Sally:
"Not everybody agrees with your interpretation, Letch. Live with it."
Everyboy does not agree. That´s correct!
"I just don't get why some people just have to be right about things which cannot be definitively proven."
In this case, it CAN be proven that the linguistic structure Lechmere suggests is functioning. It cannot be proven, as it stands, that this wording is the one that is closest to the truth, but it nevertheless is a perfectly functional phrase. That cannot be objected against (rationally).
The best,
Fisherman
Did Hutchinson get the night wrong?
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Garry:
"With the best will in the world, Fish, I find it impossible to accept that Dew was suggesting anything other than Maxwell and Hutchinson had erred in context of the date or timing of their respective sightings. In order to better explain my position, I’ll present the relevant passage with the addition of just one word:-
I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person, but rather as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were wrong.
Although far from perfect, this minor rewording better conveys what was to my mind Dew’s intended meaning. "
Actually, Garry, adding "rather" does not clinch things either! I appreciate that you apply "the best will in the world", but I must once again say that I applied the same originally, and with the exact same result. Look upon it like the kind of drawing that conceals TWO motives in one: like the one, for example, where the motive can be seen as a vase OR as two profiles of people. I believe you have seen it? Once you see the second motive, you wonder why you did not do so before.
What had me fooled here from the outset is the very clear fact that Dew speaks about time factors when he dismissed Maxwell. She could not have seen Kelly at the time she claims. Time, time, time - that is ALL that enters the skull, and that´s where it goes wrong. The time factor WAS crucial, but only to prove that she could not have seen KELLY at the time she claimed. THAT is all Dew says. Once more, and this time I fill in the missing words with capital letters. Dew discusses Hutch, after having discussed Maxwell, and rounding off the Hutch discussion, he writes:
"But I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions LIKE MR HUTCHINSON HAD, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person AS WAS THE CASE WITH MRS MAXWELL, but INSTEAD as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were BOTH wrong BUT IN DIFFERENT WAYS.
Indeed, if the medical evidence is accepted, Mrs. Maxwell could not have been right. The doctors were unable, because of the terrible mutilations, to say with any certainty just when death took place, but they were very emphatic that the girl could not have been alive at eight o'clock that morning, MEANING THAT MRS MAXWELL COULD NOT HAVE SEEN HER AT THAT TIME. SHE MUST THEREFORE, SINCE SHE SEEMS TO BE CORRECT ON THE DATES, HAVE SEEN ANOTHER WOMAN AND MISIDENTIFIED HER AS KELLY.
And if Mrs. Maxwell, A RELIABLE AND HONEST WITNESS, was mistaken AS TO PERSON, is it not probable that George Hutchison erred also, BUT ON DATE? This, without reflecting in any way on either witness, is my considered view."
This is how I read it nowadays. I trust you will see the relevance sooner or later - it was later in my case!
"Oh, they have, Fish, but you simply refuse to recognize it as such."
What I wrote, Garry, was that nothing has surfaced to DISPROVE me. Not to question, but to disprove. Surely you can agree with that?
The best,
Fisherman
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Ben:
"There is no evidence that the Hutchinson-wideawake connection was noted until at least 100 years after the murders took place, Hunter. It follows, therefore, that Abberline cannot have been particularly "idiotic" if he never established the connection."
No, Ben, it does not. It only follows that we have something looking like being close to absolute certainty that the information telling us that the connection was made has gone lost.
What it absolutely NOT tells us is that the loss of such informations goes to prove that a policeman who (together with the rest of the police corps and the collected press) misses a very obvious pice of information in a high profile murder case was not an idiot for doing so. Condoning such a suggestion would amount to even more idiocy.
The best,
Fisherman
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Ben:
"You asked me what I thought was "obvious""
No. I asked you "what if Dew was correct?"
"“Utterly” unproven, but also “utterly” likely given Hutchinson’s claim that he also watched and waited for someone to emerge from Miller’s Court at the same time and same location as the wideawake loiterer observed by Lewis. Hence, we can be almost certain that her impression was correct."
Not any more, we can´t. There is very good reason to speculate that the men were not one and the same. We can be slightly amazed by the coincidence, that´s all. It is not earthshattering in any manner.
