What many people seem to miss on the name issue is what I am actually saying about it.
I am not saying, and have never said, that it proves the guilt of the carman.
I am not saying, and have never said, that it is the one most important detail in the accusation act against Lechmere. It is not.
However, it is something that lends itself very well to the overall idea that Charles Lechmere may have been the Whitechapel killer. To give a false name or to mislead about your true identity is the oldest trick in the book. There are uncountable examples of the tactic, as everybody will be aware. And the Lechmere business fills the requirement for joining those ranks - it seems he never gave his real, registered name to the police, there are no other examples whatsoever of him ever using the name Cross, but there are more than a hundred examples of him calling himself Lechmere.
As anybody realizes, there MAY be innocent explanations to this, but that does not detract from the implications of the material we have. As I keep saying, in terms of always getting hold of the short end of the straw, Lechmere is exceptional. There are NEVER any innocent explanatory facts at hand, although there could have been in lots and lots of instances. Any old private piece of paper with the name Charles Cross would have helped out, as would any official record with that name. But that never happens.
Instead, he has to rely on the helpfulness of latter day investigators, who buy into everything he says as if it was the proven truth. The WIKI entrance on him claims:
Born Charles Allen Lechmere in 1849, St Anne's, Soho, son of John Allen Lechmere and Maria Louisa (nee Roulson). In 1858, Charles' mother remarried, to Thomas Cross, a policeman and Charles took his surname.
"Charles took his surname".
Really? And consequentially signed himself Lechmere through the decades afterwards?
There is nothing more to fear from me than a wish for some little realism. Whan he called himself Cross with the police, it was an anomaly. It was a strange thing to do, given how he otherwise never did this with authorities. That is what I am saying. It was strange, and strange things scream for explanations. He made an exception from the rule. Why?
Perhaps because it is the oldest trick in the book when you want to get away from the responsibility from something youīve done?
It certainly cannot be ruled out. This bit, as well as so many other bits, therefore fits the Lechmere bid.
I am not saying, and have never said, that it proves the guilt of the carman.
I am not saying, and have never said, that it is the one most important detail in the accusation act against Lechmere. It is not.
However, it is something that lends itself very well to the overall idea that Charles Lechmere may have been the Whitechapel killer. To give a false name or to mislead about your true identity is the oldest trick in the book. There are uncountable examples of the tactic, as everybody will be aware. And the Lechmere business fills the requirement for joining those ranks - it seems he never gave his real, registered name to the police, there are no other examples whatsoever of him ever using the name Cross, but there are more than a hundred examples of him calling himself Lechmere.
As anybody realizes, there MAY be innocent explanations to this, but that does not detract from the implications of the material we have. As I keep saying, in terms of always getting hold of the short end of the straw, Lechmere is exceptional. There are NEVER any innocent explanatory facts at hand, although there could have been in lots and lots of instances. Any old private piece of paper with the name Charles Cross would have helped out, as would any official record with that name. But that never happens.
Instead, he has to rely on the helpfulness of latter day investigators, who buy into everything he says as if it was the proven truth. The WIKI entrance on him claims:
Born Charles Allen Lechmere in 1849, St Anne's, Soho, son of John Allen Lechmere and Maria Louisa (nee Roulson). In 1858, Charles' mother remarried, to Thomas Cross, a policeman and Charles took his surname.
"Charles took his surname".
Really? And consequentially signed himself Lechmere through the decades afterwards?
There is nothing more to fear from me than a wish for some little realism. Whan he called himself Cross with the police, it was an anomaly. It was a strange thing to do, given how he otherwise never did this with authorities. That is what I am saying. It was strange, and strange things scream for explanations. He made an exception from the rule. Why?
Perhaps because it is the oldest trick in the book when you want to get away from the responsibility from something youīve done?
It certainly cannot be ruled out. This bit, as well as so many other bits, therefore fits the Lechmere bid.
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