Welcome back, Fisherman.
So presumably you cannot "for the life of you" accept that the police “would not keep track” of someone like Charles Cross, who was "there and when as the murder went down"? Remember, they can't have kept proper track of Cross if they allowed him to appear at the inquest under the guise of an innocent witness, never once realising that here was the real Jack the Ripper fibbing his bottom off right under their noses. This is why you should only attack other suspect theories if they don’t expose glaring holes in your own.
Where are you getting your information from that this particular aspect of Lewis' evidence was "judged important by the police"? I don't want to see ex cathedra pronouncements based on thin air. I want to see actual evidence that Lewis' description of the man in the wideawake in particular was "judged important by the police". It is, of course, completely without foundation. What we actually see is that this aspect of Lewis' evidence was totally eclipsed in terms of significance by her other, more sensational claims, such as those pertaining to her Bethnal Green botherer from the previous Wednesday, as well as by evidence from other witnesses, such as Mary Cox. Don’t make the mistake of assuming that because we make a lot of noise 120 years later about a particular esoteric area of ripper interest, the police in 1888 accorded it as much attention as we do. What happens more commonly in the real world is that details are often missed or swamped by seemingly more significant and higher priority issues.
Your inference is a highly questionable one, in my opinion.
The fact that no connection was alluded to only means that nobody noticed it, just as you allege that the police failed to consider the guilt of Cross when they ought to have done. The similarity between Lewis' "wideawake" loiterer and Hutchinson in terms of reported actions, movements and behaviour at the same location and at the same time is far too coincidental for the two to be separate people. That's just obvious. And yet we KNOW that it went unobserved even by the contemporary press. They published Hutchinson's account before they could conceivably have had a chance to discover that a potential Lewis-Hutchinson had been investigated and ruled out by the police (which is what you wrongly claim happened). The connection was there to be made, nobody had told them they'd spotted it or dismissed it beforehand, and yet they didn't notice it.
So, unfortunately for your conclusions, you are forced by the evidence to accept that no connection was made between Hutchinson and Lewis’ wideawake loiterer. We’ve had this discussion many a time, and it would be wearisome to have to go through it all again.
Let’s not have that Dew business again, please. Nobody ever considered it a good idea to revive his thoughts on Hutchinson as accurate until you chimed in a year ago after embroiling yourself in an argument with me, and this is hardly surprising. Dew had no actual knowledge; he was relying on personal speculation only, and he made that much very clear, to be fair to him. It was you, if you recall, who cautioned me not to listen to Dew, citing the fact that he was “a bit of a freshman”, who got “lots of things terribly wrong”, and whose book was “riddled with mistakes”. That being the case, there was no reason to inform a “bit of a freshman” about the actual reasons for Hutchinson’s discrediting. He simply needed to be told that the hunt for Astrakhan man was off, leaving him to speculate many years later as to why.
As for this supposed evidence of Astrakhan man still be pursued after Hutchinson’s discrediting, let’s see the evidence, and I don’t mean the out of date nonsense I’ve dealt with thousands of times. There is not a scrap of credible evidence that anyone in any position of police seniority was still looking for Astrakhan man after 15th November. On the contrary, all indications are that they dropped Hutchinson’s account very shortly after the publication of his drastically contradictory press claims.
Why not?
Even if the police did accept the “different day” hypothesis – they definitely and provably didn’t, but let’s pretend - why on earth would they rule out the possibility of the mysterious stranger from the early morning prior to her murder being responsible for her murder the next early morning? That makes no sense at all. If they accepted Astrakhan as a living breathing reality, albeit from the previous night, there was every reason to keep him in the frame as a potential suspect. It’s just too bad, I guess, that the actual proven reason we have on record for Hutchinson’s discrediting concerned his delay in coming forward, and had nothing at all to do with any “wrong night” speculation.
Let's not go here again either, if you don't mind. Those two locations are separated by the length of a car, and the chances of him rooting himself to one spot like a statue for the full 45 minutes were obviously remote.
