Hi Jon,
Wasn’t it you who found a reference to a coat-stealing Joseph Isaacs, but were put off because the age wasn’t quite right? I can’t quite recall the details, but what was your reasoning for dismissing this as being the Isaacs we’re interested in, thus confirming the Lloyds Weekly article? Two coat-stealing men named Joseph Isaacs operating within a year of each other seems a very unlikely coincidence. If you were put off by the fact that the offense occurred in 1887 – as I recall it was - don’t be. As I said before, you don’t have any information as to when the “term of imprisonment” commenced, nor how long it lasted. Unless you’ve conducted further research that I don’t know about – in which case, I’m all ears – I don’t see why this particular Joseph Isaacs’s coat-stealing offense can’t have been the same incident referred to in Lloyds Weekly.
For the theft, yes, but what you omitted to mention that it was on this date that Detective-Sergeant Record, H Division, informed the press that there was “no further charge against the prisoner”. In other words, the police were no longer considering Isaacs as a potential suspect in the Kelly murder. Why? Well, not because they had identified him as Astrakhan man and proved him innocent thanks to an absolutely impossible alibi, but because it was discovered that he had been in prison at the time of the murder. What surprises me is your unwillingness or inability to get your head around the concept of a career criminal like Isaacs committing more than one theft, being imprisoned as a result of both, and consequently being unable to commit two different crimes against a woman on two different dates.
Wait a moment – “stealing the coats”?
You might have to jar my memory here, Jon. If the offence for which he was imprisoned during the Farmer attack was for stealing “the coats”, then surely this was the “term of imprisonment” being referred to in Lloyds Weekly? If his was sentenced on the 12th, then he would obviously have been in police custody on the 9th awaiting that sentence. Bloody hell, it was far less complicated than I ever imagined. Now I understand all that fuss you’re making over the distinction between “held in custody” and “term of imprisonment”, but that really is a non-issue. It doesn’t matter if Lloyds were unclear as to what stage of his police confinement Isaacs happened to be at on 9th November – the relevant point is that they had ascertained that he was in police detention, and thus unable to commit the Kelly murder.
“The coats”...tsk, tsk, however did I miss that!
Sally, can you confirm this, if you're about?
All the best,
Ben
Wasn’t it you who found a reference to a coat-stealing Joseph Isaacs, but were put off because the age wasn’t quite right? I can’t quite recall the details, but what was your reasoning for dismissing this as being the Isaacs we’re interested in, thus confirming the Lloyds Weekly article? Two coat-stealing men named Joseph Isaacs operating within a year of each other seems a very unlikely coincidence. If you were put off by the fact that the offense occurred in 1887 – as I recall it was - don’t be. As I said before, you don’t have any information as to when the “term of imprisonment” commenced, nor how long it lasted. Unless you’ve conducted further research that I don’t know about – in which case, I’m all ears – I don’t see why this particular Joseph Isaacs’s coat-stealing offense can’t have been the same incident referred to in Lloyds Weekly.
“- Dec. 14th, after the conclusion of those inquiries, Isaacs is finally sentenced for the charge made against him.”
“As we know Isaacs was sentenced on the 12th November to 21 days hard labor for stealing the coats”
You might have to jar my memory here, Jon. If the offence for which he was imprisoned during the Farmer attack was for stealing “the coats”, then surely this was the “term of imprisonment” being referred to in Lloyds Weekly? If his was sentenced on the 12th, then he would obviously have been in police custody on the 9th awaiting that sentence. Bloody hell, it was far less complicated than I ever imagined. Now I understand all that fuss you’re making over the distinction between “held in custody” and “term of imprisonment”, but that really is a non-issue. It doesn’t matter if Lloyds were unclear as to what stage of his police confinement Isaacs happened to be at on 9th November – the relevant point is that they had ascertained that he was in police detention, and thus unable to commit the Kelly murder.
“The coats”...tsk, tsk, however did I miss that!
Sally, can you confirm this, if you're about?
All the best,
Ben
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