Sam Flynn: ... "suddenly used"? For all we know, he might have been using "Cross" on a day-to-day basis for years and years. Our view of his using the name is confined to a few newspaper reports covering a short space of time, so we can't assume/assert that his using "Cross" was a "sudden" decision at all.
I am speaking of the name he used in contacts with the authorities. And we have a long list of examples of it - all of them, before as well as after the Nichols inquest and investigation, displaying the name "Lechmere".
When he therefore SUDDENLY departed from that habit, it was, is and remains an anomaly. The rehashed suggestions, all of them nothing but brain ghosts and conjecture, that he would ever have used the name Cross in any other walk of life, official or unofficial, are simply useless in a discussion about facts.
What you must realize is that when we have 100 plus Lechmeres, a single Cross interjecting that mass IS a sudden and unexpected matter. It should go without saying.
Trouble is, we can't know either way because we lack a detailed biography - not just for Crossmere, but for anyone else who reserved their "birth certificate name" for use on censuses (etc), whilst using a different name in everyday life. Crossmere wouldn't have been the first, nor the only one to have done so.
But we DO have quite a "detailed biography" when it comes to which name he used when dealing with authorities. And as you know...
Can´t you see that suggesting that he MAY have used the name Cross unoficially has nothing to do with the official proceedings of an inquest?
Can´t you see that suggesting that he may have used the name Cross in other dealings with authorities is wildly at odds with the recorded reality?
Can´t you see that you consequentially have nothing that even remotely looks like a substantiable point? You will have to settle for the "what if" thinking no matter how we look at things.
It is the kind of stuff that a lawyer would use in order to get his client off: It COULD have been like that. And much as it works legally, it does nothing at all to dissolve the implications.
I am speaking of the name he used in contacts with the authorities. And we have a long list of examples of it - all of them, before as well as after the Nichols inquest and investigation, displaying the name "Lechmere".
When he therefore SUDDENLY departed from that habit, it was, is and remains an anomaly. The rehashed suggestions, all of them nothing but brain ghosts and conjecture, that he would ever have used the name Cross in any other walk of life, official or unofficial, are simply useless in a discussion about facts.
What you must realize is that when we have 100 plus Lechmeres, a single Cross interjecting that mass IS a sudden and unexpected matter. It should go without saying.
Trouble is, we can't know either way because we lack a detailed biography - not just for Crossmere, but for anyone else who reserved their "birth certificate name" for use on censuses (etc), whilst using a different name in everyday life. Crossmere wouldn't have been the first, nor the only one to have done so.
But we DO have quite a "detailed biography" when it comes to which name he used when dealing with authorities. And as you know...
Can´t you see that suggesting that he MAY have used the name Cross unoficially has nothing to do with the official proceedings of an inquest?
Can´t you see that suggesting that he may have used the name Cross in other dealings with authorities is wildly at odds with the recorded reality?
Can´t you see that you consequentially have nothing that even remotely looks like a substantiable point? You will have to settle for the "what if" thinking no matter how we look at things.
It is the kind of stuff that a lawyer would use in order to get his client off: It COULD have been like that. And much as it works legally, it does nothing at all to dissolve the implications.
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