All the best,
Ben
I just cannot for the life of me believe that the police would not keep track of who was there and when as the murder went down. The task the police has from the outset in a murder case, is to piece the different bits together. They listen to all the the witnesses, and they are therefore the central unit who has access to all the material.
Where are you getting your information from that this particular aspect of Lewis' evidence was "judged important by the police"? I don't want to see ex cathedra pronouncements based on thin air. I want to see actual evidence that Lewis' description of the man in the wideawake in particular was "judged important by the police". It is, of course, completely without foundation. What we actually see is that this aspect of Lewis' evidence was totally eclipsed in terms of significance by her other, more sensational claims, such as those pertaining to her Bethnal Green botherer from the previous Wednesday, as well as by evidence from other witnesses, such as Mary Cox. Don’t make the mistake of assuming that because we make a lot of noise 120 years later about a particular esoteric area of ripper interest, the police in 1888 accorded it as much attention as we do. What happens more commonly in the real world is that details are often missed or swamped by seemingly more significant and higher priority issues.
“To me, there can only be one reason for the total lack of records of the connection - it was found out very quick that there never was a connection. I also find it incredibly tempting to accept that the sudden lowered interest in Hutchinsonīs testimony is knit to this lack.”
The fact that no connection was alluded to only means that nobody noticed it, just as you allege that the police failed to consider the guilt of Cross when they ought to have done. The similarity between Lewis' "wideawake" loiterer and Hutchinson in terms of reported actions, movements and behaviour at the same location and at the same time is far too coincidental for the two to be separate people. That's just obvious. And yet we KNOW that it went unobserved even by the contemporary press. They published Hutchinson's account before they could conceivably have had a chance to discover that a potential Lewis-Hutchinson had been investigated and ruled out by the police (which is what you wrongly claim happened). The connection was there to be made, nobody had told them they'd spotted it or dismissed it beforehand, and yet they didn't notice it.
So, unfortunately for your conclusions, you are forced by the evidence to accept that no connection was made between Hutchinson and Lewis’ wideawake loiterer. We’ve had this discussion many a time, and it would be wearisome to have to go through it all again.
Let’s not have that Dew business again, please. Nobody ever considered it a good idea to revive his thoughts on Hutchinson as accurate until you chimed in a year ago after embroiling yourself in an argument with me, and this is hardly surprising. Dew had no actual knowledge; he was relying on personal speculation only, and he made that much very clear, to be fair to him. It was you, if you recall, who cautioned me not to listen to Dew, citing the fact that he was “a bit of a freshman”, who got “lots of things terribly wrong”, and whose book was “riddled with mistakes”. That being the case, there was no reason to inform a “bit of a freshman” about the actual reasons for Hutchinson’s discrediting. He simply needed to be told that the hunt for Astrakhan man was off, leaving him to speculate many years later as to why.
As for this supposed evidence of Astrakhan man still be pursued after Hutchinson’s discrediting, let’s see the evidence, and I don’t mean the out of date nonsense I’ve dealt with thousands of times. There is not a scrap of credible evidence that anyone in any position of police seniority was still looking for Astrakhan man after 15th November. On the contrary, all indications are that they dropped Hutchinson’s account very shortly after the publication of his drastically contradictory press claims.
“Astrakhan man went from being a red-hot bid for the killerīs role to becoming a man that had met Kelly on the night BEFORE she was murdered. And that meant that the police would very much like to see him and ask him about his encounter with Kelly, but they did not for a minute believe that he was involved in the murder.”
Even if the police did accept the “different day” hypothesis – they definitely and provably didn’t, but let’s pretend - why on earth would they rule out the possibility of the mysterious stranger from the early morning prior to her murder being responsible for her murder the next early morning? That makes no sense at all. If they accepted Astrakhan as a living breathing reality, albeit from the previous night, there was every reason to keep him in the frame as a potential suspect. It’s just too bad, I guess, that the actual proven reason we have on record for Hutchinson’s discrediting concerned his delay in coming forward, and had nothing at all to do with any “wrong night” speculation.
To boot, we have the fact that Hutchinson never said a word about standing outside Crossinghams - he instead placed himself at the corner of the court.
All the best,
Ben
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