Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sympathy for Hutch

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • perrymason
    Guest replied
    Hello all,

    Ive read the thinking that for Hutch to come forward based on seeing or hearing or Sarah's Wideawake Hat Man, he puts himself in grave risk...but I believe its the exact opposite, his story not only exonerates him for being there somewhat...(still not clear how spying on someone claimed to be a friend, who is murdered that night...and then waiting 4 days to speak of it is "friendly"),...but Hutchinsons story effectively removes a stalker, or killer, or killers accomplice, in the guise of Wideawake Man.

    The Pardon for Accomplices was issued 1 day after Marys murder...on a Saturday...from the desk of a man who had already submitted his resignation. Im sure the cumulative pressure added to the issuance, but I believe the haste shows they believed Wideawake played a role that night.

    But maybe not, after Georgie Boy. If he was the killer.....and if so I tend to see the merits of Bens Flemming/Hutch identity realistic....then he gets himself OFF the hook with his statement, with the investigators. But not with me personally though.

    My best regards.

    Leave a comment:


  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Ben View Post

    If witnesses from previous murders were reintroduced into the equation and all identified Hutchinson as the man they'd seem, he'd be in a spot on bother. It wouldn't have mattered if he'd only be seen an hour before the crime scene. Several witnesses attesting to having seen the same man would have been incriminating enough...

    ...we know that GH did pop to the cop shop. We don't know why than happened, but if he did so because he was the killer attempting to "legitimize" his presence at a crime scene, it wouldn't be remotely unusual or unlikely...
    Hi Ben,

    The problem with your reasoning is that if Hutch the Ripper knows perfectly well that he was the man seen on previous murder nights, he also knows he will be in far more than ‘a spot of bother’ if he pops to the cop shop to admit to having been at the latest crime scene (“I'll have to go because some woman saw me lurking there damn it!”) and the cops then fetch every other witness to date to give him the once-over precisely because some woman testified independently that she saw someone just like him sniffing around Mary’s place.

    Originally posted by Ben View Post

    ...before October 19th he had every reason to believe that the witnesses who had observed him had only provided inadequate descriptions. After that date, it had become public knowledge that the police were deliberately suppressing witness descriptions only to appear in full weeks later in the Police Gazette.

    Now, if the police used that ploy with the Lawende's evidence, what was preventing them from repeating it at the next inquest?
    If Hutch the Ripper learns that the cops have been deliberately suppressing witness descriptions, it makes his pop to the cop shop ten times more precarious because he knows that just one reliable witness description sitting suppressed under the desk is going to fit him like a glove, and even the thickest cop is not going to see a perfect match and say, “Well what a coincidence, my good man! You could be him! Except you can’t be him because you is a truthful witness, not a bloomin’ murderin’ forinner. Much obliged to you, Sir, for your valuable help and I’ll bid you good day. But may I suggest you remove that distinctive wideawake hat on your way out, as it is an extremely unusual accessory for the East End and it might give the ladies a fright and make ’em think Jack must be after ’em.”

    Originally posted by Frank van Oploo View Post

    Not that I think it's the most likely that GH was MJK's killer, but there would have been no sense in going to the police when he knew he had already been questioned/was already suspected/was looked for. Obviously, it would have been too late then. So, if he chose to come forward to try and deflect possible suspicion away from him, he had to do it before he was ever named or fingered.
    Hi Frank,

    But that, I think, touches on Ben’s point: when Hutch the Ripper pops to the cop shop he goes because he knows the cops could be deliberately suppressing all manner of descriptions of him.

    So presumably he imagines that the cops might be persuaded to forget all about looking for any Hutch clones seen near previous crime scenes if they are suddenly offered a new, polar opposite description (Mr A) by - er - a Hutch clone.

    I can see the logic of Hutch the Witness serving up Mr A, thinking he fits with previous published witness descriptions or killer profiles. But Hutch the Ripper knows that the only genuine and reliable witness description will be of him, and therefore quite unlike Mr A. It's a paradox: if the cops accept Mr A, then they obviously have no Hutch clone descriptions suppressed under the desk and he needn't have shown his guilty face at all; if the cops reject Mr A, because he doesn't sound remotely like the chap described to them in secret, because that chap is in fact Hutch, then Hutch is snookered.

    I will see the logic in all this eventually, I’m sure. Just as long as Ally sees it first and can explain it to me.

