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Kosminski and Victim DNA Match on Shawl

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  • Hi Robert,

    To paraphrase—

    Jari wasn't aware how famous the mystery was and was surprised by its widespread interest.

    Please tell me you are having a laugh.

    Regards,

    Simon
    Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
      Hi Mick,

      Tread carefully.

      Take a look at who is mentioned in RE's acknowledgements.

      Regards,

      Simon
      I know Simon, but thanks anyway.
      Mick Reed

      Whatever happened to scepticism?

      Comment


      • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
        Hello Jeff. Thanks.

        "They are, you only require an A to Z. Perhaps we should all chip in and send a copy?"

        But I should think that, with his new found wealth, Mr. Edwards could afford to buy his own copy?

        Cheers.
        LC
        Come on Lynn… I just have lost the mojo to argue. Read the book. Take it all on board, and come to a conclusion.
        If your half the per on I think you are we'll await everyone else's findings..

        In the mean tine we;ll have comment but probably kept to a minimum as we are old gits…hping I'm not the JL in question?

        xxx

        PS but that is after an evening drinking with my beautiful fiancé so parting to be happily pissedxx.. things could be worse..and hopefully catch face to face on the 19th October 2014
        Last edited by Jeff Leahy; 09-24-2014, 03:46 PM.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Chris View Post
          Not really what I was hoping for, certainly.
          Yes Chris and Debs, it's not really informative for us.
          Mick Reed

          Whatever happened to scepticism?

          Comment


          • Originally posted by RockySullivan View Post
            Exactly Tom. The "I proved it" when he clearly hasn't yet is what makes this a fraudulent claim. Lots of people keep saying it's not fraud....but that's a fraudulent claim!!! It is fraud by definition!!
            It's not the he faked the DNA...it's that he faked what the DNA amounts to in the media.
            I don't think that's the definition of fraud. To be fraud, Edwards would have to know that what he was selling wasn't true, and I've seen no evidence that he faked anything or doesn't believe that what he's saying is true. He's just overstated his case.

            Yours truly,

            Tom Wescott

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
              Hi Mick,

              Tread carefully.

              Take a look at who is mentioned in RE's acknowledgements.

              Regards,Simon

              Yeah lets all make a conspiracy theory… tosh

              Comment


              • Originally posted by mickreed View Post
                And that's all some of us are complaining about. Frankly I'm astounded that prominent participants in this discussion, including people who've written some of the very best books on this topic, seem to be saying things along the lines of 'what's wrong with believing stuff and saying it loudly?', to which the answer is 'bugger all', but that is not what RE is saying.

                If he said, 'Look, here's my theory, and here's how I arrive it', then that's fine. But he's not. He's saying, unambiguously, 'I have cracked this case'. And I've seen him in interviews saying it even more strongly to the effect that anyone who disagrees is a bigot or an idiot.

                That says to me that the bloke is not to be taken seriously.
                I don't think that's what Paul's saying. I think he's just uncomfortable with how freely accusations of fraud are being made. I am as well. That's a very serious charge. Authors put out 'solution' books all the time, and rarely are there people lining up to yell fraud en masse. This one just happened to catch the public imagination and blow up.

                Yours truly,

                Tom Wescott

                Comment


                • levity

                  Hello Rocky, Simon. Thanks.

                  A bit of levity for Mitwoch.

                  Cheers.
                  LC

                  Comment


                  • jackpot

                    Hello Mick. #3912 is a jackpot.

                    Cheers.
                    LC

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Caligo Umbrator View Post
                      Hi, Chris
                      Before I moved to America I was an antique dealer.
                      I owned and sold many Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian artifacts. As I've stated elsewhere on this forum I'd date the shawl to around the early 1820's-1840's and, as I've not handled it or seen it with my own eyes, give a margin of around 5 years either side.
                      The way that designs were applied to textiles varied considerably in the 19th C. From the images I've seen I'd agree that the design is unlikely to be woven in to the fabric. Machine printing is not the only method of determining a uniform pattern. I owned and sold many hard wood block print patterns that where designed to be overlaid upon material in repetitive ways.
                      So to fulfill a pattern there could be one block for every colour. One for green leaves, one for red petals, etc. All carved to match up to a full design and all laid upon the material separately in succession, by the persons producing the item.
                      Thank you for providing real background data. I was always suspicious of my own hypothesis because the photos I saw were too unclear.

