Can we keep discussion of Mizen etc for the Lechmere threads, please?
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View PostThe Western Mail was not a London paper, and the article conflicts with the Echo article, so which is the more likely to be an accurate?The Stride murder was six weeks before. Is Bowyer likely to remember a description as given by Packer after that length of time?Researchers should perhaps stop believing all they read in newspapersKind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Researchers who DID read the book provided that conclusion.
Where is this going?
The day of his statement the only prevalent theory was Kelly was murdered in the late morning. There was no cause to ask about men coming and going through the night, and his statement basically testifies to that.
If you think it happened before the inquest then show me the report - prove your assertion
Cries of "murder" were common place, many testified to that, and the police knew it from experience, so that was no firm indication
Blotchy’s description was published in the press along with the other inquest details; there was no sense in publishing it beforehand. How long after the Eddowes murder was the Lawende description published in the Police Gazzette?
if you know a case where two witnesses are brought to an inquest to make the same statements, then show me.
They made very different statements, but both testified to a cry of “murder” in the small hours; just so with Maurice Lewis and Maxwell.
The coroner is not charging anyone with murder, he only needs to know if the victim was alive after 9:00 am. Only one witness is necessary
If the coroner “needs to know if the victim was alive after 9.00am”, it was absolutely essential to obtain as much corroboration as possible. It would therefore have been absolute gold to find more than one witness to that version of events, and put them on the stand accordingly.
It’s as though the very concept of corroboration, and the obvious value it entails, is a completely alien one to you.
All the best,
BenLast edited by Ben; 09-22-2018, 08:42 AM.
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Exactly, Abby.
Whatever “sighting” may have been bogusly attributed to Bowyer in the form of second-hand hearsay, it is quite clear from his actual quoted words that he saw nobody in the court at 3.00, and was instead somewhat rueful that he didn’t.
Hi Bridewell,
Speaking strictly for myself, I make no presupposition that Hutchinson was a murderer, nor have I ever insisted that he was one. I don’t even recall ever starting a Hutchinson discussion or opening a new thread on the subject. I have merely responded reactively to various claims along the lines that “if Hutchinson was the killer, he would have gone about things in this way rather than that way” or “If he lied, he would have told a better lie, therefore he didn’t lie at all”. That sort of thing.
It tends to be those with a paranoid aversion to the notion of Hutchinson as a suspect - and he is an irrefutably reasonable one from a criminological perspective - who go out of their way to pick the fights, from my experience.
You accept uncritically Hutchinson’s claim to have been out of pocket. Why then did he walk 13 miles in the small hours when he knew he couldn’t gain access to his “usual” lodgings or any other? You also say he had “nothing to do” upon arrival in the district; how about seeking to remedy his homeless predicament as soon as possible, as opposed to engaging in fruitless voyeurism for the best part of an hour followed by more fruitless “walking about”?
All the best,
BenLast edited by Ben; 09-22-2018, 08:47 AM.
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if I had known he was there" - meaning if he had known the killer was "there", in this court...
“If I had known the killer was there, I would have stopped him” was what he was saying in essence, whereas if he had seen an actual man in the court, he would have said “If I had known that the man I saw was the killer, I would have stopped him.
Regardless of the hearsay attributed to him, his actual quoted words make quite clear that he saw nobody in the court at 3.00am.
All the best,
Ben
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostBut hutch didnt have funds, and quickly got dumped for another man, classic circs for a stalking situation. Which IMHO hutch then does, following her around, waiting in the middle of the night watching for her, and in his press account, even going next to her door to see if he could here anything.
Re your second point. Hutch lying to mizen about being wanted in bucks row dosnt mean Neil lied about it too. Not sure of your reasoning there at all.
Mizen said that the two men had told him that he was wanted by a PC in Bucks Row. Pc Neill says he as he was passing along Bucks Row he "didn't notice anyone about" - so he didn't see or speak to two men. It follows that, as they were supposedly looking for a policeman, they didn't see him either; had they done so they would have reported the body to Neil rather than continuing their search. Neil didn't see them and they didn't see him. So either Neill did see and speak to them and Mizen was right about that or Neill didn't see and speak to them, in which case Mizen was lying and Neil must have been too. Much more likely though that Neil was right in saying that he didn't see Lechmere & Paul and that Mizen was justifying a delay in his response.
I suspect you may not agree but I thought I should at least explain why I'm thinking as I do.Last edited by Bridewell; 09-22-2018, 12:38 PM.I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostBut hutch didnt have funds, and quickly got dumped for another man, classic circs for a stalking situation. Which IMHO hutch then does, following her around, waiting in the middle of the night watching for her, and in his press account, even going next to her door to see if he could here anything.
Re your second point. Hutch lying to mizen about being wanted in bucks row dosnt mean Neil lied about it too. Not sure of your reasoning there at all.
Mizen said that the two men had told him that he was wanted by a PC in Bucks Row. Pc Neill said that, as he was passing along Bucks Row, he "didn't notice anyone about" - so he didn't see or speak to two men as Mizen claimed. It follows that, as they were supposedly looking for a policeman, they didn't see him either; had they done so they would have reported the body to Neil rather than continuing their search for a policeman. Neil didn't see them and they didn't see him. So either Neil did see and speak to them and Mizen was right about that, in which case Neil must have lied when he said he didn't see them. Robert Paul couldn't be clearer about it - they looked to see if there was a constable but one was not to be seen.
Much more likely that Neil was right in saying that he didn't see Lechmere & Paul and that Mizen was justifying a delay in his response by inventing a report that the police were already in attendance.
