Originally posted by Ben
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A police station is open to the public regardless of their attitude towards police. Are you trying to suggest the police employed a discrimination policy to only admit members of the press who are "yes men"? (yes sir, no sir, three bags full, sir)?
Thats a joke Ben, really!
... why would the police invite them into the station and tell them anything when they knew full well that the same paper had flagrantly lied about their treatment of a witness? In such a case, the obvious response to a knock on the police station door from known lying journalists was “phuck off”, not, “gentleman, please do come in for tea, and let us confirm some of the assumptions doing the rounds”.
This is not some third-world Dictatorship, it's a principal Metropolitan Police Station. Everyone is treated with a degree of respect, regardless of their private thoughts on the various members of the press.
I’ve acknowledged a million times that if the police informed the Echo that Hutchinson’s discrediting was purely because of his failure to provide evidence at the inquest, they can’t have been putting the newspaper fully in the picture about their full reasons for distrusting Hutchinson.
Now who's living in their own private world?
First you invent a story, and because it doesn't hold up to scrutiny, you change your mind and claim the police must have lied to the press?
Thats funny Ben, it reads more like an admission that your invented story failed miserably.
The Echo simply did not obtain any information from the police.
Far from “failing to observe” this, I have pressed the point for years; yes, it was the “morning papers” who observed that the Hutchinson account published on the 14th November “agreed with” the description furnished on the 13th,...
For example, the morning papers were possibly confused into thinking that the 13th and 14th November accounts were from different sources,
What we do read is:
"It will be observed that the description of the supposed murderer given by Hutchinson agrees in every particular with that already furnished by the police, and published yesterday morning."
An obvious conclusion to anyone's eyes. Place the stories & descriptions side-by-side and anyone with a pulse can see they are very likely from the same source (a laborer, in Commercial St, on the morning of the 9th, etc.).
Who are you trying to kid Ben?
And finally, the one comment that blows your interpretation out of the water is this below (in bold):
... it was the Echo who were able to report that “the police do not attach so much importance to this document as some of our contemporaries do” – again on the basis of that meeting at Commercial Street station.
The Echo say it was not regarded as "important", and I have tried to impress on you the same, - it was not important".
Yet, you on your own, (even without the support of the Echo) try to maintain this contrary view that it was important?
All your imaginary claims run contrary to what is written.
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