"Peering intently into the court, craning the heck in that direction. Many different ways really. "
But how would that add up to waiting for somebody to come out? People who see something that interests them do the exact same thing. And how did Lewis establish from her apparently very casual look at the man that he was looking up the archway? It was slightly more than a metr in width, I think. How do we know that he did not look to the right of it - to McCarthys shop? Answer: We don´t . We know that Lewis THOUGHT he looked up the court, and that has a lot going for it - but not all, I´m afraid. Likewise, how do we know that he was not looking out into the street to assess whether it was too rainy for him to leave his stance or not. The focus of the eye is not something that is expressed in numbers on your forehead. There is doubt, Ben, and there must be; very reasonable doubt.
" If he “said that he saw a woman entering the archway”, he might have been fearful – with considerable justification – that the police would put two and two together and register a link between the release of Sarah Lewis’ inquest information regarding the wideawake man and Hutchinson’s decision to come forward just a short time thereafter. Why don’t you wait for the clarification you seek next time before condemning me as “silly”?"
No need to this time, Ben. First and foremost, I am not saying that you are silly - I think you are an often bright, knowledgeable Ripperologist harbouring a silly VIEW.
After that, thi8s clarification changes nothing: the only thing that would have seemed odd to the police would be if he was there and did NOT register and mention Lewis. That would seem like a very conscious ommittment of important evidence, and the police would have become extremely curious about it. He would have awoken the exact sentiments that you calim he wanted to avoid by doing so. Saying that he SAW her would merely have the police saying "yep, that´s correct - she was there, and that means this guy is correct". Why would they say "Hold on - how did he know that?" since it was bleeding obvious that his knowledge came from being there.
I find it extremely hard to see how you have managed to get yourself tangled up in this issue the way you have. It is beyond comprehension, Ben. It is a twisted logic that is curious. The police may of course have been wary of the possibility that this new star witness was not truthful - that he was simply aware that Kelly had been killed (as was most of the East End), and had decided to try and make a buck from it. Therefore, every little bit that tied in with what they knew would of course not have served as factors that made them suspicious, but instead as corroboration of his truthfulness.
"I’ve asked you politely on a number of occasions not to “echo” like that when you ask me questions."
I do it the way I choose to. I sometimes stress things when doing this, and there is no rudeness involved. You shall have to take my word for that.
"There is no evidence that any connection was ever made between Hutchinson and the wideawake man mentioned by Lewis."
My answer to that is all over the boards, Ben.
"This is preposterous expectation, and strictly not to be taken remotely seriously."
It is meant very seriously and should be taken as such. Of course, every case is specific, but if you are correct, one would expect to see something remotely alike in at least some other case. One doesn´t though.
"In any case, we don’t need examples in this case because the extent evidence tells its own story"
You may be amazed to hear that this is not agreed, and that is exacly why examples would be very enlightening and useful.
"No, I meant according to sources worth taking seriously, not Dew, who you cautioned me back in October of last year not to listen to."
Okay, then, let´s hear the evidence that tells us that Hutch was not regarded as an honset man after he was dropped!
"Excellent, so the whole “lecturing me about my own language” thing didn’t pan out very successfully, did it?"
You may need to read my answer once more, Ben. Plus you may need to realize that this whole discussion took it´s start when YPU lectured ME about my SECOND language. If you want to, I can put things in very clear Swedish instead...?
The best,
Fisherman
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Lechmere
Yeah. Not sure it's necessary for you to 'restate the Dew Argument'. You made your opinion quite clear already. And other posters - gosh! - can read, and can make their own minds up.
Which in fact they have. Not everybody agrees with your interpretation, Letch. Live with it.
I just don't get why some people just have to be right about things which cannot be definitively proven. There are times when this thread just looks like one big pi**ing contest. Actually, which thread is this? There seem to be so many and they're all the same!
I can't wait for the plumbing news, by the way. If your'e as well informed about that as you are about other things, it should be great!
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Ruby:
"were they right ? We cannot judge because we don't know the reasons that Hutchinson was dropped."
That is correct. But I think that if my suggestion of muddling days is correct, then we know that Lewis´absense in Hutch´s testimony, for example, was VERY telling. And the weather factor would have been revealing too. But on the whole, you are correct - we cannot be sure.
"It is pure conjecture that Toppy even said what Reg quoted him as saying, let alone whether he was lying or not. For the time being, it remains conjecture that even Reg said what he was quoted as saying."
