Originally posted by Garry Wroe
View Post
I think this is a really important question; one which affects both sides of the debate, but one which is never satisfactorily answered by either.
At face value, there appears to be a paradox: those arguing today that looking up 'suspicious' in the dictionary ought to result in a photo of Hutch staring back, are then obliged to argue that he was merely treated as an ineffectual witness back in 1888 and explain why that makes perfect sense.
Others agree there could be several reasonable grounds for suspicion in both his statements and his behaviour, but can't readily see the police being so totally wrongfooted by his voluntary presence that this feature alone would have cancelled out every misgiving they should have had, and stopped them subjecting the man or his statement to further scrutiny - even if, as we are constantly reassured, they came to doubt the truth of his story. If today's suspicions about Hutch are entirely justified, how can an entire lack of suspicion at the time be argued for and justified? But that's what has to happen to keep him in the frame. The very fact that he came forward of his own accord (with this pile of unbelievable rubbish) is meant to have blinded the cops to any possibility that he was there and could have been involved in any capacity, eg protecting the real killer or acting as a lookout.
Clearly, if Hutch had presented at the cop shop with MJK's dripping heart on his sleeve and a maniacal glint in his eye, they wouldn't have been taken in for a tenth of a second by his belated good citizen act. So taking that as the extreme end of appearing 'suspicious', how far along the line to the other extreme - being completely believable - should we be placing him if we want the police to have been a) totally hoodwinked by his 'innocent witness' guise, or b) concerned enough, about this belated tale of a "last man in" after Blotchy, not to take Hutch's word for his own movements and motivations but to check them out?
And if the link between Hutchinson and Sarah Lewis was so obvious, how is it that this connection was seemingly never made by those policemen and journalists engaged on the case at the time?
If Lewis read all about it and didn't make the connection, however, just like nobody else seems to have done, then something must have suggested to her that Hutch was not the man she saw.
And that is the problem - those who were there at the time may have known something that we don't, which made Hutch incompatible in some way with Lewis's man. If no link was ever made by anyone, that would best explain why.
But then Hutch - uniquely - is meant to have made the connection and been motivated forward because of it, in which case he would have been expecting Lewis to make the connection once he blabbed to the papers.
Love,
Caz
X
Comment