Patrick S: In the end it doesn't matter if Mizen misunderstood what he was told or willfully misrepresented what he was told. The result is the same: The Mizen Scam didn't happen.
Very true - if we leave out the possibility that he was speaking the truth, then the scam did not happen. If. I for one would never do that. I would think it treacherous to the sources to make such an omission. Other must do as they see fit, and live with it.
David Orsam may well be right. Personally, I subscribe to the view that Mizen said was he said as a result of the Lloyd's statement by Paul. To my way of thinking the statement, whether massaged or crafted by Lloyd's or directly from Paul's lips, was an attack piece on the Met. The timing of Mizen's testimony as well as the fact that Neil testified that he'd found the body without mention of Paul and Cross indicates - to me - that the first Mizen's superiors heard about the encounter in Baker's Row was when it appeared in Lloyd's. Thus, Mizen testified as he did primarily to blunt it's effect (both on himself and his employer, the Metropolitan Police).
He knew as he took the stand that if he lied, he would be contradicted by Lechmere, testifying after him. That is not blunting the effects - it is asking for them, together with a dismissal from the police corps. So my money is very firmly on him telling the truth.
Inventing a scenario where he was a worthless copper, ready to try and lie his way out, kind of stumbles on the two facts that he acted according to his testimony when he did not gainsay Neil and that he would set himself up for a dismissal from the police if he blatantly lied and was gainsaid by Lechmere and Paul.
For me, it's not an article that drives a killer from hiding to risk his life, rushing off to tell lies about policemen at inquests. It's a direct critique of a police organization that had - and would continue to be - under heavy criticism for their perceived ineffectiveness in apprehending the individual(s) responsible for Millwood, Wilson, Smith, and Tabram.
... involving a passage effectively saying "by the way, there was a man standing where the dead body of Polly Nichols lay, and I have no idea how long he had been there for".
And THAT is an article that drives a killer from hiding, especially since Mizen - and most likely Paul - were perfectly able to ID him. It should be perfectly obvious to anybody that he was in line for becoming the prime suspect.
But why are we doing this again? Why go through it all again? We have positioned ourselves firmly on our fix points ages ago, and not a iot has changed. So why?
Very true - if we leave out the possibility that he was speaking the truth, then the scam did not happen. If. I for one would never do that. I would think it treacherous to the sources to make such an omission. Other must do as they see fit, and live with it.
David Orsam may well be right. Personally, I subscribe to the view that Mizen said was he said as a result of the Lloyd's statement by Paul. To my way of thinking the statement, whether massaged or crafted by Lloyd's or directly from Paul's lips, was an attack piece on the Met. The timing of Mizen's testimony as well as the fact that Neil testified that he'd found the body without mention of Paul and Cross indicates - to me - that the first Mizen's superiors heard about the encounter in Baker's Row was when it appeared in Lloyd's. Thus, Mizen testified as he did primarily to blunt it's effect (both on himself and his employer, the Metropolitan Police).
He knew as he took the stand that if he lied, he would be contradicted by Lechmere, testifying after him. That is not blunting the effects - it is asking for them, together with a dismissal from the police corps. So my money is very firmly on him telling the truth.
Inventing a scenario where he was a worthless copper, ready to try and lie his way out, kind of stumbles on the two facts that he acted according to his testimony when he did not gainsay Neil and that he would set himself up for a dismissal from the police if he blatantly lied and was gainsaid by Lechmere and Paul.
For me, it's not an article that drives a killer from hiding to risk his life, rushing off to tell lies about policemen at inquests. It's a direct critique of a police organization that had - and would continue to be - under heavy criticism for their perceived ineffectiveness in apprehending the individual(s) responsible for Millwood, Wilson, Smith, and Tabram.
... involving a passage effectively saying "by the way, there was a man standing where the dead body of Polly Nichols lay, and I have no idea how long he had been there for".
And THAT is an article that drives a killer from hiding, especially since Mizen - and most likely Paul - were perfectly able to ID him. It should be perfectly obvious to anybody that he was in line for becoming the prime suspect.
But why are we doing this again? Why go through it all again? We have positioned ourselves firmly on our fix points ages ago, and not a iot has changed. So why?
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