But..
I think that most are assuming Dorset Street was empty when Hutchinson was loitering. In fact it was probably still very busy.
I'm amazed anyone still believes Hutchinson was telling the truth. A man who walked from Romford, tired, no money, notices eyelashes and such?
Unfortunately policemen are human and make mistakes so if no one noticed Hutchinson or forgot they talked to him is human nature.
Throw Hutchinson away as a witness. Suspect maybe......
Hutchinson's Sunday Sighting
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Ben:
"There is no evidence that any police or press connection was ever made between Hutchinson and the wideawake man mentioned by Lewis."
Come to think of it, there is no evidence that Hutchinson had a nose either.
If us Ripperologists, amateurs in crime that most of us are, can make the connection quicker than you can say Jack Robinson, then you may rest assured that the connection was made.
It is not as certain that it lay behind the ultimate ditching of Hutchinson´story, but still a very fair bet.
What I find mindboggling here, Ben, is that you so often take it upon you to make the call that very unobvious matters are "bleeding obvious", whereas you fail to see when something truly is. But I will give you credit for using the "no evidence" card to the full.
"I’m frankly rather annoyed that you should dredge up this entire issue again."
You were frankly very annoyed when I did it the first time too, Ben. Remember? In fact, you have been very annoyed EVERY time it has been mentioned. You don´t like it, since it will not fit in with your reasoning. And what does not fit in with your reasoning annoys you.
"It’s triumphalist rhetoric, which I’m not too huge on."
There are times, Ben, when I think you invented the concept, so you could have fooled me.
"It’s far nearer the mark to say that there has been very little debate about Dew’s suggestion over the years precisely because it is NOT a “very good suggestion”. "
That´s just YOUR opinion. It would make far better sense if you presented something - aside from "I don´t think he messed up the days" argument - to show WHY it is not a good suggestion.
Could it be since it does not account for why Hutch did not mention Lewis?
Could it be since it does not account for why the Dorset Street PC never saw Hutchinson?
Could it be since it is obvious that Hutchinson describes the night as one of very bad weather?
Could it be because it is very logical to walk the streets all night on rainy, cold and blustery nights?
Could it be because the only contemporary person that worked the case, and subsequently voiced an opinion about why Hutchinsons story was dropped, voiced a belief that he must have been in place on Friday morning?
Could it be because people normally stand around outside in terrible weather, five yards from a sheltering room they have access to?
Could it be anyone of these parameters that you deem damning to the suggestion of a mistaken day? Or is it just that you sense that the suggestion is so very, very "unpopular? Does such a thing mean that we don´t have to look at it any further?
Or is the sole reason for your dismissal that you yourself do not think that Hutchinson would have mixed up the days? And if so, what expertise do you judge this by? The "bleeding obvious", once more? As always?
"Personally, I would give experienced commentators Tom and “a guy like Monty” credit at least with knowledge of Dew’s memoirs and the Hutchinson speculations advanced therein."
Of course. Which was why Tom Wescott exclaimed that he was amazed that he had not realized the implications before. Makes sense big time, Ben.
And don´t try and paint it out as I am yearning for some sort of Nobel Prize here, please. Do not take every opportunity to roll the ones who disagree with you in tar and feathers, Ben. Give us a little more credit than that, if you want to be taken seriously.
Dew´s statement has been there for everybody to see over the years. What I did was to couple it with a number of other parameters, and test how it held up. And it held up admirably, although YOU won´t admit that. But that was to be expected - in both cases.
In conclusion, I have expanded on Dew´s suggestion, and put in in context, and I am happy that I did so. It does not make me a genius or point me out as incredibly shrewd. But is makes for a pretty darn good suggestion, well worth of pursuing further.
Do I feel proud about it? Yes, I do, to some extent. But I fail to see that it makes me the equivalent of people suffering from illusions of grandeur.
You, of course, make another evaluation, and try to smear me as a Bonaparte wannabee. But once again, this is your decision, not mine, and you are free to make it, as long as you realize that it says a lot more about you than about me.