That is a little harsh - but certainly great care must be taken. What I like about it is that it fits with my suggestion. I would have been less at ease otherwise.
"It would follow that the majority of women..."
It would arguably follow, yes. But it ALSO applies that there is no way of knowing whether Lewis ascribed to that majority. Feel free to guess - but keep in mind that you are guessing.
The best,
Fisherman
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Oh well, I will restate the Dew textual argument...
Here is Dew’s references to Maxwell and Hutchinson in context. I have cut some bits out that I hope are not material to the discussion as to whether he meant mistaken as to the person or day or time for Maxwell and Hutchinson.
The new evidence was supplied by another woman, named Mrs. Caroline Maxwell...
She claimed to know Marie Kelly well, and to have seen her alive only two hours before her body was discovered.
Imagine the sensation this story caused. If true it put an entirely new complexion upon the whole case.
If Mrs. Maxwell had been a sensation-seeker-one of those women who live for the limelight-it would have been easy to discredit her story. She was not. She seemed a sane and sensible woman, and her reputation was excellent.
She stated that at eight o'clock on the Friday morning she was going into Mr. McCarthy's chandler's shop, when she saw Marie standing in the passage leading to the court. The girl looked ill, and Mrs. Maxwell went over to her and asked if anything was the matter...
Mrs. Maxwell repeated this evidence at the inquest, and told her story with conviction...
The informant this time was a young man named George Hutchison, who declared that he had seen Kelly at 2 a.m. in Dorset Street...
A few minutes later he saw her again. This time she was in the company of a man, and the two were walking in the direction of Miller's Court....
But I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person, but as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were wrong.
Indeed, if the medical evidence is accepted, Mrs. Maxwell could not have been right. The doctors were unable, because of the terrible mutilations, to say with any certainty just when death took place, but they were very emphatic that the girl could not have been alive at eight o'clock that morning.
And if Mrs. Maxwell was mistaken, is it not probable that George Hutchison erred also? This, without reflecting in any way on either witness, is my considered view.
I would draw attention to the fact that Dew says Maxwell ‘claimed to know’ Kelly – that implies doubt.
There is no such doubt when he discusses Hutchinson.
Why does Dew raise the spectre of people being mistaken as to person if he truly believed that both Hutchinson and Maxwell were only confused as to date and time? There are other things someone could be mistaken about. Why does he confine himself to person and date/time?
I suggest it is because he thinks that Maxwell cannot have seen Kelly at 8am due to the medical opinion. She is 'a sane and sensible woman' so she must have seen someone. That Dew believed the someone must have been someone else is the logical inference.
This is backed up by the construction of this passage:
“But I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person, but as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were wrong.”
Please permit me to add one word which makes it clearer:
"But I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person, but as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were respectively wrong."
Or
"But I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person (A), but as to date and time (B). And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell (A) and George Hutchison (B) were wrong."
I would suggest that it is common for people to write like this and as they know what they meant, neglect to spell it out as clearly as one might wish.
I think it is fairly certain however that Dew meant that Maxwell was mistaken as to a person and Hutchinson was mistaken as to date and time.
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Mr Ben – can you run this past me again...
The most suspicious person that Lewis mentioned in her testimony was a man she saw on Bethnal Green Road on the Wednesday before, and not the man she saw opposite the murder scene on the Friday morning roughly when the murder took place?
Also...
I think seven people testified at the inquest concerning Kelly’s and other people’s movements on the night or morning in question around the murder scene. Of those only Cox, Maxwell and Lewis gave evidence that they were walking around Miller’s Court and saw Kelly or saw other people around the area.
Lewis was the only one who placed herself there roughly at the estimated time of death.
Hutchinson was for a short period the star witness and placed himself there at the same time.
But Abberline didn’t cross reference the two statements and neither did any other policeman involved in the case? It was left to Ripperologists 100 years later to suss out the connection?
Right!
I will endeavour not to neglect the Mr again.
Sally – you haven’t missed anything. These posts I can do on the fly but the plumbing topic – and the related issue of how likely it would be for someone of Toppy’s likely background to move about as he is proposed to have done, are slightly intricate subjects that has been strongly debated before, so I’m not going to do a rushed reply.
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"The implication is unambiguous."
