Barnet is in S Division, not A Div., the constable who appeared at Worship Street Court to provide background on Isaacs was also from S division, and I located him in the Census - David Tyce.
Yet, the application for Remand was requested and approved, so clearly the Barnet police were not able to confirm the whereabouts of Isaacs
None of that even slightly follows.
The "remand" - assuming you're referring to the one issued on the 7th December - had nothing to do with the supposedly unknown "whereabouts" of Isaacs, but rather with his known behaviour in connection with the watch-stealing incident. It is for this offense that he was remanded, whereas the other ripper-related speculations being levelled against him were far too flimsy in nature to get anywhere close to fulfilling the criteria to warrant a "remand" – “pacing the room” doesn’t quite cut it.
“The police at H Division can ask Isaacs, they can ask Constable Tyce, or they can send a telegraph to Barnet - any one of these requests will not require Isaacs being held on remand. It only takes a few minutes to receive an answer regardless of the source.”
Then, at some point, and only when the police feel inclined to inform the press of the development, it was revealed to the public that Isaacs was no longer being considered a suspect. He remained in a remand prison until the 14th December, however, because the revelation that he was not Jack the Ripper would not have abrogated the necessity for punishment in the watch-stealing case, for which he was guilty, and for which he was remanded in the first instance on the 7th.
“Evening News, Daily News, Morning Advertiser, The Citizen, just to name a few...”
“Isaacs appeared in court the day after he was charged, so he was not in court "on remand" - only a court official, in this case a Magistrate can grant a remand.
The reason for the remand was clearly explained by Det. Record, "to investigate his whereabouts on the night of Nov. 8/9th"
The reason for the remand was clearly explained by Det. Record, "to investigate his whereabouts on the night of Nov. 8/9th"
You’re doing that thing you do again; wrapping one of your own statements in quotation marks and creating the misleading impression that you’re quoting from an original source. It he appeared in court on the 7th in connection with the watch-stealing offense, any “remand” issued during that court session will be in connection with that offense – the offense for which he was charged. This is precisely what happened that day – he was remanded for stealing a watch, and the police used the opportunity created by his detention to quiz him connection with the Whitechapel murders.
“And yes, Isaacs can be charged for further offenses which result from the investigation quite unconnected to the original theft of the watch.”
“Kosminski was not in custody because they had nothing to charge him with.”
“Isaacs was arrested on the Sunday in Dover, and appeared in Court for that offense the next day, Monday”
But I digress.
You ask why Isaacs didn’t have his case “dealt” with on the 9th instead of the 12th, as though that was my problem, rather than yours, which it is. For some reason, the 12th was selected as the sentencing date, as opposed to the 9th, which was when - according to you - it should have happened because all the relevant personnel and evidence was available. That’s too bad for your argument that there was no “need” to issue a remand; clearly there was a need because there was a lapse of four days between the arrest and the sentencing. However you propose to get out of that one, I can assure you that the following won’t work: “Ah ****, the courts are too full so we’ll have to wait until the 12th! Oh well, let’s let him go, and hope he doesn’t run away, which is a likely and easy thing for him to do”.
So don't try it.
Regards,
Ben
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