Ben writes:
"The fact that his account appeared in the press so soon after his initial appearance at the police station speaks even more favourably for the notion that he was tracked down by a reporter."
I donīt think, Ben, that George Hutchinson was ever ”tracked down” by any reporter. The material instead speaks in favour of the information on Hutchinson being distributed to the press by a centrally placed news agency.
I very much doubt that any of the representatives of the different newspapers who put the description of Hutch as being of a military appearance, actually did so because they had seen/met him. I think they were fed this description by the news agency in question. I think we can agree that it would be utterly strange if a bunch of reporters independently came up with the notion that Hutch was of military appearance, and no particular paper seems to have made the scoop.
So it would seem that there was some sort of press conference or centrally distributed communiqué which broke the news of Hutch, without himself participating.
That having been cleared up, the only thing that remains to establish is how the news agency who informed the journalists got THEIR information in turn. One thing that we can probably agree on is that what you want to do if you need to break news fast and reach far, is to use a news agency. That was why the so called Bulling letters were sent to the Central News Agency, instead of to the police or a single newspaper, it would seem.
Now, news agencys are places that collect news hunted down by people, mainly journalists, and thereafter distribute them. They donīt do the actual hunting themselves, meaning, as I said, that Hutch would never have been ”tracked down”. Given the short time that passed between his turning to the police and the publications in the papers, the only reasonable interpretation is that the police USED a news agency to circulate their story. And that, in itīs turn, means that we can not actually say with any certainty whether the agency ever got to see the illusive George Hutchinson, since the meagre details we know about his appearance may well have been passed from the police to the agency.
Why the police would choose this method of doing it is anybodys guess. But the fact remains that we are left with a guy who made no tracks at all as he moved on in history, although the entire press of London would have had an interest in tailing him. And that evokes my interest.
Fisherman
"The fact that his account appeared in the press so soon after his initial appearance at the police station speaks even more favourably for the notion that he was tracked down by a reporter."
I donīt think, Ben, that George Hutchinson was ever ”tracked down” by any reporter. The material instead speaks in favour of the information on Hutchinson being distributed to the press by a centrally placed news agency.
I very much doubt that any of the representatives of the different newspapers who put the description of Hutch as being of a military appearance, actually did so because they had seen/met him. I think they were fed this description by the news agency in question. I think we can agree that it would be utterly strange if a bunch of reporters independently came up with the notion that Hutch was of military appearance, and no particular paper seems to have made the scoop.
So it would seem that there was some sort of press conference or centrally distributed communiqué which broke the news of Hutch, without himself participating.
That having been cleared up, the only thing that remains to establish is how the news agency who informed the journalists got THEIR information in turn. One thing that we can probably agree on is that what you want to do if you need to break news fast and reach far, is to use a news agency. That was why the so called Bulling letters were sent to the Central News Agency, instead of to the police or a single newspaper, it would seem.
Now, news agencys are places that collect news hunted down by people, mainly journalists, and thereafter distribute them. They donīt do the actual hunting themselves, meaning, as I said, that Hutch would never have been ”tracked down”. Given the short time that passed between his turning to the police and the publications in the papers, the only reasonable interpretation is that the police USED a news agency to circulate their story. And that, in itīs turn, means that we can not actually say with any certainty whether the agency ever got to see the illusive George Hutchinson, since the meagre details we know about his appearance may well have been passed from the police to the agency.
Why the police would choose this method of doing it is anybodys guess. But the fact remains that we are left with a guy who made no tracks at all as he moved on in history, although the entire press of London would have had an interest in tailing him. And that evokes my interest.
Fisherman
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