Apologies for the late reply, Fetchbeer.
Yes, I am familiar with the report in question. This isn’t the first time you’ve reproduced this report, and as such, this will not be the first time I’ve addressed its content. In a nutshell, it is very clear that the first man attracted the suspicion of the police because he attempted to “persuade” two women to accompany him into a side alley. As for the other two men, it is likely that they attracted attention for similar reasons. No man would have been “arrested” or “taken into custody” purely for sharing physical similarities with a “suspect” described in an alleged witness account, and as such, you are clearly onto a very losing wicket when you claim that the other two suspects supposedly fitted the Astrakhan description and were arrested solely for that reason. Good luck to any copper who wanted to get that one through as a legitimate arrest: "you did nothing wrong, but you look slightly like Mr. Astrakhan". Nah.
I conjure them up only when strictly necessary, chiefly to offer them up as examples of witnesses who were considered to have given false witness accounts, and who were ultimately discredited for that reason. These two men were ostensibly investigated as witnesses only - never suspects - and they were discredited not because the police had procured proof positive to the effect that they were lying, mistaken, or elsewhere at the time of the murder, but because they were assumed by the police to have been lying.
Next time you refer to the “checking” activities of the contemporary police, I want to see that crucial witness/suspect distinction properly acknowledged by you, please. If Packer and Violenia came to be treated as false witnesses only, despite being near the crime scene, there is simply no case for inferring that the 1888 police would have been more interested in Hutchinson as a suspect, who unlike the aforementioned pair, did not live in the same street in which the murders were committed.
It is clear that Hutchinson’s statement was “checked out” to some extent, since The Echo stated quite explicitly on the 13th November that a “reduced importance” had been attached to his account in light of “later investigations”. Significantly, however, these investigations clearly did not involve any consideration that Hutchinson might have been the killer, nor did they result in any proof positive that the account was either false or mistaken. The police discredited Hutchinson’s account on the basis of opinion only, just as Walter Dew did in the late 1930s.
No, not at all. Once they had exposed the lie, the police probably took Hutchinson to have been a two-a-penny publicity-seeker who was prompted dismissed as a promising lead. It was unlikely to result in any punishment, as it is clear that neither Packer nor Violenia suffered appreciably for their obvious lies. An acceptance and realisation of this obvious reality is infinitely preferable to conjuring up a whole host of imaginary, hoped-for reports that “must have” been conveniently lost.
And…?
What are you saying here, exactly? That if you were Hutchinson, you would have told a specific, less “complicated” lie that differed wildly from the “version” on record? This is nonsense, and irksomely preposterous nonsense at that (I’m glad you like my phraseology, but please get a thesaurus and cultivate your own!) as it perpetuates the patience-testing fallacy that if a lie seems too outlandish, it cannot have been a lie at all. It’s akin to the Maybrickian suggestion that mismatching handwriting lends weight to Maybrick being the author on the grounds that no forger would have been so “stupid” as to overlook the necessity of mimicking the real Maybrick’s handwriting.
No established prededent, no.
Unless you have evidence to the contrary, which I know you don’t.
Misjudgment of time is fine as a general concept, but not by an hour and a half, especially if energy preservation and sleep were essential requirements for a person in Hutchinson's situation as you've described it. Your version of events extends far beyond mere sleep deprivation for one night, but a whole night’s lack of sleep substituted with 13 miles of walking from Romford, plus more walking around for the remainder of the night, plus even more walking around in search of employment. It is sheer obstinacy and stupidity to embrace this as a likely or even vaguely acceptable version of events, especially for a contemporaneously discredited account. Why bother? Nobody makes these sorts of mind-numbingly crap excuses for Packer and Vionenia, who were both discredited like Hutchinson.
Yes, you said that when the gargantuan "Wrong day" thread was only about ten pages old!
“Regarding the police’s checking powers, you will naturally be familiar with the following report”
“You continuously conjure up Packer and Violenia”
Next time you refer to the “checking” activities of the contemporary police, I want to see that crucial witness/suspect distinction properly acknowledged by you, please. If Packer and Violenia came to be treated as false witnesses only, despite being near the crime scene, there is simply no case for inferring that the 1888 police would have been more interested in Hutchinson as a suspect, who unlike the aforementioned pair, did not live in the same street in which the murders were committed.
It is clear that Hutchinson’s statement was “checked out” to some extent, since The Echo stated quite explicitly on the 13th November that a “reduced importance” had been attached to his account in light of “later investigations”. Significantly, however, these investigations clearly did not involve any consideration that Hutchinson might have been the killer, nor did they result in any proof positive that the account was either false or mistaken. The police discredited Hutchinson’s account on the basis of opinion only, just as Walter Dew did in the late 1930s.
“Your explanation for the police dropping Hutchinson was that he told the press he spoke to a policeman on the Sunday. The Police exposed that as a lie and left it at that?”
“The lie I proposed a guilty Hutchinson could have told was hideously different to the complicated version that he chose to tell.”
What are you saying here, exactly? That if you were Hutchinson, you would have told a specific, less “complicated” lie that differed wildly from the “version” on record? This is nonsense, and irksomely preposterous nonsense at that (I’m glad you like my phraseology, but please get a thesaurus and cultivate your own!) as it perpetuates the patience-testing fallacy that if a lie seems too outlandish, it cannot have been a lie at all. It’s akin to the Maybrickian suggestion that mismatching handwriting lends weight to Maybrick being the author on the grounds that no forger would have been so “stupid” as to overlook the necessity of mimicking the real Maybrick’s handwriting.
“Are you now really saying that there would have been no precedent for real offenders coming forward as potential witnesses?”
Unless you have evidence to the contrary, which I know you don’t.
“How can you possibly say it is nonsense that he misjudged the time it took to walk back?”
“I won’t mention this again”
Comment