Originally posted by Sam Flynn
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Lechmere/Cross "name issue"
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostI haven't brushed anything aside Fisherman. I quoted Scobie's entire statement as broadcast. I repeat it here:
"The timings really hurt him because she could have been very very recently fatally killed. You can inflict injuries, as I'm sure a pathologist will tell you, with a knife in seconds and the question is, "where were you?" "what were you doing during that time?" Because actually he has never given a proper answer. He is somebody who seems to be acting in a way, behaving in a way that is suspicious, which a jury would not like. A jury would not like that. When the coincidences add up, mount up against a defendant, and they mount up in this case, it becomes one coincidence too many. The fact that there is a pattern of offending, almost an area of offending, of which he is linked geographically and physically, you add all those points together, piece it all together and the prosecution have the most probative powerful material the courts use against individual suspects. What we would say is that he has got a prima facie case to answer which means there is a case good enough to put before a jury which suggests that he was the killer."
So why does Scobie think there is a good case against Lechmere?
Point 1 – The timings "really hurt him".
Point 2 – Following directly on from point 1, he has never given a proper answer as to where he was or what he was doing.
Point 3 - Following directly on from point 2, he was behaving suspiciously.
Point 4 – He is linked geographically and physically to a pattern or area of offending.
Those are the only reasons given.
Point 1 is based on wrong information. Point 2 is not correct. It follows that Point 3 is unsustainable. Point 4 is baffling and, in any case, not something that existed at the time of the Nichols murder.
Although Scobie refers to "coincidences" he doesn't identify any of them in the case against Lechmere and it is said in the context of a general statement.
So what have I brushed aside?
And that´s fine, up until the point where you seem to claim that only you can be right.
That´s patently wrong, see.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostSo was it another mistake in the documentary when the voiceover said:
"Robert Paul was in Bucks Row for a full minute before he noticed Lechmere."?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostIf you walk at similar speeds on soundless soles in darkness, you can be in a street 40 yards away from a person for an indefinite amount of time without ever noticing the other person.
If not please explain why not given that you say that you can be 40 yards away from someone without noticing them.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostIt could not be a case of Lechmere stepping out into the street as Paul entered Bucks Row, though, since we know that Lechmere said that it was when he stepped out into the street that he heard Paul approaching, estimating that the latter was at that stage 30-40 yards off.
Is he a bat? Does he have radar like hearing?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut I think we HAVE got somewhere. We have established that Scobie was misinformed on the facts. Therefore we cannot place any weight on his opinion as to the guilt or innocence of Lechmere.
And Scobie used a good many parameters to entertain suspicion against Lechmere, some of which may well have been sorted out from the material. As I keep telling you, I saw more material with Scobie, where he elaborated on things in a manner that was left out.
We also have Andy Griffiths, who has the great advantage of not being a barrister but instead a murder squad leader, who also pointed a finger at Lechmere.
So there are two men with adequate knowledge in their fields that arrived at the same conclusion - Lechmere is a really good bid. In Griffiths case, it is stated that he believes that Nichols was cut when Lechmere was with her. But he may of course have been lied to. Just jump on that train if you wish - others have embarked upon it before.
Of course, when the outcome of what experts like these men say does not fir with people´s own views, it will be of the essence to speculate that they were deceived to say what the film crew wanted to hear.
I believe the Lechmere case is unique in this matter too.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostFor David Orsam:
You claim that Scobie said "The timings really hurt him" because he had been unrightfully told that Lechmere left home at exactly 3.30.
However, let´s take a look at the WHOLE quote - it actually involves a "because", explaining WHY Scobie thought the timings were hurtful.
Here it is:
"The timings really hurt him, BECAUSE she could have been very, very recently fatally killed.
You can inflict injuries, as I am sure a pathologist will tell you, with a knife in seconds.
And the question is: Where were you? What were you doing?"
I also don't know why you have omitted some relevant words. The full quote is this:
"The timings really hurt him because she could have been very very recently fatally killed. You can inflict injuries, as I'm sure a pathologist will tell you, with a knife in seconds and the question is, "where were you?" "what were you doing during that time?" Because actually he has never given a proper answer."
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostSo, far from believing that the nine minutes offered if the timed path to Bucks Row from Doveton Street (7 minutes, 7 seconds) is weighed against Robert Pauls claim to have entered Bucks Row at 3.45, was a prerequisite to be able to committ the murder, Scobie is instead talking about how Nichols seemed to have been very, very recently killed - offering no real alternatives to Lechmere as the killer. Whether Scoboe grounded this on the bleeding details I cannot say, but it is the subject that springs to mind. It is very obvious that he does not feel any need for nine minutes at the other end of the strike, since he acknowledges that the knifing could have been overwith "in seconds".
