This idea that everyone knew each other, by sight if not by name, in an area such as this, seems to come from nowhere - or when some theory requires it to have been the case.
And please see my response to Lechmere. There is nothing remotely unusual about the apparent failure to connect Hutchinson's account with Lewis', whereas it requires speculative leaps and the ever-convenient "lost report" to argue that the connection was first explored and subsequently eliminated. Had such events occurred, it is impossible that the press missed out on it or failed to report on it. Once they concluded that Astrakhan was a fabrication - and the likelihood is overwhelmingly that they did arrive at that conclusion - they evidently no longer considered that Hutchinson was there at all, just as Violenia wasn't really there when he claimed to be the last person to see Annie Chapman alive with a fictional suspect. The precedent had been set, which is why it was so tempting to lump Hutchinson into the same category as Violenia, Packer and others.
Regards,
Ben
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