Hello Richard,
Nail on the head that one. Mrs Maxwell shouldn't have been there, as she had nothing to actually report if she didn't actually see Mary Kelly. But she was there, and under pressure, insisted that she had seen Kelly. Not once, but twice.
She wasn't the only one who saw MJK that morning either. Two more people got the day wrong, the person wrong, the identification wrong. Had Maxwell been the only person to have seen MJK, mistaken identity is far more plausible. But another independant witness? Two more independant witnesses? (Mauice Lewis and an unnamed woman mentioned in the Times)
Walter Dew said she was on the level, but still didn't believe Maxwell's story.
The inquest gets closed double quick time with indecent haste without all the legally required evidence presented about the cause of death, time of death and all injuries made, and finally neither the Coroner nor the jury's signatures appear on the Inquest Certificate. And the infamous George Hutchinson, witness extraordinaire, chooses to turn up with his statement after the Inquest is closed.
I get the distinct feeling the police were happy to see this inquest go away very quickly...
I also get the distinct feeling the police didn't want Maxwell's evidence at that Inquest...and they didn't even get Lewis in on it, nor chase down the third person talked of in the Times.
I also get the distinct feeling that the Hutchinson evidence did a remarkable job in limiting and then deflecting the Maxwell evidence into the realms of mistaken identity, in the minds of the public. Almost, although not provable, seemingly planted, and very convenient. Then again, I am a suspicious person.
best wishes
Phil
Nail on the head that one. Mrs Maxwell shouldn't have been there, as she had nothing to actually report if she didn't actually see Mary Kelly. But she was there, and under pressure, insisted that she had seen Kelly. Not once, but twice.
She wasn't the only one who saw MJK that morning either. Two more people got the day wrong, the person wrong, the identification wrong. Had Maxwell been the only person to have seen MJK, mistaken identity is far more plausible. But another independant witness? Two more independant witnesses? (Mauice Lewis and an unnamed woman mentioned in the Times)
Walter Dew said she was on the level, but still didn't believe Maxwell's story.
The inquest gets closed double quick time with indecent haste without all the legally required evidence presented about the cause of death, time of death and all injuries made, and finally neither the Coroner nor the jury's signatures appear on the Inquest Certificate. And the infamous George Hutchinson, witness extraordinaire, chooses to turn up with his statement after the Inquest is closed.
I get the distinct feeling the police were happy to see this inquest go away very quickly...
I also get the distinct feeling the police didn't want Maxwell's evidence at that Inquest...and they didn't even get Lewis in on it, nor chase down the third person talked of in the Times.
I also get the distinct feeling that the Hutchinson evidence did a remarkable job in limiting and then deflecting the Maxwell evidence into the realms of mistaken identity, in the minds of the public. Almost, although not provable, seemingly planted, and very convenient. Then again, I am a suspicious person.
best wishes
Phil
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