"I don’t wish for a bad climate of debating, or to be spiteful or scornful, but the risk of this happening in minimized significantly if you just occasionally acceded to my polite requests not to keep dredging repetitive debates up."
Translation: As long as you adjust to my rules, everything is fine. The moment you displease me, though, I will make you regret it.
Thanks, but no thanks.
"I think you must only have been listening to yourself during those previous discussions if you seriously can’t remember that people cited specific reasons for doubting the “wrong night” hypothesis. I won’t waste time regurgitating them now"
Please do! It will take up precious little space.
"Stamina war tactics again – good luck with those. Let’s see whose wins out."
Eh - not necessarily, Ben. It is an unshakable fact that there is no absolute proof that the two men were one and the same, and it is equally unshakable that they MAY have been. A stamina debate should only apply when there are two unprovable suggestions around, and that is not the question here. It is not proven that the men were the same - they may or may not have been.
Or do you dispute this? Hmm? Of course not - you will only go on nagging about how incredibly ALMOST certain this is, how "we can be 99,99999999 per cent sure" it is, and how filthy, rotten, stinking, nauseating unfair it is that somebody should challenge this.
You would however never take the step to say that it is beyond doubt proven that the two men were one and the same (severely tempted though you are), and you would not do that because you very well know that it is NOT proven.
To me, that represents a very good reason not to enter any, hrrrm, "stamina war". Would you not agree?
"He never claimed to have even visited the “Miller’s Court side of the street”. He simply didn’t specify any “side”. Given the tiny little piss-poor piddling distance between the two sides of the street, i.e. the length of the hatchback, he could have been anywhere in the street that resided in front of the Court entrance."
Yes. He COULD have. But that does not change the fact that there WERE two sides of the street, and Hutchinson MAY well have told Abberline that he was never on the Crossingham side throughout. So it is your argument that is piss-poor piddling - not the hatchback.
"If Hutchinson waited there for as long as he alleged, the chances are strong that he moved about the immediate location somewhat, rather than rooting his feet to one particular spot like a constipated hippo."
Yes again. But if he did NOT - and moving about can be made on just the one side of the street, actually (who would have thought it?) - and told Abberline that "No, Sir, I stood outside the court, at the corner of it all the time" and Abberline asked "And you are positive that you never crossed the street?" and got the answer "That I am!", then your theory is baloney, just like I said.
We can of course not be sure that the conversation took this turn, it is just an outlined potential scenario of many - but we CAN be reasonably certain that Abberline DID ask about exactly what Hutchinson did and where he did it. Unless you object to that too?
"all those “people” paying all this attention to me, according to you. Hardly."
I think you may be wrong there, Ben. The reoccurring exchanges between you and me will have been seen by hundreds, perhaps thousands of persons. And I am fine with that.
Are you?
"No, it means that after the horror of what had taken place on her very doorstep had subsided, she was able to gather her recollections somewhat better."
Oh! So it is not strange that a woman at an inquest can furnish a description of a man that she claimed that she could tell nothing at all about when speaking to the police initially? But it is very strange that a man can provide a detailed description of another man he watched intently for a substantial period of time?
Choosing, are we?
"It’s also ridiculous, and factually in error, to claim that Lewis’ two accounts contained more variation than Hutchinson's."
Of course. Going from no description at all to a description including height, body stature, colour of clothing and hat type is nowhere nearly as strange as changing the moustache, walking manner and skin colour in a detailed description. Point taken!
Choosing, are we?
"The loiterer was not interested in the lodging house, according to Lewis."
Yes, I can also remember her specifically saying this: "That man had no interest at all in the doss house!", that´s what she said, honest to God!
"I’m afraid it is very obvious that you only wish to lessen this "coincidence" in an effort to lend some sort of gravitas to your “different day” hypothesis, which naturally RELIES on Hutchinson not have been Lewis’ man."
