Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Leander Analysis

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

  • babybird67
    replied
    Originally posted by Ben View Post
    That can impact hugely on any judgement tendered. For instance, if he saw other signatures from the same individual that registered far less similarity with the Toppy entry, it may have increased the validity of the assumption that the perceived similarities were of a rather more coincidental nature, not that I personally detected much similarity.

    Precisely, Ben. How biased and unprofessional to de-select valid comparative materials on the basis that these materials might actually sway the examiner to place more emphasis on the differences than he otherwise might.

    A spectacular own goal there by the pro-Leander camp. I am still in utter shock at the revelation that he wasnt provided with all the available materials myself. "Meagre" doesnt even begin to cover it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Hi Victor,

    The problem here is that you cannot simultaneously convey a neutral stance AND a belief that the signatures register a "remarkable consistency", simply because the latter isn't neutral at all! Neutrality is what came across very strongly in Leander's first contribution. He listed some similatiries, but observed that "against these", there are differences. On balance, he observed that "it could not be ruled out" that we're dealing with the same person.

    That, for the record, reflects my stance on the matter.

    Personally, I don't consider it likely that Toppy was the individual we seek, but I wouldn't dream of "ruling him out" conclusively.

    If Leander's neutrality needed any further reinforcement, he even provided a grading system, from which we learn that the expression he used, "cannot be ruled out", was applicable in the cases of neutrality. We've since learned that Leander was supplied with information that he ajudged to be "meagre" despite the fact that the "supplier" had the opportunity to make it less meagre by providing all three statement signatures, which is what Sue Iremoner was supplied with in the 1990s.

    That can impact hugely on any judgement tendered. For instance, if he saw other signatures from the same individual that registered far less similarity with the Toppy entry, it may have increased the validity of the assumption that the perceived similarities were of a rather more coincidental nature, not that I personally detected much similarity.

    All the best,
    Ben
    Last edited by Ben; 07-21-2009, 03:29 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Jane Welland:

    "Anyhow - what do I think? Well, to judge by your most recent account of his response to you, he has put the matter quite fairly, I think. I thought I had made that clear already? He has insufficient material. You say that he would always have such because there are not the requisite 10 samples on each side - and I accept that. What I don't accept is that his view can be accepted as being any more than it is when it is based on less than the whole number of samples available. His view would be worth more if he had seen them all. I'm sticking to that one, I'm afraid, as it is a matter of plain logic - I say again, if you don't have the complete picture, you have incomplete information - stands to reason."

    Fair as it comes, Jane - couldnīt be more pleased with that answer.

    "I accept what you say about your reasons for sending the final witness signature to Leander, but with the greatest of respect, Fisherman, in not sending all three you have run the risk of unduly colouring Leander's view towards a match - I do not say intentionally."

    Look at it this way, Jane; if you pick keys from a pile of individually shaped keys in a barrel, and try them in a lock, then when you find the one that fits, it matters not if the same locksmith that shaped that key did not shape the others in the same fashion. The shapes of these keys do not - in retrospect - remould the first key you found. It remains the correct one.

    In the same fashion, if we imagine a situation where only the signature Leander saw existed as he made his examination, then the sudden appearance on the stage of the two other signatures would not mean that he would change his meaning about the signature he first saw.
    Weighed together, he may or may not have reached another result than the one he has handed down, that is only logical to deduct, but in the question of what the signature from page three represents visually, not a iota will change. It will remain the same graphic conglomerate of lines and curves as it always was, and THAT particular signature therefore also remains a probable match.

    After that, we can go on for ages discussing the other signatures (that are also very much alike the third one in very many respects, as effectively shown by Sam on the 1911 thread), just as we can go on discussing whether I had any other intents than the ones I have already given you. Such discussions can result in heaps of things, but one of them is not the signature from the third protocol page changing in any respect.

