Elamarna: I was not going to comment but I really must.
Despite what you have been saying and posting the witness sources are very clear.
No, they are not very clear, Steve. If they were, we would not be having this discussion. The sources open up for more than just the one solution, and that is the equivalent of not being very clear.
I do not dispute that most of them describe the event as if Paul and Lechmere were always more or less close to each other, but it is by no means any certainty. Other details speak for another interpretation.
And nowhere is there data that guarantees us that Paul must have overheard Lechmereīs conversation with Mizen. Nowhere! The mere suggestion is a falsification.
Lechmere says Paul also spoke during the conversation with Mizen.
Paul claims to have taken part and at the very least to have known what was said . Agreeing with Lechmere.
Now I will point out as you often do that it is not me suggesting this, it is what is recorded.
It is not enough and it is in no way conclusive, though.
The second you say that Lechmere said that Paul spoke to Mizen, I can say that Mizen never recognized this, instead he told us that ONE man spoke to him.
That very effectively puts Lechmereīs statement into doubt. Anyone can see that.
And there is absolutely no need to believe that Paul knew what was said. What he says himself is that "they" told Mizen what they had seen, and he may simply have worked from an assumption that Lechmere told the PC this. They may even have aggreed about what was to be said and who was to say it, after which Lechmere violated the agreement. Anyone can see that too.
So you see, you are left with nothing in the end. There is not a thing that can tell us that your way of looking upon it is the correct way. It may be and it may not be. My guess is that you are dead wrong.
You don't believe this fine, and we now know that is because you believe that Paul lied and one must assume you hold the same view of Lechmere.
In addition you interpret Mizen as saying they were not in close proximity and you believe Mizen was truthful.
Again that's fine.
I KNOW Paul lied in his paper interview, unless the journalist lied. He was nt the one who solely managaged the discussion with Mizen. I donīt know why you otherwise say that I beleive that Paul lied, if it does not emanate from this?
I do not interpret Mizen as saying that the two men were not n close proximity. I interpret him as opening up for the possibility, though.
And yes, I think Mizen told the truth. It is in line with the lie about the PC that Mizen never corrected Neils statement of being the finder of the body, and it is line with it that he let Lechmere and Paul go, unquestioned.
However we are left with 3 sets of Witness statements and any views on what occurred need to be based on those. To suggest that pointing out that two of those 3 sets specifically say that both Lechmere and Paul were involved in the conversation with Mizen is unhelpful, is a somewhat strange approach,if one seeks a full and true picture of the events.
To reach your verdict, you have to believe a man that is under suspicion of murder, who would have all the reason in the world to lie and who seemingly did so about his name.
If you have ten convicted killers awaiting their death penalties on a prison island, being accued of trying to flee by a prison guard but denying it, then in your world the prison guard was probably wrong since he was in the minority.
Once we look at a possible culprit, his word must be taken with a large grain of salt, thatīs what I am saying. Much as we should listen to him, we should ALSO picture the possibility that he may be lying to get out of trouble. Both perspectives must be used, least we want to be called naive.
Despite what you have been saying and posting the witness sources are very clear.
No, they are not very clear, Steve. If they were, we would not be having this discussion. The sources open up for more than just the one solution, and that is the equivalent of not being very clear.
I do not dispute that most of them describe the event as if Paul and Lechmere were always more or less close to each other, but it is by no means any certainty. Other details speak for another interpretation.
And nowhere is there data that guarantees us that Paul must have overheard Lechmereīs conversation with Mizen. Nowhere! The mere suggestion is a falsification.
Lechmere says Paul also spoke during the conversation with Mizen.
Paul claims to have taken part and at the very least to have known what was said . Agreeing with Lechmere.
Now I will point out as you often do that it is not me suggesting this, it is what is recorded.
It is not enough and it is in no way conclusive, though.
The second you say that Lechmere said that Paul spoke to Mizen, I can say that Mizen never recognized this, instead he told us that ONE man spoke to him.
That very effectively puts Lechmereīs statement into doubt. Anyone can see that.
And there is absolutely no need to believe that Paul knew what was said. What he says himself is that "they" told Mizen what they had seen, and he may simply have worked from an assumption that Lechmere told the PC this. They may even have aggreed about what was to be said and who was to say it, after which Lechmere violated the agreement. Anyone can see that too.
So you see, you are left with nothing in the end. There is not a thing that can tell us that your way of looking upon it is the correct way. It may be and it may not be. My guess is that you are dead wrong.
You don't believe this fine, and we now know that is because you believe that Paul lied and one must assume you hold the same view of Lechmere.
In addition you interpret Mizen as saying they were not in close proximity and you believe Mizen was truthful.
Again that's fine.
I KNOW Paul lied in his paper interview, unless the journalist lied. He was nt the one who solely managaged the discussion with Mizen. I donīt know why you otherwise say that I beleive that Paul lied, if it does not emanate from this?
I do not interpret Mizen as saying that the two men were not n close proximity. I interpret him as opening up for the possibility, though.
And yes, I think Mizen told the truth. It is in line with the lie about the PC that Mizen never corrected Neils statement of being the finder of the body, and it is line with it that he let Lechmere and Paul go, unquestioned.
However we are left with 3 sets of Witness statements and any views on what occurred need to be based on those. To suggest that pointing out that two of those 3 sets specifically say that both Lechmere and Paul were involved in the conversation with Mizen is unhelpful, is a somewhat strange approach,if one seeks a full and true picture of the events.
To reach your verdict, you have to believe a man that is under suspicion of murder, who would have all the reason in the world to lie and who seemingly did so about his name.
If you have ten convicted killers awaiting their death penalties on a prison island, being accued of trying to flee by a prison guard but denying it, then in your world the prison guard was probably wrong since he was in the minority.
Once we look at a possible culprit, his word must be taken with a large grain of salt, thatīs what I am saying. Much as we should listen to him, we should ALSO picture the possibility that he may be lying to get out of trouble. Both perspectives must be used, least we want to be called naive.
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