.It amazes me that you’re putting up such a fight over such a completely lost cause Fish
Sorry, mate, but I have actually proven that Chapman was out of sight with the parameters used in my drawings. It is the law of nature we are talking about here, so it won´t budge.
No, you’ve proven (sort of) that a person acting as if he didn’t want to notice a body, acting unnaturally, could manipulate the circumstances so that he might not have seen the body.
Look at the gap. It’s vital’
Yeah? Looking at it, Herlock. And?
Eh? That´s just the old pictures. They have been dealt with in my drawings.
And a drawing by you trumps an actual photographs of the yard. Only in Fishworld.
Imagine that door swinging toward being closed.
Right.
Look at the step that Richardson sat on. Look how low it is.
Mmm. His butt would have been around 30 centimeters off the ground.
The door would have been higher than his legs.
It would be u at that approximate level, yes, as per my drawing. But he did not have eyes in his kneecaps!
As long as he’d got them in his head. Sitting upright or with his head bent forward slightly fixing his shoe he’d have seen the body. No question.
When he opened the door initially he’d have opened it wider than in your drawing.
Stop! There is no telling about that at all. Nor is there any telling where he looked as he shoved the door open. Maybe he put his shoulder against it and pushed, maybe he used his hand, we cannot possibly know. So stating as a fact that it opened wider than in my drawing is folly. Moreover, he may have had the door at a much more acute angle than in my drawing, remember!
Now this is typical Fisherman. “No. We can’t know that.” We’ll, I’m sorry. We can’t know that Richardson didn’t do the entirely natural push the door open on entering the yard (as he said he did). We can’t know that he just rigidly looked to the right and not all across the yard (as he said he did.) But according to you we can.
I know that you are suggesting that he sat facing left but I’m making the point that if he sat in a more normal position, ie facing forward, without bending or stooping or anything unusual he would have been able to see, at a guess, within a foot or two of the fence.
I am actually suggesting that he sat facing RIGHT, Herlock - the lock was to his right, remember?
Since he was there to check that lock, why would it be a normal position to sit straight forward? Not that it matters, because what I am saying is that he MAY have sat as I depicted, and there would be nothing at all odd with it.
Plus, my drawing of him on the stairs shows us that he could not have seen anything at all of the ground beyond the steps, if he was indeed in the kind of position I suggest. It is all good and well to say that he could see here and there - but bolster it with a drawing showing us your take, and it will be easier to look at your thinking in detail.
Left was a typing error. You ask ‘why would it be a normal position to sit straight forward??’ Because that’s what most people do Fish. Just because he checked the lock it doesn’t mean that he had to sit there staring in it’s direction! My thinking doesn’t need a drawing because as long as you have eyes you can see it. It’s blatantly obvious. It’s not natural or normal to sit on a step performing knifework on a shoe with the door bumping against your left arm! It’s just not. He’d most likely have pushed it open. It would have taken no effort; it would have had no consequences; it would have taken no time. It would have been perfectly reasonable, logical behaviour.
Annie’s body, with her knees pointing outward, from knee to knee would have been approximately three feet across. So even if her left knee was touching the fence her right knee and much more would have been in sight.
No, it would not. His eyes were too far up the door-blade to allow for him to see anything at all in the recess, unless he stooped down. It is in the drawing, the angle is quite clear and it does not lie. Once again, it is the laws of nature that governs this.
A pencil sketch does not convince. A photograph does. End of.
Even if he sat facing right. When he stood up to go and held the door back even slightly to allow him to exit he would have seen the body.
When did he "hold the door back"? How on earth do we know that he did? If he just get up and let the door slide off him and in place, he would not add a millimeter to the scope. You are inventing things, Hemlock
Think back Fish. The door would have swung over his legs so he’d have pushed it back to allow himself the room to stand up. It’s called normal behaviour. People don’t just allow doors to keep bumping off them when with one hand they could simply push it back for ease of exit. It’s you that are inventing stuff Fish. You are trying to manipulate the position of the door and Richardson’s behaviour just to allow for the possibility that he could have missed a horrendously mutilated corpse just inches from him by having him sit facing one side, with the door knocking against his left hand side whilst he only looks right and with a door open only at the exact angle where he might not have seen anything. Back on earth Fish!