What I wish to do, is to point out that Lewis´SECOND testimony has been used over her first one generally, something that swears very much against normal procedure. The first impression is the most important one, which is why the police are anxious to speak to the witnesses as soon as possible. The risk is that they forget otherwise, or even worse, that they suddenly start to "remember" things. Such occurrences are very often tied to wishful thinking or lies, as you will no doubt appreciate and admit.
In line with these factualities, I am proposing that we open up for another thinking on the connection that is so damn obvious to you (but not to Abberline, no Sir), and look at the case from the ground instead of starting out from a point where a potentially totally faulty and very detrimental mistake is already made.
"After calling me foolish and dumb…"
We are not allowed to call each other foolish and dumb, Ben. That is why I called your SUGGESTIONS foolish and dumb. It does not necessarily mean that I think YOU are foolish and dumb. But I DO think you are often unnecessarily and improductively spiteful. And I AM hoping for improvement on that score.
The best,
Fisherman
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Sorry, Lechmere, forgot to add:
“But I would repeat to those who say he deliberately missed the inquest – he may well not have known it was talking place on the Monday”
Hi Fisherman,
“Exactamundo, Lechmere - the sparse number of witnesses involved would have ensured that the police would have made the connection IF IT WAS THERE, reasonably.”
“As spiteful and arrogant as always, I see. Never mind - if that´s the picture you want to peddle of yourself, feel free!”
“What I am saying is that there has been very little debate about Dew´s suggestion over the years, in spite of it being a very good suggestion”
I’m not especially deflated by your reaction to my suggestion that Hutchinson avoided mentioning Lewis to make in appear less obvious that it was her evidence that forced his hand, but if all you can do is dismiss it as “dumb”, this tells me immediately that you weren’t able to argue against it very successfully, although I knew this already from the first time you attempted to dismiss it. I don’t wish for a bad climate of debating, or to be spiteful or scornful, but the risk of this happening in minimized significantly if you just occasionally acceded to my polite requests not to keep dredging repetitive debates up.
I think you must only have been listening to yourself during those previous discussions if you seriously can’t remember that people cited specific reasons for doubting the “wrong night” hypothesis. I won’t waste time regurgitating them now, as they were all discussed on the interminable thread that was dedicated to the topic.
“Once again - and forever, if that is what it takes - the compatibility between Hutchinson’s evidence and that of Lewis with regard to her loiterer is sufficient to conclude that they MAY HAVE BEEN the same person.”
“You have no idea whatsoever if Hutchinson in his interview with Abberline claimed never to have left the Miller´s Court side of the street during his vigil.”
“It will only add to people´s picture of Ben the poster.”
“But her police report and inquest testimony were different. Are we to accept that she BOTH saw a man that she could not describe AND that she saw a man that she COULD describe?”
As for the lodging house’s proximity to Lewis’ loiterer, it is irrelevant. The loiterer was not interested in the lodging house, according to Lewis. He was standing on his own, watching and waiting for someone to come out of Miller’s Court, exactly as Hutchinson would later tell the police he was doing at that same location, and at the same time. I’m afraid it is very obvious that you only wish to lessen this "coincidence" in an effort to lend some sort of gravitas to your “date confusion” hypothesis, which naturally RELIES on Hutchinson being separate from Lewis’ man.
“Hoping for a less spiteful answer”
Do as you would be done by, Fisherman.Last edited by Ben; 08-11-2011, 02:45 PM.
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That would depend, Harry, on who you ask. There are those who claim that the connection was in fact never made by the contemporary police or press, and that was not until us Ripperologist took an interest in the errand that the correlation was discovered.
The best,
Fisherman
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Wasn't the connection made as soon as Hutchinson appeared.They certainly couldn't make it before.
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Ben:
"I don’t know of anyone who aborted their previously held opinion that Hutchinson was Lewis’ man on the basis of your reminding them about Dew’s extremely unpopular Hutchinson-musings. If any such people exist, a mean-spirited but discerning person might consider them ripe for the ridicule for requiring you to tell them about a piece of cast related commentary that has been around for over seven decades."
