Hi Jon,
Garry's arrival is timely, as his book addresses every point you raised, including this one. He observes that even if Hutchinson's claim to have had no money was "a ruse intended to preserve what little cash he had", there was nothing preventing him from securing a bed in "one of the hundreds of other lodging houses which proliferated the neighbourhood". It could further be observed that if he had money, there ought to have been nothing preventing a man with "no regular employment" from dossing down in Romford for most of the night, and leaving early for "home" the following morning - had he really been there, of course.
As for the police being "hoodwinked, they weren't; at least not for very long, or else it would not have been reported less than 24 hours after Hutchinson's first appearance that his evidence had suffered a "very reduced importance" for reasons that concerned his credibility. Hutchinson's Astrakhan description was derivative, as Sally points out, regardless of whether or not the police were "hoodwinked" by it for a very short time. It contained a myriad of details borrowed from earlier witness accounts, and pandered to all the “scary” attributes that had been circulating in the press with regard to the ripper’s likely appearance. The McKenzie suspect you refer to – William Wallace Brodie – confessed to being Jack the Ripper, and there was obviously a significantly reduced likelihood of the police being “hoodwinked” by such a confession than by “another” witness description.
As far as “remembering details” is concerned, the more pressing doubts concern Hutchinson’s ability even to notice the items he supposedly memorized, and if we’re deferring to the opinions of policemen, you should note Bob Hinton’s finding: “I have spoken to many serving and ex-police officers, and without exception they all dismiss Hutchinson’s description as pure fantasy. The general consensus of opinion being that witnesses generally get the sex and the height about right, but after that it’s pot luck”.
A typo?
How on earth does a policeman confuse “pale” for its absolute polar opposite – dark? Not as a result of a “typo”, that’s for sure.
Regards,
Ben
So he didn't really have no money, he just told her that.
And, as a result, he tells the police what he said to her.
And, as a result, he tells the police what he said to her.
As for the police being "hoodwinked, they weren't; at least not for very long, or else it would not have been reported less than 24 hours after Hutchinson's first appearance that his evidence had suffered a "very reduced importance" for reasons that concerned his credibility. Hutchinson's Astrakhan description was derivative, as Sally points out, regardless of whether or not the police were "hoodwinked" by it for a very short time. It contained a myriad of details borrowed from earlier witness accounts, and pandered to all the “scary” attributes that had been circulating in the press with regard to the ripper’s likely appearance. The McKenzie suspect you refer to – William Wallace Brodie – confessed to being Jack the Ripper, and there was obviously a significantly reduced likelihood of the police being “hoodwinked” by such a confession than by “another” witness description.
As far as “remembering details” is concerned, the more pressing doubts concern Hutchinson’s ability even to notice the items he supposedly memorized, and if we’re deferring to the opinions of policemen, you should note Bob Hinton’s finding: “I have spoken to many serving and ex-police officers, and without exception they all dismiss Hutchinson’s description as pure fantasy. The general consensus of opinion being that witnesses generally get the sex and the height about right, but after that it’s pot luck”.
"Complexion pale" as opposed to "complexion dark" does not make a liar out of the witness. A typo on behalf of the press is just as likely.”
How on earth does a policeman confuse “pale” for its absolute polar opposite – dark? Not as a result of a “typo”, that’s for sure.
Regards,
Ben
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