I thought so too, Garry. But I was wrong. Look at it again, please:
"‘I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person, but as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were wrong.’ "
One may think, as I used to, that Dew points away from the person error and instead opts for the time error in both cases. But …
With the best will in the world, Fish, I find it impossible to accept that Dew was suggesting anything other than Maxwell and Hutchinson had erred in context of the date or timing of their respective sightings. In order to better explain my position, I’ll present the relevant passage with the addition of just one word:-I know from my experience that many people, with the best of intentions, are often mistaken, not necessarily as to a person, but rather as to date and time. And I can see no other explanation in this case than that Mrs. Maxwell and George Hutchison were wrong.Although far from perfect, this minor rewording better conveys what was to my mind Dew’s intended meaning. If I’m correct, his objective was to establish an association between the temporal fallibility of witnesses and what he considered to have been the honest but mistaken claims of Maxwell and Hutchinson. But, quite frankly, I’m at a loss to understand how the passage in question could be construed in any other way.
"With Hutchinson, however, no such inference could be made. His alleged 2:00am sighting of Kelly was certainly not incompatible with the medical evidence, and couldn’t, therefore, have been called into question on the basis of date-confusion."
Of course it could! He saw Kelly alive, not dead, and Kelly WAS alive on the 8:th, the 7:th, the 6:th ... Of course he could have muddled the dates!
Only if you insist on taking Dew’s words out of context, Fish. For an explanation, please see above.
"Since one or the other condition must have been untrue, Dew concluded that Hutchinson must have been mistaken with regard to his timings and revised his ‘theory’ accordingly."
If we are speaking of a muddling up of the dates - yes. If we are speaking of merely a muddling up of three hours - emphatically no. I outlined a numner of problems in that respect in my former post to you - the pubs were still open at the time you are suggesting that Dew believed Hutch saw Kelly, the streets would still have been full with pubcrawlers, vendors, merrymakers ...
Yes, Fish, and I responded to your objections with the advice that we adhere strictly to those elements covered by Dew. Since this remains my position I’ll move on.
Plus I noted that you were very pessimistic about me having a case from the outset …
Not pessimistic, Fish, merely unconvinced by what you consider to be the substantiation of your ‘wrong night’ hypothesis.
… and yet here we are, closing in on 1500 posts on the subject, ans nobody has put forward a scintilla of evidence that goes to disprove me.
Oh, they have, Fish, but you simply refuse to recognize it as such. And as for the notion that the number of posts this thread has generated represents validation for your argument, Christianity has been a hot topic of debate for two millennia but most sensible, rational individuals baulk at the idea of virgin births, spontaneous global flooding, eight hundred year lifespans and loquacious serpents.
You’re a trier, I’ll give you that much.Last edited by Garry Wroe; 02-24-2011, 12:27 AM.
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There is no evidence that the Hutchinson-wideawake connection was noted until at least 100 years after the murders took place, Hunter. It follows, therefore, that Abberline cannot have been particularly "idiotic" if he never established the connection. As Philip Sugden observed, the Kelly murder abounded in potentially suspicious characters seen out and about by the various eyewitnesses, and when it came to Sarah Lewis' account, the more immediately "suspicious" character was the man who accosted her and a companion on the Bethnal Green Road, and who might have been the same man seen talking to a woman at the corner of Ringers' on the the night of Kelly's murder. It is easy to see how the wideawake man might have been eclipsed as an investigative priority as a consequence.
Even more significantly, not even the press noticed the correlation.
Welcome back, Lechmere. I'll address your points later.
Sorry to see I've lost the "Mr".
Best regards,
Ben
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Originally posted by Ben View Post.
... Abberline had almost certainly come up from Leman Street police station when he caught wind of Hutchinson’s account, and was thus unlikely to have been in any strong position, at the time of the initial interview, to cross-reference his emerging claims with those of previous witnesses...
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Lechmere..
I thought you were going to enlighten us regarding the plumbing trade?
Did you do that already? I must have missed it.
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Been a bit busy later, so please forgive me for going back over some points:
Ben
“I said the number of people legitimately on the streets in the small hours would have been two great for anyone to home in on any particular individual to the extent of recording their movements for every murder. The ripper was clearly one such person and he was never caught.”
Clearly the streets were fairly empty in the small hours of the morning, but that is to miss the point. The point of contention is that very few inmates at the Victoria Home would have had special passes to grant them access between 12.30-1.00 am and the normal opening hours.