As spiteful and arrogant as always, I see. Never mind - if that´s the picture you want to peddle of yourself, feel free!
What I am saying is that there has been very little debate about Dew´s suggestion over the years, in spite of it being a very good suggestion, covering things that could not be covered in a useful manner before (and no, it is not useful to suggest that Hutchinson did not mention Lewis because he thought that would reveal himself. Not at all, actually. It is a dumb suggestion).
There were a number of renowned Ripperologists who agreed very much with me on the usefullness of the perspective I spoke for as my aticle was published. You will recall that Tom Wescott exclaimed "why have I not seen this before?", for example. To me, that is not the reaction of a man who has had the material at hand and dismissed it - it is the reaction of a person who has overlooked a very obvious possibility. Others reacted much the same. A guy like Monty had nothing to remark on the suggestion a few posts back - he did say that it did not tally with the testimony, and it does not - but how could it, if the testimony, given in good faith, was given by a man who was out on the dates?
No, Ben, my friend, you may be as spiteful and scorning as you like, but that won´t make any difference. The inherent value of a theory is not judged by how many times you choose to vomit upon it. Such things only make for a bad debating climate, and not for any constructive assessment. Please bear in mind that the best you have come up with so far in terms of criticism is that you don´t personally think that Hutchinson could have muddled the dates. That´s it - nothing else. In no instance can you point to any particular detail where the suggestion of a mistaken day can be dismissed.
...and that is the position from which you think it is quite appropriate to piss on the suggestion. Charming!
"I really wouldn’t advise bringing up this nonsense again"
Find your footing first, learn to debate without scorning people, bury that arrogance, get a grip, Ben - and then, who knows, maybe I WILL take advice from you.
Not before, though.
"I didn’t say that. I said that the compatibility between Hutchinson’s evidence and that of Lewis with regard to her loiterer is sufficient to conclude that they were the same person."
Don´t be a fool - that amounts to the exact same thing. Once again - and forever, if that is what it takes - the compatibility between Hutchinson’s evidence and that of Lewis with regard to her loiterer is sufficient to conclude that they MAY HAVE BEEN the same person. Nothing more. And when you start weighing in Lewis´changed testimony, Dew´s statement, the non-existant evidence that Abberline drew the conclusion that you do and many, many more things, you will find yourself with an ever weakening case.
"They were standing in the same location to within a Vauxhall Astra’s length, which is an absurd distance to quibble over"
More foolishness. You have no idea whatsoever if Hutchinson in his interview with Abberline claimed never to have left the Miller´s Court side of the street during his vigil. You do not know this, Ben. He may well have done so, and Abberline would most certainly have asked about his exact movements. Unless you want to dismiss that too?
And if this was so, then it would not matter if the distance was that of a Fiat 500, would it? If Abberline established that Hutchinson was never on the other side of the street, then your theory becomes baloney, end of story.
And to be perfectly honest, the combination of Abberline´s ultimate dismissal of Hutchinson´s story may well have owed to the combined knowledge that Hutch never left that sidewalk, and Lewis´not having stumbled over him as she went into the court after having seen ANOTHER man on THE OTHER side of the street.
This is perfectly feasible and anybody with a fair mind will immediately recognize that. Moreover, if you decide to call it rotten, filthy, detestable, nauseating vomit, then that will not add anything at all to the built-in parameters of the suggestion. It will only add to people´s picture of Ben the poster.
"In the absence of any indication that Lewis was mistaken as to time in her inquest testimony and police report, we’re obliged to accept that she was correct. "
But her police report and inquest testimony were different. Are we to accept that she BOTH saw a man that she could not describe AND that she saw a man that she COULD describe? You have to make a choice here, Ben, and the wisest choice would be to opt for choosing the first suggestion over the other, or at least to only opt for the parameters that were present in BOTH variants. That is, let´s accept that Lewis did see a man standing outside Crossinghams - and that´s it.