    The best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    More:

    I think, Jane, that nobody can be certain of a match, at least if we are speaking about 100 per cent certain. I myself may well be the one that has stretched the furthest of those who are "Toppy-endorsing" (donīt I just love that word!), since I have said that I work from the assumption that a match is at hand
    That's fine if you think so, but please avoid the usual trap of ramming your "near-certainty" down other people's throats, because she majority clearly don't share it. The nearest thing we've got to a full examination is that which was undetaken in the early 1990s by Sue Iremonger, as attested to by several experts in the field, and she came to the conclusion, after seeing all three statement signatures, that Toppy probably wasn't the witness. You're equally entitled to your opinion that it "defies logic", although it's a rather silly stance, since we know that Iremonger is an expert and you are not, and it also comes with the troubling inference that you're somehow the ultimate barometer of "logic".

    I needed substantiation for my conviction that the signatures were a probable match, and Leander provided that.
    Maybe after being pestered several times, but certainly not initially, as his first letter demonstrated. You must try to avoid the trap of admitting to "needing substantiation". Doesn't read very well. You should approach an expert with a clean slate, rather than harbouring some perceievd "need" for an expert to endorse the conclusion you've already jumped to. That tends to lead to skewed results, which isn't helped by the fact that you only gave him one signature, and related "information" about the number of George Hutchinsons in the East End in 1888 that you couldn't possibly have known to be true or false.

    And unscientific though the approach may be, what will always remain is the fact that this signature tallies with Toppys to an extent where Leander believes we have a probable match.
    Don't keep saying it, Fisherman. It doesn't add any more weight to a previously challenged position. I utterly reject that he came to the conclusion that "we have a probable match". If he really thought so, he'd have said as much from the outset, or at the very least conveyed that general impression. But he did nothing of the sort, and nobody should be expecting to swallow radically contrasting views.

    And no matter if we add the other two signatures, that will not change the inherent qualities of this, the third witness signature in the least
    That's nonsense. What if he compared the second signature, for example and decided that it could not have been written by the person who wrote either the 1911 census entry OR the third signature? Such comparisons are absolutely necessary, not least to determine the accuracy of Leander's own discernment. What are we supposed to make of his views, for example, if his discounted two signatures that we know for certain have a common source?

    You can warp whatever he said into a conclusion that we have a match, and use silly rhetorical language when claiming that the alternative has a "microscopical" probabiluty of being correct, but you're saying so on the basis of having dismissed Ms. Iremonger's findings, despite the fact that that the compared all three original statement signatures, not just one that was sent via email. We've since learned that reservations are entertained about the validity of foreign documents examiners being used to compare non-native scripts.
    Last edited by Ben; 07-21-2009, 03:14 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • babybird67
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Incidentally, my own stance on the issue of which signatures are most credible to have been written by the witness and which may have been writen by Badham is that they were probably ALL written by the witness. But IF there is any doubt involved, the safest bet would be to believe that the witness signed the protocol at the end, at the very least - and that signature is the one I provided Leander with, and the one I was discussing at the time I contacted him.

    And unscientific though the approach may be
    Oh my God! I don't usually read your posts Fish but this is priceless! So Leander wasnt even given the other two George Hutchinson signatures to compare???? You decided which one YOU deemed most similar, most likely to have been written by the witness, despite there being acknowledged doubt about whether Badham signed one or more, and which one or more, and you just sent him that one???


    Oh it gets better and better. You dont think he should have had those other two signatures at all? Even since one of his problems was the lack of available comparable material? Yet we had three alleged Hutchinson signatures, but you only sent one? The one that didnt have half the name George left off? The one that it has been suggested was written by Badham?

    Fish, honestly, to call this method unscientific is like comparing the Biblical flood to a teardrop splashing on arid ground.

    You have single-handedly shown just how flawed and unreliable Leander's comments actually are, because you have contributed to undermining them and making them so.

    it now has to be conceded that whatever Leander said even in his personal capacity is completely and utterly inadmissable within this debate. End of story.