Very few will have paid for their beds and not bothered to go back there to sleep.
If Jack the Ripper (whether that person was Hutchinson or not) lived at the Victoria Home the combination of the rules and the social nature of such establishments for long term inmates, would probably have made his absence or late entry noticeable.
Also it is abundantly clear that the police took extra notice of lodging houses inmates.
These factors make the Victoria Home a less than likely home for the ripper.
The general busyness of the nocturnal streets is only really related to this because you claim people would be coming and going all night long almost as if it were daytime.
I would also like to leap to your defence over the use of Maths in preference to Math. Just to show that I am not biased against everything you say. However I am aware that the younger generation of educators are using the revolting Americanism ‘Math’ more and more frequently, which demonstrates the decline in teaching standards in this country. If only we could get back to how things were in the Victorian times, just like in Oliver.
This is a strange claim:
“But the author’s "agenda" didn’t enter into the equation when it came to quotes directly attributed to Toppy by Reg, and I’m surprised to see you keep missing this distinction.”
Of course it did – the author’s agenda informed Reg. This is rather obvious.
I would argue that it is very weak putting any emphasis on Lewis’s suggestion that the wide-awake man (of non-military bearing) was there purposefully staring down Miller’s Court. She only had a quick glimpse at him. The evidential correlation is meagre. You say there are compelling reasons to think that Abberline didn’t make the connection yet also say that it is futile to argue that there isn’t a connection. That Abberline was some species of idiot, wasn’t he? And all the journalists around at the time were idiots also.
The sensible conclusion is that there is a piece of missing evidence that ‘unconnected’ them. One of those convenient missing documents.
It is also weak to always rely on the 'it has always been thought that such and such is so, therefore it must be', or the similar 'I was discussing this in 2006, therefore I must be right' line.
“It is even less likely that Dew was ever familiar with the Victoria Home entry guidelines”
Keep consistent Mr Ben, you don’t think there were any guidelines, do you?
On your last point about date confusion on the occurrence such a significant event. It looks like various witnesses were confused about when they saw Kelly given the variety of statements about when and where she was seen. Unless they were all telling the truth or gratuitously lying.
Mr Wroe
[I]“He (Dew) leaves no room for doubting his belief that Carrie Maxwell was mistaken over the date, as witness, ‘f the medical evidence is accepted, Mrs. Maxwell could not have been right. The doctors were unable, because of the terrible mutilations, to say with any certainty just when death took place, but they were very emphatic that the girl could not have been alive at eight o'clock that morning.’”
I believe that the Dew text if read in its full context (I won’t cut and paste it again) actually implies that he thought Maxwell was confused about the person, not the date. At the very least it is ambiguous. I also think you have misread Dew in affirming that he suggested that Hutchinson was out by time rather than date.
Miss Retro
“I'm curious...what do you think that this man was waiting FOR at 2.30am on a rainy November night?
“Enjoying the view ? Basking in the feel of the cold droplets dripping down his neck ? Talking to himself?”
It is fruitless speculating – people do hang around for all sorts of reasons. They don’t usually hang around because they are about to murder someone – although very rarely this does happen. Even given the fact that a murder did take place nearby, that still does not mean increase the likelihood that the lurker was the culprit by very much.
I can agree with this virtually word for word...
“I think that Mary became a victim that night BECAUSE it was raining, and there were a lot less streetwalkers about, and very many less people outside in Dorset street -which allowed the Ripper to moniter the Court and sneak in unseen.
“Besides which he wanted to get out of the rain like everyone else.”
I think that the victims took him to his murder scenes though and Kelly took him there, possibly because she always took her customers there, possibly just because it was raining. The ‘monitoring’ was I suspect mobile monitoring – i.e. while walking with his victim or just before picking them up he would have been very observant.
However I don’t think the non private washing facilities at the Victoria Home nor the prospect of giving up any incriminating items of property to the deputy’s care would have been beneficial to a killer.
Also Mrs Retro, contrary to Mr Ben’s oft repeated assertions, you drew attention to the fact that Lewis was actually a competent describer of persons.
“a gentleman passed us. He followed us and spoke to us, and wanted us to follow him into an entry. He had a shiny leather bag with him.... He was short, pale-faced, with a black moustache”
“Murderers are the ultimate 'control-freaks', they take control over whether some other human being should live or die. Serial killers are all control-freaks whatever else they may or may not have in common.”