That clears away your suggestion effectively, and makes for a fuller and more factbased background.
As for your point about Scobie referring to Nichols having been recently fatally killed it has no meaning if Nichols had been murdered at 3.35 and Lechmere left his house at 3.33. Of course Nichols had been murdered shortly before Lechmere found her body but how does that alone "really hurt" Lechmere. How is even capable of hurting Lechmere?
Surely Scobie cannot be confusing Lechmere being a suspect due to Nichols having recently been killed with actual evidence that makes a case against him.
For Scobie to draw any conclusions about the relevance of Nichols having been recently killed he would have needed to factor in the time Lechmere left his house, the time Nichols was murdered and the time Lechmere found the body. Of this, we know for a fact that Scobie was misinformed about the time Lechmere left his house and we can assume he was given the same information as in the documentary for the finding of the body. Let's remind ourselves of that information:
v/o: According to Paul’s evidence, Lechmere found the body some sixteen minutes after he claimed he left home.
Christer: "And it says 7 minutes, seven seconds. That would have meant that if Lechmere left his home as he said at 3.30 he should have been here at 3.37". Andy Griffiths: "Well that’s very interesting because Paul says he came into the street at 3.45." v/o: Andy and Christer have found a major gap in Lechmere’s timings.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut Fisherman, that is exactly my point because it shows how crucial the difference between "at 3.30" and "about 3.30" is. It's the possible difference, easily, between 3.30 and 3.33. Remove the 3 minutes and perhaps the timings now do not "really hurt" Lechmere, in Scobies view. This is why Scobie needed accurate information on timings before forming an opinion.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostNo that is speculation too far. The place for it to have been mentioned was in the paragraph I quoted. It would make no sense for a caveat to be written in another part of the document.
I am not interested in discussing things with somebody who reserves himself the right to decide what is reasonable speculation and what is not, especially not if that self same person has a vested interest in trying to establish that a film crew I got the feeling was well read up, honest, very interested and always asking questions so as not to get things wrong, was instead trying to lead Scobie wrong. And to boot, the detail as such is irrelevant to the full picture.
It´s just not my cup of tea. You will have to push your propaganda without my participation. I congrautlate you on having prolonged the debate this far - when Trevor Marriott tried the same stunt, I told him to go xxxxxxxxx in one post flat.
Goodbye.Last edited by Fisherman; 02-08-2017, 12:17 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostJack the Doppler.
Any ideas?
Goodnight to you, Gareth.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThe idea that Paul would not have heard Lechmere 15-20 seconds in front of him, and vice versa, is not a good one as far as I am concerned.
You have no idea how fast Paul was walking and how long it would have taken him to cover 40 yards.
But more than this there is no possible way that Lechmere could have accurately estimated the distance from nothing more than the sound of footsteps. For that reason 40 yards could, in reality, have been 80 yards, 100 yards or 130 yards.
Or perhaps Lechmere did indeed say that Paul was 130-40 yards away and this was misheard by the reporters.
In any event, in saying "15-20 seconds" you haven't factored in ANY time for Lechmere to have slowed down, looked at the bundle on the ground, stopped, thought about what it was before walking to the middle of the road.
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWithout knowing the relative walking speeds of Lechmere and Paul it's impossible to draw any firm conclusions. For example, as Lechmere turned into Bucks Row, Paul could easily have been a full two minutes behind him. But if Lechmere was walking slowly and Paul was walking quickly, that alone would explain why Paul could have caught up to within 40 yards of Lechmere in Bucks Row. I mean, perhaps Paul would have overtaken him before the end of the Row had they both continued walking without stopping. So how is it possible to say that "Lech and Paul should have seen each other" prior to this?
Out of interest Abby, what do you say is the minimum distance (in both yards and seconds) that the two men needed to be apart where, on the dark streets, they would not be expected to have seen or heard each other?
Do you agree that if there was 60 seconds walking distance between them then they would not be expected to have seen or heard each other?
By my timings 60 seconds walking distance equals about 30 yards. so, considering the time, desertedness, and aparrently Paul at least was on the look out for ruffians, I do think they(or at least Paul) would have noticed each other. But maybe not. it was dark, who knows-but I still lean toward it was close enough to notice each other before Bucks row."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWhat is the evidence that Paul was walking at 'slightly faster than normal walking pace'?"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
Comment
Comment