    (Mike...i kept your cloud warm for you, come join the angelic hosts who have been proven correct in treating Leander's view with circumspection all along...i cannot believe for a moment you would endorse providing just the one signature that we have from the witness statement to anyone for comparison...please tell me you dont)
    Last edited by babybird67; 07-21-2009, 03:32 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Ben writes:

    "t's either the case that he used the word correctly, but radically altered his stance later to appease a nuisance, or this particular expert has a genuine problem with clarity"

    But thatīs not what you said in your initial post, Ben. In that you opted for him being most informative and reassuring.

    The best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • Jane Welland
    replied
    Hi Fisherman

    You speak of an outlandish an unforgiveable insult - with the greatest of respect, not by me. I don't quite see how this is my business - I would have thought the whole 'He said this, He said that' affair was between you and Ben, frankly.

    But you seem unsatisfied with the response I have so far given, which is that I cannot possibly know what Leander thought. If you look at my post above, you will note that I have consciously refrained from speculating on this very matter.

    Anyhow - what do I think? Well, to judge by your most recent account of his response to you, he has put the matter quite fairly, I think. I thought I had made that clear already? He has insufficient material. You say that he would always have such because there are not the requisite 10 samples on each side - and I accept that. What I don't accept is that his view can be accepted as being any more than it is when it is based on less than the whole number of samples available. His view would be worth more if he had seen them all. I'm sticking to that one, I'm afraid, as it is a matter of plain logic - I say again, if you don't have the complete picture, you have incomplete information - stands to reason.

    I accept what you say about your reasons for sending the final witness signature to Leander, but with the greatest of respect, Fisherman, in not sending all three you have run the risk of unduly colouring Leander's view towards a match - I do not say intentionally.

    If you ask me why I think some posters have an issue with your communications with Leander, then I think this is one thing which has not helped. I hope you see my point, which I am trying to make as a point of principle, and not in order to point the finger of blame at anyone.

    So for me, it isn't a question of Leander 'lying' to you, or not - I have no idea if he wants to get rid of you - I'm not the person you should be asking about that, as only Leander knows the answer to that one.

    I do think, however, and have already said as much, that his view is of limited usefulness, for the reasons given above.

    Now, Fisherman, I hope that will do for you - I really don't want to engage in a protracted argument concerning who has slandered who - in my view, it is regrettable that people are pushed to such tactics in the first place.

    Best regards

    Jane x

    Leave a comment:


  • babybird67
    replied
    some facts through the eyes of a babybird...

    1. Although this thread is called The Leander Analysis, the initial posting, and various contributions to this and other Hutch-related threads both before and since, has established quite clearly that Leander has not made an analysis. Leander has stated quite clearly that he has been unable to offer a professional opinion given the "meagre" materials he has been presented with, since document examiners cannot pass professional judgements on documents they havent even seen, and has merely offered a "spontaneous" and "personal" comment.

    2. No document examiner worth listening to would attempt to come to any professional opinion on documents he or she had not seen. To do so would be, i would imagine, professional suicide, and i doubt any such person would be taken seriously within their field ever again should they do so. This is why every single time Leander has been pestered, , i mean approached for "clarification" , he has consistently reiterated this point...that he is unable to tender a professional expert opinion...the materials just do not allow him to do so.

    3. Can we dispense with this ludicrious idea, therefore, that there is some kind of professional opinion carrying some kind of weight forthcoming from Leander, since he himself has consistently eschewed the contention that he has given one?

    4. Leander has been said in his latest comments to have provided some commitment to the idea that Toppy was "probably" Hutch, if I am to take Mike's comments, in which he congratulates Fisherman on painfully torturing this information out of poor Leander at the seventh attempt, as correct. If he now thinks Toppy is "probably" Hutch, why did he not say this in his first to sixth responses? Should someone be pleased about such a judgement being forthcoming at a seventh attempt to obtain it? Should we not now be wondering exactly what Leander has based his change of opinion on? It would be perfectly easy to understand this apparently increased confidence in the Toppy/Hutch identification had he been influenced professionally, by examining evidence that had since come to light, such as the original documents, or other sample signatures from the witness (which we do not have)...then a change of stance would be rational and explicable.

    But there has been no new evidence has there.

