Originally posted by MysterySinger
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An hypothesis about Hutchinson that could discard him as a suspect
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What was it about the Kelly case though that caused the pardon for an accomplice to be offered? Could it simply have been the evidence of Cox of seeing a man opposite the entrance to Miller's Court at a crucial time?
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Originally posted by caz View PostAnd yet, Abby, and yet...
...the police, having read all this, concluded he was never there at all?
Does that sound in any way reasonable, even if they were totally unprepared for lying witnesses being potentially involved, whether it be directly or indirectly, for example if they were trying to supply an alibi for the real killer? The police were assuredly aware of the potential for the killer(s) to have an accomplice watching their back, even if they could not conceive of the actual killer ever daring to show his face in the guise of a witness.
If Blotchy killed Kelly, for example, Hutch's statement was an absolute Godsend, putting a very different customer in the room long after Mrs. Cox's sighting. And Hutch didn't need to be there to help Blotchy out in this way.
The difference between Hutch and previous witnesses, who lived or worked or had other legitimate reasons for being near the respective crime scenes, but were ditched as mere publicity seekers, is that without Astrakhan he had no apparent business being near the Kelly crime scene at all, never mind practically outside her window.
So what went on in police minds? Did they not even try to establish if he was elsewhere, doing something else entirely, when they decided he was just another publicity seeker? Was he still potentially at the crime scene, but they lost interest in what he might have been doing there when they no longer believed Astrakhan was?
Love,
Caz
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So the real issue here is why Hutchinson chose to assume that Wideawake role after that Pardon offer was made....since he isnt historically a suspect at all.
Suspicious and suspect can be mutually exclusive.
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And yet, Abby, and yet...
...the police, having read all this, concluded he was never there at all?
Does that sound in any way reasonable, even if they were totally unprepared for lying witnesses being potentially involved, whether it be directly or indirectly, for example if they were trying to supply an alibi for the real killer? The police were assuredly aware of the potential for the killer(s) to have an accomplice watching their back, even if they could not conceive of the actual killer ever daring to show his face in the guise of a witness.
If Blotchy killed Kelly, for example, Hutch's statement was an absolute Godsend, putting a very different customer in the room long after Mrs. Cox's sighting. And Hutch didn't need to be there to help Blotchy out in this way.
The difference between Hutch and previous witnesses, who lived or worked or had other legitimate reasons for being near the respective crime scenes, but were ditched as mere publicity seekers, is that without Astrakhan he had no apparent business being near the Kelly crime scene at all, never mind practically outside her window.
So what went on in police minds? Did they not even try to establish if he was elsewhere, doing something else entirely, when they decided he was just another publicity seeker? Was he still potentially at the crime scene, but they lost interest in what he might have been doing there when they no longer believed Astrakhan was?
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIs this the same report covered by the Star, Garry? It's not that straightforward, and seems to be a mish-mash of Hutchinson's police statement and other material, possibly gleaned by a press-agency reporter, as you suggest. Given journalistic/editorial involvement, it's quite possible that some of this could have been added or the sake of narrative - padding out some bald statements to make them more readable, with good intentions, but ultimately confusing matters in the process.
Whatever, the relevant passage is this: "I went up the court and stayed there a couple of minutes, but did not see any light in the house or hear any noise. I was out last night until three o'clock looking for him."
Shortly before this, in the same report, we have: "I went to look up the court to see if I could see them, but could not. I stood there for three-quarters of an hour to see if they came down again, but they did not, and so I went away." (Note that this matches almost verbatim what Hutchinson told Sgt Badham. The only difference is that "came out" [police statement] has been substituted with "came down again" [The Star], but the rest is identical. I'm fairly convinced that this section of the Star report comes from the police statement.)
These "went to [look up] the court" and "went to the court" {before he gave up} references quite feasibly relate the same event, especially if one reference came from Sgt Badham and the other from a Press Agency reporter. So, did he "go up" the court or "go UP TO" the court?
Either way, in neither version does he state that he stood directly outside Kelly's room.