I suspect you may not agree but I thought I should at least explain why I'm thinking as I do.I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostWicker or trevor
Both you have said bowyer corroborates hutches story by somehow also mentioning aman or someone who looked like him. Balderdash.
Please provide a direct quote and source of bowyer that includes a description of a man that fits the description if Aman.
Where are your direct quotes from anyone who accuses Hutchinson of lying?
I guess it doesn't matter now....right.Regards, Jon S.
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Returning to the issue of the Lawende identification(s), it’s worth pointing out that the bearded over-fifty Sadler did not resemble Lawende’s man in the slightest. He was no better a fit in that regard than he was for Hutchinson’s Astrakhan man, but the police went ahead with the attempted identification anyway, if only to follow proper police procedure and tick another official box.
It wasn’t just the aforementioned identify parades that provide additional evidence of Hutchinson’s reported discrediting; it was the actual remarks on the subject from senior police officials that hammer home the final nails in that particular coffin. Unless they all suffered from very selective amnesia on the subject, the collective observations of Anderson, Swanson, Macnaghten and Abberline, when remarking on the subject of eyewitness evidence, all make very clear that the early press reports of Hutchinson’s “considerable discounting” were perfectly accurate.
All the best,
Ben
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostWhere are your direct quotes from anyone who accuses Hutchinson of lying?
I guess it doesn't matter now....right.
Lol"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostBeing Scotland Yard men, they probably realized a man can grow a beard in under two-and-a-half years.Last edited by Abby Normal; 09-23-2018, 12:00 AM."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Ben View PostInto a very deep hole of your own digging, as you continue to provide one bad excuse after another for not reading that which you’re critiquing. It’s a Hutchinson book, Jon, and you have a monomaniacal attitude towards all things Hutchinson, remember?
You don't suggest I buy every Jack the Ripper book just because I have an interest in Jack the Ripper, surely?
Apply some discretion Ben, or at least permit others to do so.
The suggested identification was not proved, but merely hypothesised.
You give yours out for free, I'm good with that.
Your criticisms of that hypothesis are based on outdated and thus inaccurate message board reactions to a three year old article, which don’t relate to the book under discussion.
There is no evidence whatsoever that G.H. the Witness was G.H. the Seaman. Therefore, it is pure speculation.
These boards are the place for speculation, it should be offered for free when there is no evidence behind it.
So, it doesn't matter how old the critique is, nothing has changed to firm up the connection, so it is just as relevant now as when written.
Firstly, experienced detectives are not generally so stupid as to only ask questions pursuant to whatever “prevalent theory” they happen to subscribe to. They are interested in ALL evidence that may have a bearing on an investigation. Secondly, even if they were the ninnies you’re anxious to depict them as, there was ample opportunity to reinterview Bowyer before the inquest, once this supposedly “prevalent theory” had subsided.
Had Bowyer seen Mary Kelly at that early hour, then just like Cox, we might expect an account to that end from Bowyer.
But, he provided no account of seeing Cox at midnight, or seeing Prater after 1:00, or more to the point, seeing Blotchy at all either coming or going. Yet you are insisting Abberline had to have questioned Bowyer about seeing anyone at 3:00?
The term, double standard, comes to mind, again.
Two doctors, attesting to a death that occurred hours before the Maxwell sighting, and two mutually corroborative witnesses who recalled a cry of “murder” in the small hours. Assertion proved. Thanks for coming.
So, where is this evidence?
Where is the evidence that the police knew from experience that cries of “murder” were common?
Blotchy’s description was published in the press along with the other inquest details; there was no sense in publishing it beforehand. How long after the Eddowes murder was the Lawende description published in the Police Gazzette?
The suspect seen by PC Smith in Berner street was published the next day - 1st Oct.
"A description has been issued by the police of a man who was seen in the company of the deceased about midnight on Saturday.
He is stated to have been about twenty eight years of age, 5ft 8in in height, of dark complexion, but having no whiskers. He was attired in a black diagonal coat, and had on a hard felt hat and a collar and tie. He was of respectable appearance and carried a newspaper parcel."
That, Ben, is an official police suspect release. It is taken from an internal police circular issued across all stations.
No such suspect description was issued by the police concerning Blotchy.
I’ve told you already; Lewis and Prater.
They made very different statements, but both testified to a cry of “murder” in the small hours; just so with Maurice Lewis and Maxwell.
Whereas Prater also gave evidence that Kelly's room was in darkness, raising the important question as to whether Kelly was already dead, or out on the streets.
So no, those two witnesses are not duplicates.
If the coroner “needs to know if the victim was alive after 9.00am”, it was absolutely essential to obtain as much corroboration as possible. It would therefore have been absolute gold to find more than one witness to that version of events, and put them on the stand accordingly.
It’s as though the very concept of corroboration, and the obvious value it entails, is a completely alien one to you.
It isn't the coroner's place to corroborate testimony, merely ensure that reliable testimony is produced to the jury.Last edited by Wickerman; 09-23-2018, 07:36 AM.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Ben View PostMy point exactly, Jon.
“If I had known the killer was there, I would have stopped him” was what he was saying in essence, whereas if he had seen an actual man in the court, he would have said “If I had known that the man I saw was the killer, I would have stopped him.
Regardless of the hearsay attributed to him, his actual quoted words make quite clear that he saw nobody in the court at 3.00am.
You just wrote the same comment in two different ways. The meaning is the same.
He had no way of knowing the man he saw was the killer. More especially as the prevalent rumors at the time was that she was killed in the late morning.
Remember, this was not a quote, Bowyer's comment was related by a reporter, so his precise words are not used.Regards, Jon S.
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