Richardson would have had to have pretty much deliberately tried to avoid seeing it. It would have been an effort.
What? Why would he do that? What reason would he have to look to his left side in the first place? Even if he did, the body would be obscured, but nevertheless - why would he do that?
Firstly because he said that he did. Secondly, if someone had previously gained entry to the yard and got at the cellar it would have been quite natural to give the yard a quick once-over. The body would not have been fully obscured Fish. By persistently repeating it you won’t make it true.
I see not the slightest possibility that anyone acting naturally could have missed a body whose feet were 6 feet down into the garden and who would have been 3 feet across with knees spread outward from the fence and with a door with a 2 feet gap beneath it.
Put an obstacle in the shape of a door between that somebody and the body, and you would be amazed, Herlock. It is ever so effective.
Now, please bolster your thinking with sketches or material that illustrates how you think it worked. How did he manage from above to bounce his sight off the steps, then falling slowly down onto the body? Just how does that work?
It is game over, really. The only ionteresint question is how long it will take for it to dawn on you. Right now, you are in a Richardsonesque situation, it would seem - there is light and things to see but you do not make use of it.
I don’t have the facility for posting pictures Fish so I can’t. I don’t need to though. Photographs more than suffice. Using misleading phrases like “bounce his sight’ is the equivalent in conspiracy terms as ‘the magic bullet.’ The chances of Richardson, behaving like a normal human being, missing a body is so vanishingly small as to be not worthy of consideration.
Sorry, mate, but I have actually proven that Chapman was out of sight with the parameters used in my drawings. It is the law of nature we are talking about here, so it won´t budge.
No, you’ve proven (sort of) that a person acting as if he didn’t want to notice a body, acting unnaturally, could manipulate the circumstances so that he might not have seen the body.
Look at the gap. It’s vital’
Yeah? Looking at it, Herlock. And?
Eh? That´s just the old pictures. They have been dealt with in my drawings.
And a drawing by you trumps an actual photographs of the yard. Only in Fishworld.
Imagine that door swinging toward being closed.
Right.
Look at the step that Richardson sat on. Look how low it is.
Mmm. His butt would have been around 30 centimeters off the ground.
The door would have been higher than his legs.
It would be u at that approximate level, yes, as per my drawing. But he did not have eyes in his kneecaps!
As long as he’d got them in his head. Sitting upright or with his head bent forward slightly fixing his shoe he’d have seen the body. No question.
When he opened the door initially he’d have opened it wider than in your drawing.
Stop! There is no telling about that at all. Nor is there any telling where he looked as he shoved the door open. Maybe he put his shoulder against it and pushed, maybe he used his hand, we cannot possibly know. So stating as a fact that it opened wider than in my drawing is folly. Moreover, he may have had the door at a much more acute angle than in my drawing, remember!
Now this is typical Fisherman. “No. We can’t know that.” We’ll, I’m sorry. We can’t know that Richardson didn’t do the entirely natural push the door open on entering the yard (as he said he did). We can’t know that he just rigidly looked to the right and not all across the yard (as he said he did.) But according to you we can.
I know that you are suggesting that he sat facing left but I’m making the point that if he sat in a more normal position, ie facing forward, without bending or stooping or anything unusual he would have been able to see, at a guess, within a foot or two of the fence.
I am actually suggesting that he sat facing RIGHT, Herlock - the lock was to his right, remember?
Since he was there to check that lock, why would it be a normal position to sit straight forward? Not that it matters, because what I am saying is that he MAY have sat as I depicted, and there would be nothing at all odd with it.