    Can’t say fairer than that.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    Last edited by caz; 02-27-2008, 07:43 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    You raised this spurious "objection" three times with the same identical wording on each occasion on the "old board", and three times I addressed it. You've now raised it twice more on the "new" boards, and not once have you had the courtesy to address the counterarguments. It doesn't matter in the slightest if Lewis and Hutchinson were not acquainted. This was a close-knit locality, and the possibilty of a subsequent identification within that tight-knit locality was very strong indeed. It's a bit ridiculous to claim that the ripper "didn't care" to be seen with earlier victims. How can we possibly know that? Of course he was concerned about being seen - it was an occupational hazard that came with Whitechapel and Spitalfields being both busy and densely populated. He could do nothing about it, but before October 19th he had every reason to believe that earlier witnesses had only provided inadequate descriptions based on inadequate sightings. After that date, it had become public knowledge that the police were deliberately suppressing witness descriptions only to appear in full weeks later in the Police Gazette.

    Now, if the police used that ploy with the Lawende's evidence, what was preventing them from repeating it at the next inquest?

    In any case, he couldn't have come forward as Lawende's or Schwartz's man even if he desperately wanted to. The timing was too tight for anyone to arrive on the scene and dispatch Eddowes' after the Lawende's sighting, and as for Schwartz, well "Yes, I was the man hurling anti-semetic insults and attacking the victim at around the time the doctors believed she died, but no, I left just aftewards, just as Mr. Astrakhan emerged from the gloom"

    Hardly plausible, but any excuse to regurgitate all this again...
    Last edited by Ben; 02-27-2008, 05:21 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Varqm
    replied
    To me the sighting in the Eddowes case in which 3 people saw him or were in a position to see him , with the victim herself not just lurking across the street,was a strong indication about the Ripper's attitude about witnesses and situations were witnesses were present before a murder. If he could withstand the sighting in the eddowes case he could have withstand the sighting in Lewis 's case.
    In order to believe that Hutchinson has any kind of reason to go to the police it has to be shown that Lewis knew Hutchinson or if Hutchinson even knew Kelly or visited or talked to her in Miller's Court or Dorset St.or anywhere. I think the newspapers or police would have pursued these. So far no newspapers or police documents or memoirs ever stated this. Not one person ever alluded to that kelly or lewis knew hutchinson or at least seen them together,at the very least if Hutchinson was ever in Dorset st. as a lodger, visitor or acquaintance of one person.
    So with what is available Hutchinson/ripper has no basis.

    Leave a comment:


  • paul emmett
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    Whilst I don't accept every atom of his testimony, I don't find it difficult to believe that he was there at some point early that morning, and would therefore have known at first hand how quiet it was.
    Hello, Sam.

    That's what I think, too. So I'm gonna quit while we're in agreement, and not ask what capacity you feel he might be there in.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Hi Paul,
    Originally posted by paul emmett View Post
    But if he wasn't using Cox, he got the dark and quiet of Kelly's room right on his own--and, perhaps he wasn't using Lewis either, which for me entails the where ya at problem.
    It may have been reasonable for Hutchinson - a "local" - to guess that Miller's Court would have been comparatively quiet towards 03:00. Whilst I don't accept every atom of his testimony, I don't find it difficult to believe that he was there at some point early that morning, and would therefore have known at first hand how quiet it was.

    Leave a comment:


  • paul emmett
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    In his press statement, Hutchinson's stated departure time was dangerously close to when Cox said she returned to the Court that night. If Hutchinson was clever enough to fabricate his story based on the evidence of Mrs Cox, would he not have tried to put a greater distance between her arriving at Miller's Court and his presence and departure therefrom?
    Yes, Sam, he would have put in more distance, espescially since, as you suggest, the 3:00 tolling of the bells as he leaves Miller's Court was only in his press statement. In the police report there is wiggle room, with him arriving at 2:00, seeing the couple, and staying "at the Court" 45 minutes.

    If he was using Cox's statement to bolster his case, why would he ever add the precision of 3:00, the very time Cox said she came back?

    But if he wasn't using Cox, he got the dark and quiet of Kelly's room right on his own--and, perhaps he wasn't using Lewis either, which for me entails the where ya at problem.
    Last edited by paul emmett; 02-26-2008, 01:49 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Cutting it a bit fine...?