Can’t agree with this generalisation.Last edited by Lechmere; 02-23-2011, 06:34 PM.
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Hi Ruby,
I can't understand why you keep being accused of "conjecture". Indeed, I find such an accusation very difficult to sustain when offered from the perspective of someone who thinks Hutchinson got the night wrong. It is certainly hypocritical. And how does the fact that we're on 1500 posts on the subject remotely increase the likelihood of the "different day" speculation being correct, as Fisherman has just suggested? "Look at me! I'm still posting!". Great. And? How does this enhance the probability of date-confusion? And what do lots of posts actually communicate other than a willingness to continue arguing with people? This doesn't mean Fisherman has "held his ground" necessarily. It could just as easily mean that he is continuing to post in spite of failing to "hold his ground".
This is not an attack, but a reminder that arguments are neither won nor sustained through sheer quantity of posts. Most of the 1500 posts in question haven't been concerned with the wrong day hypothesis anyway. They've been more concerned with the Victoria Home guidelines, the nature of Hutchinson's discrediting, and even more frequently, the issue of whether or not Hutchinson lied or killed anyone. An entirely generic Hutchinson debate, in other words, of the type I was having in 2006.
Walter Dew's theories have been known about for decades, including his take on Hutchinson, and yet despite this knowledge, the vast majority of commentators on the subject have chosen to identity Hutchinson as the man seen by Lewis, not because they hold any particular conviction with regard to Hutchinson's "honesty" or lack thereof, but because they are simply capable of registering the striking similarity between the two accounts with regard the movements and behaviour of Hutchinson and Lewis loiterer at the same time and the same location on the same night. A strictly general observation (and anyone can apply it to me if they feel I'm guilty of it), but be very wary of anyone purporting to be the instigator of a permanent change in decades-long mainstream thinking on a particular subject, as they tend to have very large and undeserved egos. "For years you all assumed X to be true, but that was until I came along, and now everyone will hereafter believe Y, all thanks to me!" Yeah. Right.
This holds true for the "ripper community" as much as anywhere else.
Hi C4,
Welcome to the discussion!
"I think it very unlikely that Hutchinson got the day wrong. When something earth-shattering happens people tend to remember what they did around that time more clearly"
In this case, there was even more reason for the 9th to be remembered, rather than confused with another date. In addition to the earth-shattering news that was the murder of Mary Kelly, who he claimed to have known "very well" for three years, he had returned 13 miles all the way from Romford that night, according to his own account, and the Lord Mayor's Show coincided with both these memorable occasions. The three events occurring on the same date strike me as more than sufficient reason to discount "date confusion" in this case.
All the best,
BenLast edited by Ben; 02-23-2011, 06:13 PM.
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Fisherman!
“So if Dew WAS correct, it becomes obvious that he was not correct? Could you elaborate?”
“I regard it utterly unproven that this was what the loiterer did.”
“Please explain to me what one does to convey the impression that one is waiting for someone to exit an archway”
“If he said that he saw a woman entering the archway, the police would immediately start looking upon him as somebody who had overheard the inquest...?”
“Do you actually suggest that they would never have seen the correspondance in time here? That they would not have used Lewis testimony for confirmation of Hutch´s ditto? Do you?”
Clearly, therefore, Hutchinson’s deliberate omission with regard to the presence of Sarah Lewis appears to have paid off. It wouldn’t have been a case of outright denial of having seen her, since it is unlikely that the police ever asked him about her, but one in which she simply wasn't alluded to by either party. Abberline had almost certainly come up from Leman Street police station when he caught wind of Hutchinson’s account, and was thus unlikely to have been in any strong position, at the time of the initial interview, to cross-reference his emerging claims with those of previous witnesses. It’s laughably absurd for you to accuse me of “farfetched speculation” when you are prepared to conjure up a whole set of “must haves” (such as the putative Lewis cross-referencing on the part of the police) for which not the tiniest scrap of evidence exists.
“I would very much like to see any parallel case where A/ a killer approaching the police purposefully omitted to mention knowledge of evidence that could tie him to the case since he thought it would make it too obvious to the police why he came forward”
“How about fifty years?”
“Yes, Ben, I´ve done the math, so I know that.”
Regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 02-23-2011, 05:20 PM.
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