    So we are left perplexed as to why he has changed his mind? It is not an evidence-based change of mind. One can only conclude with Ben that the dogged persistence with which he has been relentlessly pursued over this issue has worn him down and he sincerely wishes to draw a line under the episode and has said what he has said in order to effect that conclusion.

    There is no other explanation for his change of (personal and spontaneous) verdict. Thus his opinion is now effectively worthless in this debate, because it has been changed by factors other than the examination of evidence, and has shown inexplicable inconsistency. I say this with the greatest respect to Leander himself, but we need to stop referencing his opinion as if it should have some greater bearing on our examination of the signatures than Iremonger's or anyone else's. It is a personal and spontaneous opinion and is interesting as such...it is nothing more than that.

    5. If anyone had bothered looking at the link Ben shared with me, they would have seen that in the field of document examining, there is an acknowledged problem with examining documents which have been created in scripts/alphabets/writing which differ from the native script of the document examiner themselves. This is because there is naturally an unfamiliarity with similarities and differences that would be more apparent to someone natively accustomed to looking at that script. Thus within the field itself it is acknowledged that it is not advisable to have documents examined by examiners who are not familiar with the scripts contained in the documents themselves, and, that if they are so examined, much less weight should be given to the conclusions forthcoming from them. This is advice from the field of document examining itself! Leander is obviously not as familiar with English script as Iremonger would be. His opinion should therefore be approached with much more caution, as acknowledged by his peers, and as i am sure he would also acknowledge, since he has quite reasonably already understood that he cannot give his professional opinion, and also acknowledged that he has had "meagre" materials, "copy-based", not original, and also acknowledged that he himself may have been giving too much weight to the material he has seen (i cant remember the exact quotation, but that was my understanding of what he was saying).

    So...factors which caution us against taking Leander's comments too seriously:

    a, he told us himself he could not supply a professional opinion and could only comment in a "spontaneous" and "personal" capacity.

    b, he has not seen the original documents. Nobody who has not seen the original documents can possibly know what factors within those originals could influence the outcome of the examination, since they haven't actually seen them.

    c, he is working in a script with which he is unfamiliar. This has a bearing on whether or not he is best placed to recognise common similarities or differences that may be apparent to those examining in their native script.

    d, he has changed his mind from the neutral one of "cannot be ruled out" to something which has been more positive, according to Mike, and this change of mind cannot be attributed to the examination of evidence, only to the influence of a certain pressure on him. This factor alone, unfortunately, means i am unable to take Leander's comments on the issue seriously any more, since integrity is central to this issue, and changing one's mind without clear, consistent, logical, evidence-based reasons, sadly affects the integrity of one's opinion. I understand why he has done so, because in essence it doesnt matter since he was only passing a personal comment, but trying to represent this as a professional opinion which must be revered and kow-towed to when it is quite demonstrably nothing of the sort is starting to wear very thin with me.


    I am sure there is lots more i intended to say but i am aiming to emulate the Hell Fiend's admirable brevity ...only another minus 342,786 words to go!
    Last edited by babybird67; 07-21-2009, 02:59 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ben
    replied
    Fisherman, why can't you condense your posts a little more - make them more succinct? I means I have to do the same now! I thought I was bad enough, but you really take the biscuit.

    He mentioned in his last post that if George Hutchinson number one and number two both had attented the same school and had the same teacher, then there may be some reason to lift an eyebrow
    But that was in stark and radical contrast to anything he said in his irefutably neutral first post, so we can't possibly accept that both stances reflected his view simultaneously, because that's impossible. Best instead to recognise that his contributions have become so polluted as a consequence of more bombardments along the lines of: "Please say it's Toppy! It is Toppy, isn't it?", that his radically opposing viewpoints effectively cancel eachother out.

    it also remains to be concluded that Victorians of lower East end London DID write much alike each other. I have seen no substantiation for that in the shape of published research work - but I HAVE seen the wildly differing handstyles of the handful of George Hutchinsons of the correct time and space
    But then Garry Wroe, who it wouldn't take any stretch of the imagination to guess, has probably seen more signatures than you during the course of his research than you have, and his observations were that handwriting from the period is often so similiar that he would be surprised if there were not at least some degree of similarity between two signatures, irrespective of whether or not they'd been written by the same person, and the earlier examples from the 1911 thread tend to bear this out.

