Hi Mike,
Absolutely, just as long as we accept that this sort of "stress and scrutiny" can obviously lead to mistakes and misjudgments. If there's a difference, we're talking here about an era in which organised policing was still in its relative infancy, and when serial killers were virtually unheard of.
Viable alibi? No. Even Hutchinson himself makes clear he didn't have one. According to his account, he left Miller's Court entrance at 3.00am and "walked about all night". Unless you're now arguing that he bumped into a strategically and conveniently located night owl half an hour later, and withheld the detail from his interviewers, he most certainly did not have a "viable alibi". Checked out "rather thoroughly"? Well, as thorough as it's possible to be within a couples of hours' time frame. "Excellent" detective? Competent perhaps, but I haven't see too much evidence of "excellence".
No, there was no "reenatment", just an attempt to spot the Astrakhan man on the streets with police accompanying him. This lasted until his statement came to be doubted, i.e. not very long at all. Garry Wroe even suggested, rather persuasively to my mind, that it might have been on one such Astrak-hunting perambulation that he slipped up somehow and injured his credibility.
No, but that could only mean the difference between a good liar and a lousy one.
Agreed…I think.
As long as it’s understood that if any “checking out” occurred, it could only have gone so far, short of crystal balls and magic wands.
Which earlier reports are these?
We do, if we accept the Echo report, which we should.
Best regards,
Ben
1. Abberline and the whole police force were under stress and scrutiny and no different than any other police force in the free world that couldn't apprehend a notorious villain.
2. Hutchinson was questioned, checked out rather thoroughly, produced viable alibi, and was believed for a time by an excellent detective.
3. Hutchinson was so credible that he even accompanied the police on a sort of reenactment of what he claims to have seen
4. Walking from Romford was not suspicious enough, nor was the idea of his waiting near the Court entrance, nor the idea of giving money periodically to Kelly, for the police to doubt his statement and interrogation (if they were not the same thing)
“5. The police would have wanted to believe Hutchinson's story once he, as a person, was checked out, because if he were credible, his lead would have seemed of massive importance.”
As long as it’s understood that if any “checking out” occurred, it could only have gone so far, short of crystal balls and magic wands.
“6. Other, earlier reports of a fairly well-to-do suspect would certainly have come into play when it came to believing Hutchinson's story.”
“7. Somewhere along the way, but not quickly, the lead soured. We don't know why.”
Best regards,
Ben
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