Steve post as an example of misleading how somebody (presumably I?) have said that Neil found Nichols within two minutes after she was left by the carmen.
Maybe I have said such a thing in a generalized manner, but I certainly have also made it clear in many posts that I think that is too short an interval of time.
Why Steve chose not to present those posts, I have no idea, but it remains that the carmen cannot reasonably have made it from the murder spot to the end of Bucks Row in only a minute, and after that, Neil will have entered Bucks Row from Thomas Street, walking at a measured speed, and he will have needed perhaps two minutes or more to make it down to the murder spot.
So there will be a longer period of time.
I don´t think it means anything much in terms of Lechmeres viability as the murderer, at any rate.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostI don´t think that the locality as such is what will jump you and mug you, Patrick - it is the PEOPLE in the locality. So in fact, if Paul was concerned abot anything, it was that Lechmere may be a representative of those people.
We can of course have this partly confirmed by reading what Lechmere himself said: "He stepped back and waited for the newcomer, who started on one side, as if he feared that the witness meant to knock him down."
It's pretty simple. Paul felt it was a bad part of town. Thus, people were wise to be "on their guard" because people had been "knocked down ON THAT SPOT".
Do you contend that Cross was in some deranged state, thus he frightened poor Paul, only to ease his fears by demonstrating he was the nicest sort of psychopath, and he just wanted to show him his victim and then run off with him to find a policeman?
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I will make a few remarks since I have - with a fair measure of incredulity - read the posts on this thread.
Let´s begin with Harry, who, commended on his effort by Herlock Sholmes, posted this:
"One misconception is that Cross must be considered a suspect simply because he was at the crime scene.In my opinion,that is not so.While his own admission puts him at the crime scene,no evidence of an incriminating nature,connects him to the crime.They are separate issues.They each require their own particular proofs."
It is extremely odd that posters will go on claiming these kinds of things on my behalf. I have repeatedly stated that there is nothing at all incriminating in finding a victim - just as is often stated out here, somebody has to.
What happens if you find a victim in the kind of circumstances we have in this case, where the finder fits the overall time scheme and may therefore have been the killer, is that the finder immediately becomes a "person of interest".
After that, it is the developments of the case that governs if the finder will become a suspect.
If he can be cleared, he is written of the list of possible suspects.
If he cannot, he remains a potential suspect, and the police will take a very close look at him if there is no other suspect at hand.
If information should surface during this investigation that points in his way, in the shape of factual information or of him lying, chances are he will turn into an outright suspect.
I submit that the victorian police should have investigated him, but I also submit that this was never done, and I suspect it owes to how he came forward on bis own account.
What remains, and what I would very dearly want respected is that nobody is saying that finding a victim is suspicious per se.
If evidence surfaces that points in your way, however, then having been found with the victim does not help your cause, and will certainly be used by the prosecution should there be a court case.
In hope this clears this misconception up once and for all.
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Originally posted by Patrick S View PostApproached him like what? Paul didn't say that Cross approached him in an aggressive or threatening way. What he said was:
"I saw a man standing where the woman was. He came a little towards me, but as I knew the dangerous character of the locality I tried to give him a wide berth."
Clearly his concerns were due to the "dangerous character of the locality", not the "dangerous character" of Charles Cross.
We can of course have this partly confirmed by reading what Lechmere himself said: "He stepped back and waited for the newcomer, who started on one side, as if he feared that the witness meant to knock him down."
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostI can't disagree with any of that. But if you require an urgent response, you really need to deliver the message in the same fashion. If Cross and Paul had been gabbling breathlessly and gesticulating wildly - which certainly doesn't come across from the evidence of either carman - I've no doubt Mizen's reaction would have been very different. So if I was in Paul's shoes, I'd be asking myself whether I'd sufficiently commumicated the urgency of the situation.