                      Originally posted by Mabuse View Post
                      Yes, it has been discussed, but the point is really not how likely it is that the policeman, Amos Simpson, was able to take this garment.

                      The big issue is that he should not have been at the crime scene. The evidence we currently have suggests he could not have been there. He was stationed miles away.
                      Do we know he was on duty that night? Could he have been out for a bit of strange somewhere he wouldn't be recognized?

                      Comment


                      • findings

                        Hello Jeff. Thanks.

                        "Read the book. Take it all on board, and come to a conclusion."

                        Were I to buy the book, I would feel guilty of a moral lapse. WOULD read a scientific paper, though.

                        ". . .we'll await everyone else's findings."

                        Gladly. But now, this looks to be NOT going to happen. Procedures were breached.

                        Cheers.
                        LC

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                          I don't think that's what Paul's saying. I think he's just uncomfortable with how freely accusations of fraud are being made. I am as well. That's a very serious charge. Authors put out 'solution' books all the time, and rarely are there people lining up to yell fraud en masse. This one just happened to catch the public imagination and blow up.

                          Yours truly,

                          Tom Wescott
                          Hey Tom

                          I didn't name Paul, but I do agree about fraud claims, and I've argued against them several times in this forum. Fraud is a foolish claim to make. It's as wrong to claim fraud without evidence, as it is to claim anything else without evidence.

                          The real problem here is in the aggressive marketing of the book, in which the author appears all to keen to participate. Now anyone would want their publisher to market aggressively, but not on the basis of falsehoods or partial truths.

                          There seems to me to be various strands of Ripperology - and here I use UK comparisons.

                          1. There's the Independent, Guardian, Telegraph (and once upon a time, the Times) approach of Begg, Skinner, Evans, and many more. They try to present the truth as they see it, argue their case from evidence, and, whilst they will sometimes be wrong, the reader can feel assured that they've given it their best shot.

                          2. Then there's the well-meaning local rag. Under-resourced, unable to afford top journos, etc. Great for reporting a Council meeting or the local cricket, but without the skills, or resources generally, to get to the bottom of a complex story. This may well be RE.

                          3. Finally there's the Sun, the Mirror, the Mail approach. Who cares whether it's true or not? Sales are everything and if people buy our papers then that's all that counts. Some people may think that RE's book is being sold like that.

                          Well, I don't think that's the right way to do things. And so, I repeat, we shouldn't be bandying claims like fraud about. But on the other hand, we shouldn't go easy, just because somebody may truly believe in their own unsubstantiated claims.

                          There's an old saying about heat and kitchens.
                          Mick Reed

                          Whatever happened to scepticism?

                          Comment


                          • mesmerised

                            Hello Tom.

                            "This one just happened to catch the public imagination and blow up."

                            Possibly because the magic words "DNA and "science" were bandied about. And these always mesmerise the inattentive.

                            Cheers.
                            LC

                            Comment


                            • Hi Jeff,

                              Tell me something.

                              Why is anyone who disagrees with you—which is not difficult given your slender understanding of events—a conspiracy theorist?

                              Regards,

                              Simon
                              Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by dropzone View Post

                                Do we know he was on duty that night? Could he have been out for a bit of strange somewhere he wouldn't be recognized?
                                So far as what is in the public domain, we don't know anything about his movements that night. Neil and Ed might know more.

                                All I'd say is, Mitre Square was a dozen or more miles from Amos's home and in a rough part of London. He wouldn't, I imagine, have been able to get home until morning - or maybe trains ran all night. Watson, get me our Bradshaw! Even if he was off that night, what time was he on next day?

                                If he went there for a jolly or something, then he'd presumably have been in civvies, so the local coppers would have sent him packing, or locked him up as a suspect. If he was in uniform, they'd surely have said, 'get back to Cheshunt'.

                                It doesn't seem likely to me.
                                Mick Reed

                                Whatever happened to scepticism?

                                Comment

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