Originally posted by Fisherman
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I'm happy accept Mizen "cannot be accused of poor policing". Robert Paul seems to have disagreed though:
"I told him (Mizen) what I had seen, and I asked him to come, but he did not say whether he should come or not. He continued calling the people up, which I thought was a great shame, after I had told him the woman was dead. The woman was so cold that she must have been dead some time, and either she had been lying there, left to die, or she must have been murdered somewhere else and carried there. If she had been lying there long enough to get so cold as she was when I saw her, it shows that no policeman on the beat had been down there for a long time. If a policeman had been there he must have seen her, for she was plain enough to see. Her bonnet was lying about two feet from her head."
In light of the fact that Nichols was, in fact, dead (with four previously unsolved attacks of woman currently serving as press fodder for attacking the Met) and taking into consideration Paul's remarkable statement (above), one can at least understand why, even if Mizen's actions were perfectly acceptable by the standards of the day, the Met, Mizen, et al, may have been been somewhat embarrassed by what occurred in Bakers Row and by what the public may have made of Paul's statement, taken with the fact that the Millwood, Wilson, Smith, and Tabram attacker(s) remained at large.
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