    Why, Jane, do you not take into account that he worked from his manual, and therefore COULD NOT have given a more positive verdict?
    I don't know if you accidentally misread the manual or are deliberely seeking mislead or what here, but the manual specifically stated that that the term "Cannot be excluded" is used in cases where there may be "tendencies one way or the other", which accurately describes Leander's first letter, in which he outlined both the tendencies towards differences (nothing to do with amplitude!) and the tendencies towards similarity in some aspects. Leander himself must have clung to the hope that by providing the manual, there would be an end to the pestering for "clarification", but that wasn't to be, and there's no better way to gain his attention to telling him that his credibility is under attack.

    a probable match was at hand
    Bullocks. He didn't say anything of the sort in his initial letter. We know that for a fact now, courtesy of his manual.

    If you are not biased, as you so often press, then why do you use ONLY the part of his statement that - using an inappropriate interpretation that does not take the manuals advice into account - could be represented as unenthusiastic?
    Probably because she realises that she cannot possibly accept everything Leander says, all at once, because his alleged observations contrast with one another so markedly. "Cannot be ruled out" warping into "suprised if not a match" was our first indication that something was seriously amiss, but in a more damning case of proven contradiction, he leaps majestically from listing non-amplitude related differences to claiming that there was no difference other than in amplitude.

    That's a contradiction.

    A proven one.

    So it doesn't suprise me if Jane doesn't accept the whole caboodle. How can she, in light of the above?

    just as I point out that Leander makes a very far-reaching use of the opportunity provided to nuance, by saying that he expects any forthcoming evidence to confirm his suggestion of a genuine match.
    "Far-reaching"? That's one way of putting it! At least you've started to concede now that his intepretation and use of unambiguous dictionary definitions is "reaches" somewhat. No wonder this gentleman seems to have a problem with lawyers attacking his statements.

    "Did he write it, Mr/Dr. Leander"?

    "Well, it isn't beyond the remotest realms of possibility, but...

    "So, it's unlikely, is what you're saying?"

    "Oh no, I'd be astonished if he didn't write the thing"

    "But but but...you just said..!!"

    All joking aside here, it's either the case that he used the word correctly, but radically altered his stance later to appease a nuisance, or this particular expert has a genuine problem with clarity. All this after we've learned that foreign "experts" aren't the best candidates for making comparisons with scripts in the English language.

    What Leander did, was to compare witness signature number three to Toppys signatures, using only the two dimensions provided by the photocopies.
    Just signature #3? What about signatures #1 and #2?

    If he didn't see the latter, we're in a hideous pickle, because Sue Iremonger compared all three witness signatures, and using original documents to boot. If he only saw the third signature, then I'm wondering why? Would that imply that you only sent him the signature that you felt resembled Toppy's handwriting? In which case, there's almost an argument that you arranged the material in such a way as to engender the conclusion you wanted him to give.

    But, Like Sam has pressed so many times, such investigations are useful when you try to reveal a fraud, but NOT when you are trying to answer the question "Do these two signatures look alike?"
    Back to the fallacy that pressing something a certain amount of times makes a flawed observation any more pursuasive. Still wrong, of course, since Leander knew full well that he wasn't dealing with a case of fraud, and yet he still "pressed" the observation that a full expert opinion wasn't possible in the absence of the original documents.

    What Frank Leander specifically can do, is to add an all of his experience and all of his knowledge, and then have a look of his own and confirm that yes, the signatures ARE quite alike. That is what he can do, and that was what he did
    I utterly reject that, though, since such a view couldn't possibly resemble his first contribution to the topic which, as we learn from his grading systerm, was inescapably neutral.

    instead he assures us that the only differences are differences in amplitude.
    But that statement has been proven to be false.