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Originally posted by Patrick S View PostTo my thinking, Paul's seeming frustration toward the police was perhaps informed by his perception that Mizen's reaction was not - as far as he was concerned - appropriate. However, I think it's also possible that he was echoing an overall sense of anger that was present among many in the area. Anger stirred by media reports critical of the police and their handling of previous, seemingly connected crimes. While “Polly” Nichols is generally considered to have been the first victim of “Jack the Ripper”, there had already been several unsolved crimes that had the police under heightened scrutiny.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Postso why did paul come upon lech within seconds or even a minute that lech hesitated?
Or perhaps Paul, being late, decided to risk taking a shorter but potentially more dangerous route that day?
Or just maybe, since both carmen said they were behind time, Cross was running even later than Paul?
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Postagree-which is odd that lech approached him like that!
"I saw a man standing where the woman was. He came a little towards me, but as I knew the dangerous character of the locality I tried to give him a wide berth."
Clearly his concerns were due to the "dangerous character of the locality", not the "dangerous character" of Charles Cross.Last edited by Patrick S; 07-20-2017, 06:57 AM.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Postnot really, since he could have called him over.
and I find it odd he waited for paul to get close, and as paul tries to avoid him he goes to him and taps his shoulder before he says anything. you don't find either strange?
And I would only find the fact that he touched Paul odd if he had actually killed Nichols. Paul tried to avoid him but Cross wouldn't allow him to. He was "raising the alarm", was he not? Wouldn't his allowing Paul to continue on his way constitute NOT "raising the alarm"? Further, if he'd killed Nichols, WHY would he NOT allow Paul to go on his way? Why FORCE the man to see his victim and then accompany him on his errand to find a POLICEMAN to tell all about it? You don't find THAT odd?Last edited by Patrick S; 07-20-2017, 07:00 AM.
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostGiven that Cross' walk to work extended over half a mile beyond Paul's own, they would normally be separated by a good 10 minutes, probably more, on their daily commute - assuming, that is, that they both had to start work at the same time, took the same route and walked at the same speed.
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Originally posted by John G View PostYes, Caz. It's obvious from Paul's evidence that when Cross walked towards him he wasn't thinking that the stranger's intent was innocent, i.e. to introduce himself to a fellow commuter or to ask directions. More likely, he was in fear of his life!
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Originally posted by Patrick S View PostAbby - So you now agree a "raising of the alarm" would have been premature in that the figure - after Cross had discerned it was a woman and not a tarpaulin, etc. - could very well have been "sleeping, drunk, maybe injured"? Thus, you now agree that his approaching the first person to happen along was appropriate (as opposed to yelling, "Murder!", hammering on doors, all that)?
and I find it odd he waited for paul to get close, and as paul tries to avoid him he goes to him and taps his shoulder before he says anything. you don't find either strange?
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostGiven that Cross' walk to work extended over half a mile beyond Paul's own, they would normally be separated by a good 10 minutes, probably more, on their daily commute - assuming, that is, that they both had to start work at the same time, took the same route and walked at the same speed.
Steve
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Posthi el
well they came upon each other within seconds of lech hesitating so....
Hi Abby
Yes but both said they were behind time, in the case of lech up to 10 minutes so. We know he started at 4. That gives a very leisurely walk. We have no idea about Paul with which to work. However his journey to work was just under 15 minutes at an average pace.
A few seconds apart, at least 20 I would say. Certainly far enough in the light to make recognition extremely difficult I would suggest.
For them to meet it would require Paul to leave home 5 - 6 mins after Lech and even then the likelihood of them seeing each other is small.
Has Caz commented much more likely if they were going in opposite directions and so passed each other face to face.
I go for a walk most mornings and expect to see the same people every day walking towards me. However I have no idea about those walking in front of me in the same direction, unless they are someone I can visually from behind, either a friend or someone I actually know.
Steve
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostTo me it is.
And you bring up another point that's odd to me. If it's a common going to work thing with these two, and any minor delay by lech, or conversely any early departure from Paul, and these two should have been accustomed to seeing each other.
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