Plus, my drawing of him on the stairs shows us that he could not have seen anything at all of the ground beyond the steps, if he was indeed in the kind of position I suggest. It is all good and well to say that he could see here and there - but bolster it with a drawing showing us your take, and it will be easier to look at your thinking in detail.
Left was a typing error. You ask ‘why would it be a normal position to sit straight forward??’ Because that’s what most people do Fish. Just because he checked the lock it doesn’t mean that he had to sit there staring in it’s direction! My thinking doesn’t need a drawing because as long as you have eyes you can see it. It’s blatantly obvious. It’s not natural or normal to sit on a step performing knifework on a shoe with the door bumping against your left arm! It’s just not. He’d most likely have pushed it open. It would have taken no effort; it would have had no consequences; it would have taken no time. It would have been perfectly reasonable, logical behaviour.
Annie’s body, with her knees pointing outward, from knee to knee would have been approximately three feet across. So even if her left knee was touching the fence her right knee and much more would have been in sight.
No, it would not. His eyes were too far up the door-blade to allow for him to see anything at all in the recess, unless he stooped down. It is in the drawing, the angle is quite clear and it does not lie. Once again, it is the laws of nature that governs this.
A pencil sketch does not convince. A photograph does. End of.
Even if he sat facing right. When he stood up to go and held the door back even slightly to allow him to exit he would have seen the body.
When did he "hold the door back"? How on earth do we know that he did? If he just get up and let the door slide off him and in place, he would not add a millimeter to the scope. You are inventing things, Hemlock
Think back Fish. The door would have swung over his legs so he’d have pushed it back to allow himself the room to stand up. It’s called normal behaviour. People don’t just allow doors to keep bumping off them when with one hand they could simply push it back for ease of exit. It’s you that are inventing stuff Fish. You are trying to manipulate the position of the door and Richardson’s behaviour just to allow for the possibility that he could have missed a horrendously mutilated corpse just inches from him by having him sit facing one side, with the door knocking against his left hand side whilst he only looks right and with a door open only at the exact angle where he might not have seen anything. Back on earth Fish!
Richardson would have had to have pretty much deliberately tried to avoid seeing it. It would have been an effort.
What? Why would he do that? What reason would he have to look to his left side in the first place? Even if he did, the body would be obscured, but nevertheless - why would he do that?
Firstly because he said that he did. Secondly, if someone had previously gained entry to the yard and got at the cellar it would have been quite natural to give the yard a quick once-over. The body would not have been fully obscured Fish. By persistently repeating it you won’t make it true.
I see not the slightest possibility that anyone acting naturally could have missed a body whose feet were 6 feet down into the garden and who would have been 3 feet across with knees spread outward from the fence and with a door with a 2 feet gap beneath it.
Put an obstacle in the shape of a door between that somebody and the body, and you would be amazed, Herlock. It is ever so effective.
Now, please bolster your thinking with sketches or material that illustrates how you think it worked. How did he manage from above to bounce his sight off the steps, then falling slowly down onto the body? Just how does that work?
It is game over, really. The only ionteresint question is how long it will take for it to dawn on you. Right now, you are in a Richardsonesque situation, it would seem - there is light and things to see but you do not make use of it.
I don’t have the facility for posting pictures Fish so I can’t. I don’t need to though. Photographs more than suffice. Using misleading phrases like “bounce his sight’ is the equivalent in conspiracy terms as ‘the magic bullet.’ The chances of Richardson, behaving like a normal human being, missing a body is so vanishingly small as to be not worthy of consideration.
Now of course we can solve many problems in this case by just saying “well he must have lied” but we have no genuine reason to suspect that he did because we have no genuine motive for him to have done so. Slight discrepancies on trivial issues aren’t enough. If he was going to lie he would have been better saying that he hadn’t visited the yard at all. Or that he’d visited it earlier.
The fact that he was there at 4.45 and that the body wasn’t there is overwhelmingly the likeliest.
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