    I've told you what "amplitude" means, and it clearly wasn't a word you were even familiar with. If you return to his first post - the one that you'd prefer to forget was ever made - you'll discover that he listed the differences, and most of them had nothing whatsoever to do with amplitude. I'm going to have great fun pointing this out whenever you think it might be a good idea to repeat the original objection as though it were never proven untrue.

    ...nuanced his finds by firmly stating that he thinks we have a probable match
    Odd that for a such a "firm statement", we've never actually heard any such thing from Leander. I guess this is the bit where Fisherman contacts Leander for an 8th time, and elicits another responds where "firm statement" usefully appears on cue. Once again, we can have all sorts of jollies returing once again to the reality that "cannot be ruled out" does not mean "probable", as conclusively demonstrated by his manual, but that's entirely up to you.
    Last edited by Ben; 07-21-2009, 03:09 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Victor
    replied
    Ben,

    Where is the inconsistency in saying that his professional opinion is neutral, not enough information for an unambiguous statement that there was a positive match, but that he thought the signatures were remarkably consistent?

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Jane Welland writes:

    "Please be clear, Fisherman, I have not ruled out a match. I have asked questions of those who are certain of a match, that is all - which, I might add, have at times been roundly ignored by all."

    I think, Jane, that nobody can be certain of a match, at least if we are speaking about 100 per cent certain. I myself may well be the one that has stretched the furthest of those who are "Toppy-endorsing" (donīt I just love that word!), since I have said that I work from the assumption that a match is at hand. We have no full examination and we canīt get such a thing, and therefore, some small doubt must remain, but my honest opinion is that the signatures combined with the surrounding circumstances tell me that I have passed the point of reasonable doubt. It would defy logic if it was not a hit, in my opinion - but sometimes logic IS defied, and that is why I think I need to keep the door ever so slightly ajar.
    Anybody else who feels that this is wrong are welcome to that wiew and any other wiew they may hold, but the way things stand, I feel very comfortable about accepting the match.

    The methodology may well be at fault, just as you say, Jane - but then we are speaking of traditional scientific methodology, and I never set out to use that, nor did I ever claim that I have done so - I needed substantiation for my conviction that the signatures were a probable match, and Leander provided that.
    Incidentally, my own stance on the issue of which signatures are most credible to have been written by the witness and which may have been writen by Badham is that they were probably ALL written by the witness. But IF there is any doubt involved, the safest bet would be to believe that the witness signed the protocol at the end, at the very least - and that signature is the one I provided Leander with, and the one I was discussing at the time I contacted him.

    And unscientific though the approach may be, what will always remain is the fact that this signature tallies with Toppys to an extent where Leander believes we have a probable match. And no matter if we add the other two signatures, that will not change the inherent qualities of this, the third witness signature in the least. Therefore, we have found that one of the witnessī signatures is a probable match of Toppys ditto, and that is quite enough to conclude that the two were one and the same, as far as I am concerned. The possibility that the match is a coincidental one is effectively microscopical to my mind, quite simply.

    "Now, you ask again, do I think Leander lied to you - How can I answer that? I have no idea, Fisherman - why do you ask?"

    Because I regard Bens suggestion as completely outlandish and an unforgivable insult, and I think that it is impossible to have a rational discussion with people who resort to such extremities with no substantiation at all. If you share that belief of Bens, it must very much impact my wiew of your work. I am totally uninterested about whether you stand on anybodys side or not, but much interested in where you draw the line for what can be accepted in a discussion with a renowned authority with an impeccable reputation.
    That is why I ask.

    The best, Jane!
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • Jane Welland
    replied
    Hi Fisherman

    I take what you say on board, yes - and I agree that the signatures look similar - quite honestly, where is the person who says there is no obvious resemblance?

    There is clearly a resemblance.

    To argue otherwise would be fallacious. I have two sticking points, though Fisherman, and they are these:

    Leander has done the best he can with the material supplied - and we should all applaud him for that, imo. However, he has not seen all the signatures, so his comparison cannot be as accurate as it might otherwise have been, manual or not.

