A couple of points Mr Ben.
Although we can sensibly conclude that the police lost confidence in Hutchinson’s worth as a witness, we cannot certainly conclude that the police thought he was lying.
Nor can we conclude that Abberline personally had a change of heart later on the evening of 12th November. The Echo report is not proof of this. The press have been known to over exaggerate or even make things up. A rival officer who preferred a rival witness statement could have told the Echo. These things happen.
The same goes for the Star story. As I have pointed out, other newspapers, including local ones, continued to regard Hutchinson as a credible witness for quite a few days longer. The situation was clearly ambiguous.
I would suggest that if Hutchinson had ‘dropped a bollock’ while out with an officer for three hours on the night of 12th, such feedback would be far too late to affect a news report in the Echo, which went on sale on 13th.
It seems odd to me that Hutchinson was shown Kelly’s corpse next day and taken out with a policeman again.
The very fact that the press and the police don’t seem to have connected Hutchinson to the wide-awake man, may well suggest that there was good reason not to connect them – i.e. they weren’t the same person.
Lastly, of all the testimony given at the inquest, Lewis’s seems to have been the most overlooked. You seem to accept this and have mentioned several times the fact that the wide-awake man and Hutchinson were not linked at the time. You therefore should accept that this makes it unlikely that the detail of the Lewis testimony would have reached Hutchinson’s eager ears (outside Shoreditch Town Hall or even less likely back to the Victoria Home) and so provoked him to trotting off to the police station to give his account.
Although we can sensibly conclude that the police lost confidence in Hutchinson’s worth as a witness, we cannot certainly conclude that the police thought he was lying.
Nor can we conclude that Abberline personally had a change of heart later on the evening of 12th November. The Echo report is not proof of this. The press have been known to over exaggerate or even make things up. A rival officer who preferred a rival witness statement could have told the Echo. These things happen.
The same goes for the Star story. As I have pointed out, other newspapers, including local ones, continued to regard Hutchinson as a credible witness for quite a few days longer. The situation was clearly ambiguous.
I would suggest that if Hutchinson had ‘dropped a bollock’ while out with an officer for three hours on the night of 12th, such feedback would be far too late to affect a news report in the Echo, which went on sale on 13th.
It seems odd to me that Hutchinson was shown Kelly’s corpse next day and taken out with a policeman again.
The very fact that the press and the police don’t seem to have connected Hutchinson to the wide-awake man, may well suggest that there was good reason not to connect them – i.e. they weren’t the same person.
Lastly, of all the testimony given at the inquest, Lewis’s seems to have been the most overlooked. You seem to accept this and have mentioned several times the fact that the wide-awake man and Hutchinson were not linked at the time. You therefore should accept that this makes it unlikely that the detail of the Lewis testimony would have reached Hutchinson’s eager ears (outside Shoreditch Town Hall or even less likely back to the Victoria Home) and so provoked him to trotting off to the police station to give his account.
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