Originally posted by harry
View Post
Before we go any further into your post, would you care to explain what makes you think this?
A policeman can overhear a conversation and record what was said, yes, because there is no convenient way of obtaining a signature, but this is not the case here.
Abberline sat with Hutchinson and it was his duty, as with all serving policemen, to record - in writing - the statement given by a witness under interrogation.
Also, I am not sure by your use of the term 'interview'. In the good old days when we called a spade - a spade, the term Interview was used for witnesses. You Interview a witness, but you Interrogate a suspect.
Abberline said he Interrogated Hutchinson.
Today Interview is used in reference to both witness & suspect, perhaps evidence of political correctness infiltrating the police department.
An unsigned statement by a witness/suspect is of no use legally speaking, anyone could have written it.
Each page of Hutchinson's initial statement had to bare his signature. Every statement by the witnesses in the Coroner's inquests bare the signature of the witness, or mark if the witness is illiterate, it is a requirement.
Why you cannot accept the police would do a proper job and put an interrogation in writing is strange, unless you are one of those who believe the police were just incompetent?
Comment