    That's simple logic, not biased in any or either direction. As you say, judging by his manual, he could never have made a full expert analysis in any event, because the actual quantity of material is insufficient - i.e. there are not 10 signatures on both sides. But that has no bearing whatever on the fact that he would have benefitted from all the available material, even if it was in copy form.

    The methodology is at fault here - and I'm attaching no blame to anyone personally by saying so.

    Please be clear, Fisherman, I have not ruled out a match. I have asked questions of those who are certain of a match, that is all - which, I might add, have at times been roundly ignored by all.

    My second issue is of course with the certainty displayed by other posters in that we have a match between the signatures - because Leander has affirmed it. No he hasn't. Nor can he hope to, expert though he is, without the full sample available to us.

    With an incomplete sample, he must emerge with an incomplete view. That implies no bias on my part, it is the product of rational debate.

    I have no wish to enter into a personal row with anybody, Fisherman, I thought that was clear? I hope I treat all with due respect and consdieration, and accept the rights of others to hold views other than my own.

    Now, you ask again, do I think Leander lied to you - How can I answer that? I have no idea, Fisherman - why do you ask?

    I don't see how you can know, as if you ask him, and he was, he isn't likely to tell you, is he? If you want my view, I suggest that you take what you know of the man and ask yourself if you believe he would have done such a thing.

    If your question is designed to determine whether I agree with Ben, or am on Ben's 'side' then I'm sorry, but I won't be drawn into that.

    In fact, while we're on it - where is this 'anti-Toppy' camp that is so often referrred to? Who are they?I can see the 'pro-Toppy' camp well enough, but it seems to me that unless I'm missing something, the 'opposition' consists of those posters who advocate caution - which is hardly the same thing.

    Now, let's be amicable, Fisherman - it cannot be ruled out that you will be shown to be correct - I think the matterr is far from over as yet - as I have said.

    Best regards

    Jane x

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Jane Welland:

    "Garry has observed, for example, that 'handstyles' (to use Fisherman's term) show a remarkable propensity for general similarity at that date in London - is Leander aware of this? Has he taken it into account?"

    He mentioned in his last post that if George Hutchinson number one and number two both had attented the same school and had the same teacher, then there may be some reason to lift an eyebrow. So yes, he has commented on the issue. But he also added that the chance for this would have been very small.
    It also remains to be concluded that Victorians of lower East end London DID write much alike each other. I have seen no substantiation for that in the shape of published research work - but I HAVE seen the wildly differing handstyles of the handful of George Hutchinsons of the correct time and space, published in post 18 of the "1911" thread. Have you, Jane? They vary very much, just as signatures always have done, regardless of time and society.

    "Leander has had a look, as a personal favour to Fisherman, and doesn't rule out a match - I believe that is what he said?"

    Why, Jane, do you not take into account that he worked from his manual, and therefore COULD NOT have given a more positive verdict? It is perfectly obvious that he was working with a material composed in a manner that never allowed him to give a verdict other than "No certainty about the signature can be reached, but ..."
    And why do you not comment on the fact that the same manual allowed for nuancing, and that Leander DID nuance his wiew by adding that AS FAR AS HE COULD SEE FROM THE INSUFFICIENT MATERIAL PROVIDED, a probable match was at hand?

    If you are not biased, as you so often press, then why do you use ONLY the part of his statement that - using an inappropriate interpretation that does not take the manuals advice into account - could be represented as unenthusiastic?

    I use BOTH of these things: I point out that the "cannot be excluded" verdict relates to the manuals strict bid never to recommend any wording that could be intrepreted as a verdict of a certain match as long as the material involved does not allow for it, just as I point out that Leander makes a very far-reaching use of the opportunity provided to nuance, by saying that he expects any forthcoming evidence to confirm his suggestion of a genuine match.

    Why is it, Jane, that an unbiased, thorough and discerning person like you seems to forget about this latter part in each and every post? I would welcome an explanation on that point very much!

