC to have told the carmen about it. If he didnīt, then he didnīt, and it would have been out of Mizens control anyway.
I donīt hope you expect us to believe this, Christer. Neil painted a clear picture of what happened after discovering Nicholsī body. He was very detailed and itīs quite clear from his inquest statement that he didnīt send 2 men for any PC. Not in the least because he explicitly stated "The first to arrive on the scene after I had discovered the body were two men who worked at a slaughter-house opposite." and they clearly weren't the 2 carmen Mizen had seen.
See, this is why I say you are not grasping what I am speaking about. I KNOW that Neil "painted a clear picture" od what happened. And I KNOW that he explicitly denied any two men being involved in his finding the body.
The reason for this was that John Neil was convinced that he had been the person who first found the body of Polly Nichols!
But where does that leave Mizen, if that carman told him the truth? If he told him that THEY had been the first finders of the body? If he had said nothing about another PC awaiting him in Buckīs Row?
If so, Mizen would have faced a situation where he KNEW that Neil was not aware of the two carmen, and that Neil MISTAKENLY supposed that HE was the one to first find Nichols.
That is why I am saying that if the carman told it as it was, then Mizen would have ben obliged to correct Neil after the first day of the inquest. Mizen would have realized that the carmen had first found Nichools, and then they left, whereafter Neil arrived, unaware that the carmen had been there before him, and consequently Neil thought that he had been the one to first find the body. Which is PRECISELY what he claims!
However, Frank, if Mizen was lied to by the carman, and told that another PC awaited him in Buckīs Row, then he would have thought that Neil WAS that other PC - and the pieces would all have fit! So Mizen would NOT have been obliged to correct anything.
I hope you can see what I am talking about now, Frank. It is complex, itīs a game of mirrors, and not everybody will easily see the different bits and pieces and how they fit the frame. But the fact is that Mizenīs actions can only be understood and justified if he was lied to.
The best,
Fisherman
Not be gullible and ask the 2 men some check questions instead of asking nothing at all?
Gullible? Think again, Frank - why would a man that had killed a woman seek out a police? Mizen would have felt reassured that he was being told the truth.
It was only Pauls arrival that forced Lechmere to speak to Mizen - and thatīs a very complicated thing to see through.
Not continue to knock up, but instead trust his fellow PC in the sense that if he called for help, he in fact needed help and so, not let him wait longer than necessary?
Mizen could be relatively sure that it was not a very serious matter. The PC that had sent the carmen could not have banked on them doing what they were supposed to to begin with. Lechmere supposedly told him a story that did not sound unsettling. Finally, Frank, IF it had been an errand that called for immediate help. then Mizen would arguably have expected to hear his colleagues whistle.
This is interesting, Fish. Whatever happened to your following line of thinking??
“One detail that has gone missing in this discussion is how Mizen adds that "he" (not "they", for some VERY peculiar reason...?) did not say anything about any murder or suicide.
Have a look at this passage, and then you will see that thick-as-pigshit Mizen was rather a bright fellow. Any dumb PC would have reflected that Lechmere said nothing about a murder, since with a three-day retrospect, we would all know that it WAS a murder.
But Mizen instead realizes that the fellow PC that the carman had spoken of, would have sent him (Lechmere) and Paul to look for a fellow PC for the simple reason that he had discovered that the woman had had her throat cut.”
...
Mizen, bright and analytical as he obviously was - would surely have wondered WHY that fellow PC needed his assistence as he walked down Buckīs Row. And when he reached Neil, he was baffled about why he had not been told about the cut throat by the carmen, who to his mind MUST have known about it.”
And:
“Mizenīs line of thought was very logical:
1. A woman had been violently killed by knife.
2. A PC comes upon the body and sees what has happened.
3. The carmen appear, and the PC tells them what has happened and asks them to go for help.
4. ... so why did the carman not tell HIM, Mizen, what is was all about? Why casually speak of a woman that "had been found", leaving out the seriousness of the business?”
This sounds very logical indeed. But NOW you claim the logical next step would be NOT to check with Neil?!? You now even want to have us believe anything like that would be outright stupid?!? Very odd to say the least. But I’m sure you’re going to come up with something to try & explain how this would work.
I donīt see your problem - and I fear you donīt see the logic of what happened.
Mizen was sent for the ambulance, immediately. He had little choice but to get busy immediately.
But letīs explore your suggestion anyway - you think that Mizen would have spoken to Neil about himself having been deprived of the knowledge about how serious the errand was, is that correct? Sort of "What? A cut throat? But the men you sent to get me said nothing about that!"
In a sense, yes - it would have been a remark that Mizen COULD have made. Then again, if Mizen was told that another PC awaited him in Buckīs Row, then he would have expected this other PC to have the situation in hand. It would have been Neils errand, and if Neil chose to handle it with as little fuss as possible, perhaps not letting on exactly what had happened to the woman to the carmen, then it would have been his choice to make.
All we can tell is that Mizen was surprised that the carmen did not tell him, and that tells us that Mizen would have expected the other PC to have told the carmen about it. If he didnīt, then he didnīt, and it would have been out of Mizens control anyway.
I donīt hope you expect us to believe this, Christer. Neil painted a clear picture of what happened after discovering Nicholsī body. He was very detailed and itīs quite clear from his inquest statement that he didnīt send 2 men for any PC. Not in the least because he explicitly stated "The first to arrive on the scene after I had discovered the body were two men who worked at a slaughter-house opposite." and they clearly weren't the 2 carmen Mizen had seen.
See, this is why I say you are not grasping what I am speaking about. I KNOW that Neil "painted a clear picture" od what happened. And I KNOW that he explicitly denied any two men being involved in his finding the body.
The reason for this was that John Neil was convinced that he had been the person who first found the body of Polly Nichols!
But where does that leave Mizen, if that carman told him the truth? If he told him that THEY had been the first finders of the body? If he had said nothing about another PC awaiting him in Buckīs Row?
If so, Mizen would have faced a situation where he KNEW that Neil was not aware of the two carmen, and that Neil MISTAKENLY supposed that HE was the one to first find Nichols.
That is why I am saying that if the carman told it as it was, then Mizen would have ben obliged to correct Neil after the first day of the inquest. Mizen would have realized that the carmen had first found Nichools, and then they left, whereafter Neil arrived, unaware that the carmen had been there before him, and consequently Neil thought that he had been the one to first find the body. Which is PRECISELY what he claims!
However, Frank, if Mizen was lied to by the carman, and told that another PC awaited him in Buckīs Row, then he would have thought that Neil WAS that other PC - and the pieces would all have fit! So Mizen would NOT have been obliged to correct anything.
I hope you can see what I am talking about now, Frank. It is complex, itīs a game of mirrors, and not everybody will easily see the different bits and pieces and how they fit the frame. But the fact is that Mizenīs actions can only be understood and justified if he was lied to.
The best,
Fisherman
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