Hello Ben.
I'll cut you off right there at your first mistake.
Only the Evening News (16 Nov.) uses a citizen as its source. The Sheffield Ind. (16 Nov) makes no mention of a citizen, they suggest it is the police.
"...The police are now to a great extent concentrating their efforts upon an endeavour to find a man so vividly described by George Hutchinson.."
And, the Echo (19 Nov) states quite clearly it is the police themselves who still believe in the Hutchinson suspect.
"...Some of the authorities are inclined to place most reliance upon the statement made by Hutchinson as to his having seen the latest victim with a gentlemanly man of dark complexion, with a dark moustache."
No more is necessary on the matter. As the Echo also are aware of the division in the police between those who accept the Cox suspect and those who accept Hutchinson suspect, a full ten days after the murder, then this apparent fact totally scuttles the presumptuous comment made by the Star four days earlier.
Hutchinson clearly was not discredited even by the 19th, so as it was not by the 19th, then it was not at all.
I know you completely support the notion that the latest article on a subject is the most accurate, you told me that yourself.
So let it rest.
Once Hutchinson mentions him, Abberline will send for the roster of who was on duty in Commercial St. between 2:30-3:00am, the constable's notebook will be consulted.
What is not believable about that?
You say yourself that Abberline's change of mind 'must' (hypothetically) have come later after the story was investigated. It is this later investigation that I am referring to, so many sources available to Abberline.
We have no source nor indication that he ever changed his mind. And this conclusion is soundly supported by the article previously quoted from the Echo.
Please remind me, what is this "back-story", and the source?
Isaacs was not homeless.
Well, you're just going to have to provide an 'expert' quote to that effect, because a face-to-face interrogation is by far preferable.
He didn't, Abberline's opinion was derived from the face-to-face interview. A number of details could have been checked out that very night, before Hutchinson came back the next morning.
Abberline had much more information at his disposal than we do.
The basis for believing the police made mistakes in the Sutcliffe case is the police record itself. No such record exists for the Whitechapel murder case, ergo, no basis for believing Abberline & Co. made any mistake in evaluating Hutchinson.
Originally posted by Ben
View Post
Only the Evening News (16 Nov.) uses a citizen as its source. The Sheffield Ind. (16 Nov) makes no mention of a citizen, they suggest it is the police.
"...The police are now to a great extent concentrating their efforts upon an endeavour to find a man so vividly described by George Hutchinson.."
And, the Echo (19 Nov) states quite clearly it is the police themselves who still believe in the Hutchinson suspect.
"...Some of the authorities are inclined to place most reliance upon the statement made by Hutchinson as to his having seen the latest victim with a gentlemanly man of dark complexion, with a dark moustache."
No more is necessary on the matter. As the Echo also are aware of the division in the police between those who accept the Cox suspect and those who accept Hutchinson suspect, a full ten days after the murder, then this apparent fact totally scuttles the presumptuous comment made by the Star four days earlier.
Hutchinson clearly was not discredited even by the 19th, so as it was not by the 19th, then it was not at all.
I know you completely support the notion that the latest article on a subject is the most accurate, you told me that yourself.
So let it rest.
But what is the source for a beat constable walking across the “top” (?) of Dorset Street?
What is not believable about that?
But when he offered his opinion on Hutchinson’s statement, he “had access” to sod all beyond Hutchinson’s soon-to-be-discredited say-so.
We have no source nor indication that he ever changed his mind. And this conclusion is soundly supported by the article previously quoted from the Echo.
I agree, but it’s when we explore the back-story that supposedly legitimatises his presence on the very streets where the ripper was known to be active (and at the same time) that we encounter problems.
There is simply no way that a homeless thief could have worn such expensive-looking clothes accessories unless he nicked them, and he wasn’t likely to parade around in them if he had.
Not according to the experts it isn’t. If anything, it’s a potential distraction.
There is no way Abberline could have investigated all of Hutchinson’s claims in so short a space of time...
Abberline had much more information at his disposal than we do.
You provide a good parallel example with the Yorkshire ripper case. If there is “no basis” for assuming the police got things wrong, then there is “no basis” for assuming that Anderson was wrong in his conclusion that it was a “definitely ascertained fact” that the killer was a Polish Jew. But hardly anyone agrees with that, so where is the justification for ruling out Hutchinson as a suspect because there is “no basis” for concluding the police were in error?
Comment