Originally posted by Varqm
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This is exactly what Hutchinson claimed - so he had to be there.
And if I remember correctly from a newspaper, the police were trying to put a distance between them and the press.
Warren also complained to the Home Office about the press following his detectives around and re-interviewing anyone the police had been speaking to.
This can be seen as a direct response by the press to the fact the police were telling the press nothing. So both those complaints, and from opposing camps, tend to support each other.
This is why we must be very particular what we accept as believable in the press.
When the press write about something they could have obtained by following detectives around - like the direction of the investigation, whether the police are asking people about a Blotchy or Astrachan suspect, we can see the justification for claims like this.
But, when we read stories about what the police are thinking, like a suspect being "discredited", or the police not believing a story, then we must be wary of these claims.
As the press themselves are claiming the police tell them nothing, we shouldn't believe any unsourced claims in the press about what the police are thinking.
That is only common sense.
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