I can also choose to use any of your posts in a pedagogical manner, to show how and why your arguments deserve no answer.
Like this, for example:
"Have you completely given up on "date confusion", by the way? If you're now insisting - on the basis of absolutely no evidence - that his Romford ramblings were checked out and shown to be correct, that's your theory gone to bollocks, surely?"
Yes, that´s correct. But only if it was checked and found to be correct. What you totally forget is that it could equally have been checked out - and found to have been incorrect.
Shall I explain further? Okay, for the sake of clarity and in order to provide each and every one of us with the chance to understand:
Abberline could have checked with XXX people who were in the vicinity whether Hutchinson was known as a truthful character or not (and believe it or not, the police usually DO speak to the suspects parents too. You may be amazed what that parents tell the police at times! Look at what Dahmers parents said, for example). He may have gotten a good conduct clearance thus far, on Hutchinson´s behalf.
He may therefore have gone to bed on the 12:th, having informed his superiors about his feeling that Hutchinson was a truthful man.
Then, on the morning of the 13:th, Abberline could have wired his colleagues in Romford, who went out and spoke to the place where Hutchinson claimed to have stayed. And they may have confirmed that Hutch DID stay with them, only to realize that the police were speaking of the night leading up to the 9:th - at which stage they said: "Oh, no, officer - he was here the night BEFORE that!".
And then it would be curtains for Hutchinson´s story - but not for Hutchinson himself. And the news would somehow seep down to the Echo, who wrote about the doubts the same evening.
So, you see, Ben, you are factually wrong once again - the Romford story would not in any way speak against my scenario. On the contrary - it may well have been what revealed that Toppy had gotten the days wrong.
There are other points in your post that are equally uninformed and misleading (I never said that the police got it wrong with Packer and Violenia, for example), but I think this will serve the purpose of underlining the reason for my reluctance to exchange with you.
All the best,
Fisherman
Like this, for example:
"Have you completely given up on "date confusion", by the way? If you're now insisting - on the basis of absolutely no evidence - that his Romford ramblings were checked out and shown to be correct, that's your theory gone to bollocks, surely?"
Yes, that´s correct. But only if it was checked and found to be correct. What you totally forget is that it could equally have been checked out - and found to have been incorrect.
Shall I explain further? Okay, for the sake of clarity and in order to provide each and every one of us with the chance to understand:
Abberline could have checked with XXX people who were in the vicinity whether Hutchinson was known as a truthful character or not (and believe it or not, the police usually DO speak to the suspects parents too. You may be amazed what that parents tell the police at times! Look at what Dahmers parents said, for example). He may have gotten a good conduct clearance thus far, on Hutchinson´s behalf.
He may therefore have gone to bed on the 12:th, having informed his superiors about his feeling that Hutchinson was a truthful man.
Then, on the morning of the 13:th, Abberline could have wired his colleagues in Romford, who went out and spoke to the place where Hutchinson claimed to have stayed. And they may have confirmed that Hutch DID stay with them, only to realize that the police were speaking of the night leading up to the 9:th - at which stage they said: "Oh, no, officer - he was here the night BEFORE that!".
And then it would be curtains for Hutchinson´s story - but not for Hutchinson himself. And the news would somehow seep down to the Echo, who wrote about the doubts the same evening.
So, you see, Ben, you are factually wrong once again - the Romford story would not in any way speak against my scenario. On the contrary - it may well have been what revealed that Toppy had gotten the days wrong.
There are other points in your post that are equally uninformed and misleading (I never said that the police got it wrong with Packer and Violenia, for example), but I think this will serve the purpose of underlining the reason for my reluctance to exchange with you.
All the best,
Fisherman
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