    In his press statement, Hutchinson's stated departure time was dangerously close to when Cox said she returned to the Court that night. If Hutchinson was clever enough to fabricate his story based on the evidence of Mrs Cox, would he not have tried to put a greater distance between her arriving at Miller's Court and his presence and departure therefrom?

    Leave a comment:


  • paul emmett
    replied
    Good points, Ben.

    Everything you said was right. Hutchinson could have used Cox's satements, people in waiting are not cemented to one spot, dark and noiseless came in the press accounts, and I did address this myself.

    The reason I did so was to say that I felt anyone both careful enough to utilize Cox's statement and not exactly telling the whole truth so help him god, would have been careful enough to put himself on the same side of the street as Lewis did. That was all I wanted to say.
    Last edited by paul emmett; 02-26-2008, 01:00 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • c.d.
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    ...nearer twenty-eight, actually! Bit of a typo, there, Ben
    Well 28 and 8 are 36 which is just 3 away from 39. Hmmmm. Seems mighty suspicious to me.

    c.d.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Hi Ben,
    Originally posted by Ben View Post
    The width of the actual street, excluding the pavement, was shown to have been approximately eight feet
    I bring "Mrs Donnelly of Crossinghams (West)" back out of the black hole to help:

    Click image for larger version

Name:	dorset-street-mrsdonnelly.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	50.3 KB
ID:	652668

    If she was of average height for a woman (about 5ft), I make the road - between the pavements - roughly 14 feet wide.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Hi Gareth,

    Sort of. The width of the actual street, excluding the pavement, was shown to have been approximately eight feet in a previous geography-related thread (now in a cyber black-hole alas!) Naturally, the total width would need to include the pavement on both sides.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Ben View Post
    Besides, Dorset Street was eight feet wide
    ...nearer twenty-eight, actually! Bit of a typo, there, Ben

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Good points, Frank.

    Hut's story matched Cox's, so to me it doesn't matter if he's talking 2:15 or 3:00. Indeed, 3 is closer to Cox, and it is one small thing that makes me believe him
    But you've addressed this yourself, Paul. If he learned about Lewis' evidence concerning the 2:30am loiterer and became spooked into fabricating a story to vindicate his presence there, he probably learned about Cox's evidence at the same time, and "used" it to bolster his version of events. I'd agree with Frank's observation that there is no real discrepency with regard to Hutchinson's location. People who are "watching and waiting" for someone for any length of time don't usually cement themselves to one fixed spot, but tend instead to move around, especially if the weather is cold. Besides, Dorset Street was eight feet wide, so there wouldn't have been any appreciable movement.

    Incidentally the "dark, noiselss" detail was only introduced in press accounts. Nothing of that nature was mentioned in the initial police statement.

    Best regards,
    Ben
    Last edited by Ben; 02-25-2008, 05:52 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • paul emmett
    replied
    Originally posted by Frank van Oploo View Post
    Hi Paul,

    It's not clear when exactly he's supposed to have gone up the court to see that MJK's room was dark and quiet. It may well have been just before he said he left his vigil, which would be close to 3 am. It would even make sense for him to leave at that point: the darkness and quietness suggested the client would stay the night and that the couple were asleep, so there was nothing left to do for him.

    GH didn't clearly state where exactly he was standing or if he was standing in one spot the whole time. He just stated he "went to the court to see if I could see them" and that he "stood there" for about 45 minutes. That doesn't mean he necessarily stood at the very entrance to the court, nor that he necessarily stood at the exact same spot the whole time. It was a rather cold night, he may have moved from time to time.

    Having said the above, I also think he was there - getting the attention and perhaps even some money would all be fine and dandy, but running the risk of being suspected would be quite another thing, I'd imagine.

    All the best,
    Frank
    Hi Frank,

    Id like to say something to each paragraph, but I'm not so good at the techy stuff.
    One, I was saying that with respect to dark and quiet, Hut's story matched Cox's, so to me it doesn't matter if he's talking 2:15 or 3:00. Indeed, 3 is closer to Cox, and it is one small thing that makes me believe him.

    Two, "to the court" doesn't sound like across the street to me, and in the papers Hut was more explicit: Sugden says, "he stood about the enterance of Miller's Court for about 45 minutes." So this is one discrepency that makes me lean toward George.

    Three, we agree on the bottom line anyways, so I know all this is academic. Do you then think Hut saw MJK and guest? Clearly, he was running the risk of being suspected.

    Paul

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X