“Banging your head against this particular brick wall is not a good look. As Garry and I have taken pains to explain to you, the word 'because' doesn't belong in that sentence. If the police gave this as a reason to 'considerably discount' Hutch's statement, they were clearly fobbing the Echo off.”
The suggested alternative to the police providing the Echo with this information – whether as a “fob-off” or otherwise – is that Echo themselves invented the detail because they supposedly found it so unfathomable that two witness leads, Cox’s and Hutchinson’s, could be pursued simultaneously. The fatal flaw in this proposal, though, is that the police granted the same newspaper an interview at the Commercial Street police station the following day, i.e. after being made fully aware that the same journalists had brazenly falsified the police position regarding Hutchinson’s evidence. If we do the sensible thing and reject such a palpably absurd scenario, we’re obliged to accept that the police informed the Echo that Hutchinson’s discrediting was due to the late presentation of his evidence, even if it was "disinformation".
I don’t see how it can be suggested that a failure to come forward for three-days is not a “problem” that relates to the witness’s credibility. If an account suffers a “very reduced importance” for that very reason, as claimed by the police to the Echo, what other inference can there be besides the obvious one – that the lateness of the evidence invited suspicion that the story might be bogus?
Even if it was a fob-off – and I totally agree that the “delay” alone cannot have been anything like the most important reason for discarding Hutchinson – the true reason(s) must have been concerned with the witness’s credibility, or else they would not have maligned him publicly. The “honestly mistaken” excuse goes straight out of the window for this reason, along with the suggestion that the police wanted to conceal the faith they still retained in star witness Hutchinson. The subterfuge tactics occasionally adopted by the police to lull the offender into a false sense of security would not have extended to making a genuine, honest witness appear as dodgy and worthless as possible, which is unquestionably the impression created by the Echo on 13th and 14th.
I’m afraid the comparison with Lawende is a flawed one, to my mind. Lawende was merely a passer-by on the other side of the road, who evidently paid the couple scant attention. He didn’t see the woman’s face, and did not know the victim. The reverse is true for Hutchinson on almost every point. He had known Kelly for three years, had seen her on the morning of her murder, and took an unusually active and persistent interest in her movements. He also lived a few hundred yards from the murder site, and would have learned of the murder very shortly after the discovery of the body, unlike Dalston-based Lawende who would have relied on press accounts. A “delay” in the presentation of Hutchinson’s evidence is therefore far more extraordinary then Lawende’s, given the hugely different circumstances.
“Would he really have given Abberline and co the distinct impression that he went no further than the entrance on Dorset St, only to admit to the world and his wife that he had in fact gone right into the court - as he must have done if he murdered Kelly?”
“If the police seemed to be on the hunt for Blotchy, despite him being seen with Kelly a good two hours before Hutch claimed to see her with a completely different man, I can see how the press may have misinterpreted this as a considerable lessening of the latter's initial importance”
By the way, the “trail growing cold” is not a valid reason for considering any witness less “important”. If the police believed a witness to have seen the real killer, it hardly becomes that witness’s fault that the killer hasn’t been caught. The trail went cold for Lawende too, but that didn’t stop the police from using him to look over Sadler, Grainger and probably Kosminski, instead of Hutchinson, who alleged a far better view and description of the presumed killer than Lawende did.
“And again, unless the police had time to read the papers and notice any glaring contradictions in Hutch's statements, they wouldn't have noticed the papers making up 'audiences' with them at the nick either, or claiming semi-educated guesswork as exclusive inside knowledge.”
All the best,
Ben
Comment