I can buy that, although I think that Lewis´, shall we say, diversity, makes her a not very good witness.
"If, in the unlikely and zero-evidence scenario, she was wrong in her timing, that would lessen the “coincidence” factor, but we have absolutely no reason to think that she was."
Nor do I - in her case, we have THREE parameters to work from: her own word, the observation of the clock, and the Keylers´ corroboration, that would have been at hand. That firmly establishes that we should accept that Sarah Lewis DID walk down Dorset Street to Miller´s Court at around 2.30 AM.
Instead, George Hutchinson would have been the part that was wrong on the timing, as outlined in numerous posts. He THOUGHT and CLAIMED that he was there on Friday morning, and that would have been his honest conviction.
He was seemingly wrong, though. Unluckily, there was another man standing outside Crossinghams (and NOT directly outside the court) for a moment the next night, at a time that corresponded with the time during which Hutch had been in Dorset Street the night before. That, AND NOTHING ELSE, is what forms the ground for your stance. Incidentally, it is also what you think allows you to scorn and ridicule posters who do not agree with you, but that is another issue!
Now, Ben, the place in which Lewis´man was standing was outside a doss house and opposite a court, where sex could be bought. The doss house had around 300 dossers sleeping inside it every night.
Are you really telling us that in spite of this number of dossers sleeping inside Crossingham´s, and in spite of the potentially huge number of men that were interested in paying for sex, furnished by the numerous trading ladies inside Miller´s Court, and in spite of the fact that we do not know how long Lewis´man was standing in that spot - that this man could ONLY have been George Hutchinson? Are you?
Hoping for a less spiteful answer,
FishermanLast edited by Fisherman; 08-11-2011, 10:18 AM.
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Lechmere:
"As for this ‘certainty’ that Hutch = Lewis’s loiterer, the connection does not seem to have been made at the time, so I think we should be much less sure now."
Exactamundo, Lechmere - the sparse number of witnesses involved would have ensured that the police would have made the connection IF IT WAS THERE, reasonably.
But it was NOT made, and that points to one thing and one thing only - that it COULD NOT be made. There would have been things involved that made the two men unreconcilable, and that would reasonably have formed the ground for Dew´s assertion that he could not explain Hutchinson´s shortcomings in any other way than by suggesting a mistaken day.
The best,
Fisherman
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Mike:
"I was going to put you on ignore, but that would leave me with no one to talk to... except for Fisherman, and he's kind of long-winded"
Not.
F-man
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“Ben you also ignore coincidences when it suits you – I only need mention the word... Toppy”
“He may have been reluctant as many East Enders were to involve themselves in a police investigation – once he did he did with gusto – but that doesn’t mean he couldn’t have been initially reluctant. He may have suddenly enjoyed the limelight that he had never tasted before.”
The idea that he withheld his evidence on the basis that it might not be relevant to the time of death of his three year friend/acquaintance is utterly ridiculous. The bulk of “rumour” on the streets in the aftermath of the murder was most assuredly NOT to the effect that Kelly was murdered around 9.00am. It was far more popularly supposed that the killer had struck in the small hours, as stated by the Daily Telegraph on 10th November.
We can certainly forget the deeply silly smoke-and-mirrors claim by a few distinctly B-Team newspapers that Hutchinson had a secret, special reason for coming forward late that all the more reputable papers mysteriously missed out on. Indeed, the Daily Telegraph stated that it had NOT been ascertained why he had failed to come forward before, and the Echo stated – as a result direct police communication – that his evidence had been discredited, in part, because of his failure to come forward earlier.
