Originally posted by Varqm
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Or do you mean you have never heard of this in your life in any case?
I mean, because I have heard this done lots of times, it's just part of the process. I can't speak for today, so many rights/rules have changed over the years.
Today we mostly hear of this restriction imposed on a jury, not to talk about the case with anyone. However, the reasoning is the same, and if the coroner in 1888 learned that a witness had talked about what they saw then he could eliminate them from giving evidence.
(I have to wonder if this was the root of the problem why Schwartz did not appear at the Stride inquest).
But I don't believe some in the crowd would not have questions.I have witnessed car accidents,knife fights,people brandishing guns -threatening,assaults and people,some strangers, stay and asked questions.And this is not even a murder.
People will gossip, especially with anyone who was in some way involved. The press published many accounts of gossip over that weekend. So, yes, as I've said before, there was a great deal of gossip.
The issue is, what was this gossip?
The press had no inside sources, the police were telling them nothing, so all they had to publish was the street gossip, and none of those critical details appear in any press accounts - that, is the central issue.
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