To me, they are completely different. one is forty five minutes, the other a couple of minutes. One is to the court, the other is up the court. And close enough that he didn't hear a noise or see a sound-so hes obviously pretty darn close to her house.
also, the press statement he KNOWS exactly where Mary lives, police statement he does not.
ive said many times before this change is classic lying criminal behavior.
as in-did someone see me after I went into the court and stood outside her house?? I better add that bit just in case.
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostIn addition, he stated that he'd wandered down Miller's Court and stood directly outside Kelly's room for a couple of minutes shortly before departing the scene at three o'clock.
Whatever, the relevant passage is this: "I went up the court and stayed there a couple of minutes, but did not see any light in the house or hear any noise. I was out last night until three o'clock looking for him."
Shortly before this, in the same report, we have: "I went to look up the court to see if I could see them, but could not. I stood there for three-quarters of an hour to see if they came down again, but they did not, and so I went away." (Note that this matches almost verbatim what Hutchinson told Sgt Badham. The only difference is that "came out" [police statement] has been substituted with "came down again" [The Star], but the rest is identical. I'm fairly convinced that this section of the Star report comes from the police statement.)
These "went to [look up] the court" and "went to the court" {before he gave up} references quite feasibly relate the same event, especially if one reference came from Sgt Badham and the other from a Press Agency reporter. So, did he "go up" the court or "go UP TO" the court?
Either way, in neither version does he state that he stood directly outside Kelly's room.Last edited by Sam Flynn; 03-06-2016, 04:41 AM.
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Originally posted by Ben View PostIf it’s “by his own admission” it can’t be a fact, though, can it? I might claim to have seen a pig fly, but that's not the same as "admitting" to it. It’s just a claim, and claims can be both genuine and false. Since the police had no basis for accepting Hutchinson’s claim – not an admission, just a claim – to have been out and about on the streets of Spitalfields that morning, their first task was ascertain whether or not he was being truthful about that detail. Before they could even broach the question of “were you on the streets for murderous or non-murderous reasons” they had first to tackle “were you on the streets at all”.
That’s a very good point. So presumably they would have asked at the Victoria Home if anyone had seen Hutch around on the Thursday night/Friday morning in question? And this would be in the wake of Abberline’s early, unverified belief that the witness was telling the truth?
Originally posted by Ben View PostAnother important point is that any suspicions directed Hutchinson’s way were unlikely to be resolved to anyone’s satisfaction. “Where were you at the time Kelly was murdered, Hutchinson?”, “Walking about on my own sir”, “Ok, and what about your whereabouts for previous murders” “In my lodging house that sleeps 400 on an average night and doesn’t keep nightly registers of names from 5 weeks ago, sir”.
(Can you tell I’ve got an idea brewing?)
Originally posted by Ben View PostThe police had been deluged with fame seekers and money grabbers pretending to be in possession of helpful information to the ripper investigation, and the "interrogation" was for the purpose of assessing whether or not Hutchinson was another one of those. There was vast precedent for that type of behaviour, whereas there was no precedent at all for the most wanted man in the history of London waltzing into the police station.
Originally posted by Ben View PostMoreover, if subsequent investigation cast doubt on his story (as I argue it did in Hutchinson's case), it was not as if there was the option of him being dismissed as an attention seeker. His physical connection to the crime scene - which you often cite as a plus in favour of his culpability - also ensured that any inconsistency in his story would inevitably have resulted in suspicion that he might have been involved. Hutchinson had the option of being lumped erroneously into the same category as Violenia, whereas Cross did not.
Originally posted by Ben View PostGoldstein specifically drew attention to the fact that Fanny Mortimer had seen a man carrying a black bag, and that he was the man in question (we don't know if his "elimination" was made complete by a concrete alibi). Hutchinson, by contrast, didn't even make reference to Sarah Lewis, which was rather a wise move if he wanted to conceal the fact that he had been spooked into coming forward by her evidence, and he certainly did not have an "alibi" for Kelly's murder.