As an aside - and this isn't aimed at you, Lechmere - but if there's one Hutchinson-related argument that I find wholly unstomachable, it's the notion that he somehow remained oblivious to news of Kelly's murder until Sunday 11th November. I regard it as impossible, unless Hutchinson ventured out into the countryside after allegedly aborting his Miller's Court vigil and shoved his head down a rabbit hole for two days. The murder happened in Dorset Street, virtually on his doorstep, and his presence at the Victoria Home "in the morning" of 9th November ought to put in beyond dispute that he would have picked up on the very earliest rumours of a murder in Dorset Street. Even the Saturday papers in Manchester was aware that the victim was a Mary Kelly who was murdered in Dorset Street, Spitalfields.Last edited by Ben; 08-11-2011, 03:43 AM.
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Monty
You think he should do what??
I'm not sure that's even anatomically possible.
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Wow, Fisherman. So you’re really are in the mood for a prolonged, repetitive and identical discussion to the one we’ve had many times on many other threads of seemingly interminable length? “Life’s too short” isn’t a philosophy you particularly embrace, is it? Fine by me, but don’t be too surprised if I provide the very same responses I provided when you raised this issue before.
“But my feeling is that this is because the Dew perspective has not been discussed over the years.”
“From the moment that discussion got started, the group of same-man-disciples started to shrink.”
“I think you will agree with me that most people do not regard Hutchinson as the killer of Kelly, and that means that there are a lot of people out there scratching their heads in disbelief over this.”
“Sarah Lewis claimed that the man SHE saw, stood on the other side of the street.”
As for Lewis’ evidence, I think it was established pretty conclusively that it was only you who distrusted her evidence.
“You treat it as a certain thing, Ben, that the two men stood at the same spot. It is not.”
“It is therefore only if we accept that Hutchinson AND Lewis were correct in their timings, that we should deduct that the man was most probably one and the same.”
Regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 08-11-2011, 03:04 AM.
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Bob – fair enough about marching to and from the beat – I had heard that before but it had slipped my mind.
But we don’t know that there wasn’t an attempt to locate the officer Hutchinson said he spoke to. We might presume there would have been an attempt, whether it was found to be true or not. The fact that there is no extant record of such an attempt is not very significant, seeing as how there is so little of the official police record left in existence.
And I did give possible explanations as to why Hutchinson didn’t come forward sooner:
• He may have been reluctant as many East Enders were to involve themselves in a police investigation – once he did he did with gusto – but that doesn’t mean he couldn’t have been initially reluctant. He may have suddenly enjoyed the limelight that he had never tasted before. And he may well have been paid by journalists and the police, which may have changed is attitude somewhat.
• He may have not appreciated that he held a special clue – he may not have grasped the potential significance of his sighting (he may have heard that Kelly was seen alive in the morning).
• He may have deliberately avoided coming forward to avoid losing a day’s pay by attending the inquest.
• And yes there was a report that suggested the reason for Hutchinson not coming forward sooner was known but the reason was held back.
But I would repeat to those who say he deliberately missed the inquest – he may well not have known it was talking place on the Monday. But he may have kept a low profile until he knew it was over (early evening press reports on the Monday) for the reasons given above.
As for this ‘certainty’ that Hutch = Lewis’s loiterer, the connection does not seem to have been made at the time, so I think we should be much less sure now.
PC L63’s ‘evidence’ tends to point against Hutchinson’s presence there if anything.
However my personal general opinion about Hutchinson was that he was a false witness who came forward to get money out of it. I think some of his story is true, some embellished and some made up.
Ben you also ignore coincidences when it suits you – I only need mention the word... Toppy.Last edited by Lechmere; 08-11-2011, 03:06 AM.
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FrankO
Reading the histories of various policemen involved in this case tells me that many were ditched for poor behaviour of some sort or another. It isn’t really sensible to suggest a survey
Some are suggesting that it is implausible that any policeman would not have acted immediately upon Hutchinson going up to them on Sunday morning. It is sufficient to point out that this isn’t necessarily the case.
If Hutchinson acted as he said he did in the early hours of Friday morning then it would seem to have been out of momentary noisiness. That doesn’t equate to a potential desire to become a major witness in a murder case – nor does it show that he was ‘eager’ on that Friday morning.
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