Hi all,
Hutchinson obviously said nothing about Kelly’s attire, and equally obviously, he wasn’t asked about it by the police. His claim to have known her for three years would have been sufficient, in the minds of the police, to eradicate any doubt that he saw the deceased. Even so, protocol being what it was, the police asked Hutchinson to attend the mortuary early on the 13th November in order to identify her, which he did. This was a far better means of establishing identity than describing unremarkable clothes of the type worn by many a woman in Kelly’s circumstances. Had Abberline felt obliged to ask for a description of Kelly’s attire, it would certainly have appeared either in the statement itself or in Abberline’s accompanying report.
Its absence tells us that it wasn’t inquired about (pending the far more identity-clinching mortuary visit) or else Hutchinson claimed not to have noticed Kelly’s clothes, so intent was he on the marvel that was Astrakhan man (or so he might have claimed).
The press interview occurred after the mortuary identification, rendering a clothing description all the more pointless and superfluous for establishing an already-cemented identification.
Even in the epically unlikely event that Hutchinson did supply a description of Kelly’s clothing that mysteriously didn’t appear in either the statement or the report (making Abberline and his subordinates breathtakingly incompetent), it wouldn’t impact in the slightest on the question of honesty and potential culpability. If he was a publicity-seeking liar, he could simply have read the existing descriptions of her clothing on the night of her death, and if he was a murderous liar, he would have seen the clothes himself – either on Kelly’s body or discarded on her bedroom floor (or folded up if we accept the odd press account).
“Hutchinson” or “Mr. Hutchinson” strikes me as oddly formal for an acquaintance going back three years, i.e. considerable longer than most of her other associates, especially one who allegedly knew her “very well”. If Hutchinson was an older, venerable gent with whom Kelly had an avuncular relationship, it would make more sense, but that wasn’t the case. I don’t agree that “Mr. Hutchinson” was flirty and coquettish – first names work a lot better for that.
The oddity is neatly explained, in my opinion, if he was worried (for whatever reason) about Kelly’s true friends and acquaintances reading his account and wondering why she never said anything about this “George” bloke, with whom she was supposed to go waaaaay back. “Hutchinson” and “Mr. Hutchinson” gets round that problem by implying formality and distance, and thus a reason for the non-mention of dear ol’ George in Kelly's reminiscences about her past.
Hutchinson obviously said nothing about Kelly’s attire, and equally obviously, he wasn’t asked about it by the police. His claim to have known her for three years would have been sufficient, in the minds of the police, to eradicate any doubt that he saw the deceased. Even so, protocol being what it was, the police asked Hutchinson to attend the mortuary early on the 13th November in order to identify her, which he did. This was a far better means of establishing identity than describing unremarkable clothes of the type worn by many a woman in Kelly’s circumstances. Had Abberline felt obliged to ask for a description of Kelly’s attire, it would certainly have appeared either in the statement itself or in Abberline’s accompanying report.
Its absence tells us that it wasn’t inquired about (pending the far more identity-clinching mortuary visit) or else Hutchinson claimed not to have noticed Kelly’s clothes, so intent was he on the marvel that was Astrakhan man (or so he might have claimed).
The press interview occurred after the mortuary identification, rendering a clothing description all the more pointless and superfluous for establishing an already-cemented identification.
Even in the epically unlikely event that Hutchinson did supply a description of Kelly’s clothing that mysteriously didn’t appear in either the statement or the report (making Abberline and his subordinates breathtakingly incompetent), it wouldn’t impact in the slightest on the question of honesty and potential culpability. If he was a publicity-seeking liar, he could simply have read the existing descriptions of her clothing on the night of her death, and if he was a murderous liar, he would have seen the clothes himself – either on Kelly’s body or discarded on her bedroom floor (or folded up if we accept the odd press account).
“Hutchinson” or “Mr. Hutchinson” strikes me as oddly formal for an acquaintance going back three years, i.e. considerable longer than most of her other associates, especially one who allegedly knew her “very well”. If Hutchinson was an older, venerable gent with whom Kelly had an avuncular relationship, it would make more sense, but that wasn’t the case. I don’t agree that “Mr. Hutchinson” was flirty and coquettish – first names work a lot better for that.
The oddity is neatly explained, in my opinion, if he was worried (for whatever reason) about Kelly’s true friends and acquaintances reading his account and wondering why she never said anything about this “George” bloke, with whom she was supposed to go waaaaay back. “Hutchinson” and “Mr. Hutchinson” gets round that problem by implying formality and distance, and thus a reason for the non-mention of dear ol’ George in Kelly's reminiscences about her past.
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