Hi Sarah,
I don’t have any serious objections to "date confusion" per se, but it clearly did not happen in Hutchinson’s case. As others have pointed out, a date that is marked by certain significant or calamitous events is very unlikely to be confused subsequently with a less memorable one. If Hutchinson was telling the truth about walking all the way back from Romford on the same day that Kelly was brutally dispatched (which was also the date of the Lord Mayor’s Show), he was very unlikely to become muddled as to the date. These were other extremely significant points of reference with which to fix the date beyond question. Many people remember, even today, what they were doing on 11th September 2001 – their mundane activities embedded in their memories on account of that date’s infamous significance. If such details can be recalled years after the event, it is inconceivable that Hutchinson could have misremembered the date of Kelly's murder just a few days after it happened.
As Jon has already pointed out, Hutchinson clearly referred to both “Friday” and the “9th”.
In addition, it is clear that Hutchinson’s presence n Dorset Street on the 9th November is corroborated by an independent witness, Sarah Lewis, who described a man watching or waiting to emerge from Miller’s Court at 2:30 – tying in precisely with Hutchinson’s own statement regarding where he was and what he did at that time.
The police apparently believed they were in possession of “solid grounds to dismiss his statement”, and these “grounds” were his failure to present his evidence when he had the opportunity to be interrogated in public about it under oath. Nothing to do with any date-disorienting.
I hope the above suffices as a brief explanation for the “resistance” you’ve noticed to the date-confusion theory.
All the best,
Ben
I don’t have any serious objections to "date confusion" per se, but it clearly did not happen in Hutchinson’s case. As others have pointed out, a date that is marked by certain significant or calamitous events is very unlikely to be confused subsequently with a less memorable one. If Hutchinson was telling the truth about walking all the way back from Romford on the same day that Kelly was brutally dispatched (which was also the date of the Lord Mayor’s Show), he was very unlikely to become muddled as to the date. These were other extremely significant points of reference with which to fix the date beyond question. Many people remember, even today, what they were doing on 11th September 2001 – their mundane activities embedded in their memories on account of that date’s infamous significance. If such details can be recalled years after the event, it is inconceivable that Hutchinson could have misremembered the date of Kelly's murder just a few days after it happened.
As Jon has already pointed out, Hutchinson clearly referred to both “Friday” and the “9th”.
In addition, it is clear that Hutchinson’s presence n Dorset Street on the 9th November is corroborated by an independent witness, Sarah Lewis, who described a man watching or waiting to emerge from Miller’s Court at 2:30 – tying in precisely with Hutchinson’s own statement regarding where he was and what he did at that time.
The police apparently believed they were in possession of “solid grounds to dismiss his statement”, and these “grounds” were his failure to present his evidence when he had the opportunity to be interrogated in public about it under oath. Nothing to do with any date-disorienting.
I hope the above suffices as a brief explanation for the “resistance” you’ve noticed to the date-confusion theory.
All the best,
Ben
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