Originally posted by Garry Wroe
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It deserves pointing out that eyesight is something that we do not all have in equal amounts. If there was doubt, it stands to reason that the police would have asked themselves "could he really have seen all that?" instead of dogmatically stating "he could not have seen all that".
More to the point, as I have pointed out before, Not a single one of us knows what the light was like and not a single one of us knows for how long a time Hutchinson got to take in Astrakhan man. Any differences involved will have had an almighty importance.
Was it two seconds? Was it twenty?Were the light conditions the same when Hutchinson walked with the detectives? Was the sky clouded on one or both occasions? Did the moon shine through on one or both occasions?
Abberline could - and would, as far as Iīm concerned - have asked about this. He would have been in the know, whereas we are much, much more in the dark than Hutchinson was.
At the end of the day, I donīt invest much in the suggestion. Thatīs not to say that I can rule it out - in that context, it is much the same as many other suggestions I dislike: I have to live with them, but I donīt have to like them.
Much of my dislike is grounded in the fact that Dew had nothing condemning to say about Hutchinson fifty years on - on the contrary, he stated that he would not reflect on him.
That does not sit well in combination with a suggestion of a lying man. Itīs against the evidence, and so I opt for another explanation to the partial disinterest that ultimately became the fate for Hutchinsonīs story.
The best,
Fisherman
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