You appear to be basing Hutch’s ‘certain’ lack of an alibi on your belief that he told the truth about having a physical connection to the crime scene. Yet you also believe the police found reason to doubt his claim to fame along with any such connection. His entire story was somehow discredited and he was allowed to slip into total obscurity.
Isn’t it therefore an intriguing possibility that those famous ‘later investigations’ had turned up the information that Hutch had not been “walking about” during the relevant hours of darkness, but was tucked up in dreamland at the Victoria Home the entire time, according to fellow inhabitants who knew him and had seen him there? Now that would not only have given him an alibi for Kelly’s murder, had he wanted or needed one; it would also justify a decision by the police to drop him as a credible witness without further ado. He would indeed have been just one more of those time-consuming fame seekers and money grabbers.
It would certainly help explain his whole account being discredited with no further action being taken, which could only have come from a conclusion that he had not been near Miller’s Court that night.
Have you a better suggestion for why the police would have been satisfied with this conclusion?
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by packers stem View PostWhere did the press statement originate from?
I think the star said they'd received a statement and the times mentioned a new statement... No mention of interview so was he actually interviewed by the press?
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Originally posted by jason_c View PostWould the police have been diligent enough to have checked his Romford story?
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Where did the press statement originate from?
I think the star said they'd received a statement and the times mentioned a new statement... No mention of interview so was he actually interviewed by the press?
And as for the nonsense about not hearing a sound or seeing any light.... He must have found the window to 'see no light' and must have seen the gaping hole in the pane. Would he not have stuck his hand through had he been there for a few minutes
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostAgreed, Abby. I also think it likely that Mrs Cox passed up the court as he was loitering to the rear of Kelly's room - hence his newspaper claim that he listened for activity there shortly before departing the scene at about three o'clock. Funny how he neglected to reveal such a detail whilst speaking to Badham and Abberline.
It not only puts him closer to the where the murdered woman was, but it shows that he knew exactly where she lived, something that is not clear from his police statement.
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostWe shouldn't, Caz. Nor should we take anything he says regarding Kelly and Astrakhan at face value. The miraculously sobered-up Kelly is but one reason why I've long suspected that the Astrakhan story was pure fiction on Hutchnson's part. I'm not even convinced that he walked from Romford on the night in question. His police statement signatures also incline me to the view that he was operating under an assumed name. In fact, if Hutchinson was to tell me that my name is Garry Wroe I'd slip off to check my birth certificate before accepting him at his word.
I do think it unlikely Hutchison spent his day in Whitechapel. I also think one aspect of Hutchison's story has a ring of truth; that is the length of time he waited on Astrakhan man emerging from Kelly's room. Fourty five minutes is more than the expected time a lady of the night would spend with a client. This doesn't help confirm or deny Hutchison's version of events, bit to me it does givbe his version slightly more credence. Hutchison was eager to get another look at Astrakhan for whatever nefarious or innocent puropse you wish to give him; but once the expected period of time elapsed he soon lost interest. Of corse this assumes we believe Hutchison in the first place.
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Agreed, Abby. I also think it likely that Mrs Cox passed up the court as he was loitering to the rear of Kelly's room - hence his newspaper claim that he listened for activity there shortly before departing the scene at about three o'clock. Funny how he neglected to reveal such a detail whilst speaking to Badham and Abberline.
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostWe shouldn't, Caz. Nor should we take anything he says regarding Kelly and Astrakhan at face value. The miraculously sobered-up Kelly is but one reason why I've long suspected that the Astrakhan story was pure fiction on Hutchnson's part. I'm not even convinced that he walked from Romford on the night in question. His police statement signatures also incline me to the view that he was operating under an assumed name. In fact, if Hutchinson was to tell me that my name is Garry Wroe I'd slip off to check my birth certificate before accepting him at his word.
I lean toward Hutch not even seeing Mary Kelly that night (except when he killed her, if he did, of course).
I think he was looking for her, maybe even walked to her door/window and realized she was with someone(blotchy?) and waited around for her guest to leave.
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