    As for you repeated claims that the exchange was informal, I still fail to see who has claimed the opposite, just as I fail to see who says the examination was a full one.

    What Leander did, was to compare witness signature number three to Toppys signatures, using only the two dimensions provided by the photocopies.
    He could not establish anything related to things that are only visible using all three dimensions. But, Like Sam has pressed so many times, such investigations are useful when you try to reveal a fraud, but NOT when you are trying to answer the question "Do these two signatures look alike?" - for then the verb "look" rules that we are dealing with a two-dimensional issue. And THAT is something we can ALL do! What Frank Leander specifically can do, is to add an all of his experience and all of his knowledge, and then have a look of his own and confirm that yes, the signatures ARE quite alike. That is what he can do, and that was what he did. Moreover, he could also use that experience of his to tell us that there were no differences involved in his two-dimensional examination that structurally led him to think that there were two writers about - instead he assures us that the only differences are differences in amplitude. In his very first post he said that there were possible explanations for all the differences involved.

    All of this; his reluctance to grade the match on the higher end of his scale and the built-in reasons for this reluctance, his admittance that the examination was not a full one, his stating that there was a measure of informality in his exchange with me, the fact that he did not get the whole material, and the fact that he nuanced his finds by firmly stating that he thinks we have a probable match, Jane - all of this I discuss and acknowledge. But you settle for only saying that Leander found that a match could not be ruled out, although the implications are VERY clear that this is the manual speaking, whereas the PERSONAL musings by Leander speak of a quite probable match.
    Why is that, Jane?

    And why do you avoid answering the question I put to you about Leanders "lying" to accomodate me? If you agree with me that we should never treat any renowned, well-reputed researcher in such a manner, the question should be easy enough to answer. If you disagree, and think that Leander probably does lie every now and then when he needs to get rid of people, the question should be equally easy to answer. But you seem unwilling to do so.
    Why is that, Jane?

    The best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 07-21-2009, 10:24 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Good Michael
    replied
    Jane,

    If you think he has become the final word, you haven't read the postings. No one is beyond the word 'probable' yet. No one has said that Leander's words leave room for doubt. Not a soul has intimated that. And no one is considering only signatures. Really, it is so much more than that that we are all tired of having to defend signatures when that is only the tusk.

    Mike

    Leave a comment:


  • Jane Welland
    replied
    Morning All...

    Originally posted by Ben View Post
    I don't know how many people have taken the time to examine the link I shared with BB, but it includes a chapter entitled "Unfamilair Scripts", and highlights the problems implicit in examining documents in other languages. The author, Dave Ellen, assures us that it doesn't happen very often, and for good reason.
    (my emphasis)

    As I understand it, Leander responded informally to Fisherman's initial request - as a personal favour, not an official analysis in his professional capacity. In fact, I believe that's exactly what Leander himself said.

    Yet, since then, Leander's view has apparently become the final word on the matter for some. How does that work?

    As to the above - the point is that it wouldn't have happened in this case, either, if Fisherman was not himself Swedish, and naturally contacted an expert in his own country.

    I shouldn't think it likely that being Swedish has made any difference at all to Leander's ability to perceive differences and similarities between the form of the signatures. Actually, I think it says as much in that link posted by BB.

    I do have concerns regarding the cultural elements of the signatures, however - Garry has observed, for example, that 'handstyles' (to use Fisherman's term) show a remarkable propensity for general similarity at that date in London - is Leander aware of this? Has he taken it into account?

    I don't know, of course, but I think it's a fair question, as it may make a difference.

    By all means, as I think I have said above, accept that Leander has had a look, as a personal favour to Fisherman, and doesn't rule out a match - I believe that is what he said?

    But I think it must be seen as that, taking into account the indisputable facts that:

    a) he has only ever viewed copies

    b}he has not seen all the examples of signatures that exist to our knowledge

    c}he may be unaware of cultural differences which may have a bearing on the comparision.

    That, having read what everybody says, is how I see it at the moment.

    It isn't the last word.

    Not by a long way yet.

    Best to all

    Jane x

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X