Originally posted by Ben
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Hutchinson does not say where he was in his police statement.
Even in the press statement Hutchinson does not say where he was when he heard the conversation and saw the red handkerchief.
It is you who prefer him to be observing the red handkerchief from way off up at Commercial St.
This is the same as setting up a straw man argument.
First you claim Hutchinson is too far away to observe what he claims, but rather than decide you have jumped to a wrong conclusion, you prefer to cast Hutchinson as a liar.
It seems quite obvious to me Ben that if the distance from Commercial St. to Millers Court is too far for this observation then clearly Hutchinson was not at that corner when he made this observation - that only stands to reason.
Hutchinson does not say where he was stood to observe what he did. However, from his police statement, coupled with the confirmation of Sarah Lewis, we can quite readily place Hutchinson directly opposite Millers Court on the south side, close enough to see and hear what he claimed.
Therefore, if he did stand momentarily on the corner of Dorset & Commercial St., as he claimed to the press, then it was for a brief moment, because Sarah Lewis placed him directly across from her while she also observed the same couple that Hutchinson was watching.
Woah there, either you're listening to the main press versions of Hutchinson's statement or you're rejecting them. It's all a bit picky-choosy at the moment.
We don't throw anything out Ben.
What we do is weigh what is written and judge the contents on a case by case basis. Rarely is an article totally wrong in every instance, for the most part we find correct & incorrect statements mixed together, so yes we have to be picky.
What should be outstandingly obvious is that if you really think Hutchinson was claiming to see the red handkerchief from Commercial St. based on his press statement, then why would Abberline not object to this 'unlikely' sighting?
Abberline's conclusion that Hutchinson was truthful surely would not include this long distance observation which you interpret.
So, there must be something amiss.
Either, it was possible to see & hear what he claimed from that point.
Or, he was not at that point when he saw & heard what he claimed.
And as Hutchinson does not say precisely where he was standing at that time, then it is perhaps the second choice above that is preferable.
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