Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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So if you live in Bethnal Green, you wonīt kill in Whitechapel?
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Jon Guy: I`m sorry, it`s only speculation tying CL to the other murder sites.
Me, I am happy that speculation is viable and logic and couples with a certainty that he WAS present at one of the sites. Alone with the victim. Thatīs weighty evidence, more so practically speaking than we have for any other man.
Completely alone ?
No, Robert Paul was watching him.
Diemschutz, Davis, and Watkins were all completely alone with the victim who is freshly killed and still bleeding.
He was completely alone with the victim outside Brownīs for an undefined amount of time. The only estimate we have comes from a murder suspect. That he was not alone in London or the East End is another matter.
Well, if we knew CL`s route to work, and IF the murders occurred along this route, as opposed to the scattering of crime scenes that we have. Spitalfields, St George in The East, Tower Hamlets and the City
We do know his route to work, roughly. Through Spitalfields, never far from the sites. And quite possibly at the relevant hours. Again, that is evidence that is unrivaled and very weighty.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThen you cannot count.All six strikes have ties to his logical routes.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostDidn't Robert Paul's work route also take him past two of the murder sites (Buck's Row & Hanbury Street)?Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Paddy Goose View PostCharles Cross found the body of Polly Nichols. He couldn't be "found with the body" because he found the body.
If he didn't find the body, who did? The answer is nobody besides Charles Cross. Nada, Zilch, Nyet, Nej
Paddy
I actually did not know that this was how it worked, so thanks for revealing it.
Letīs see here, a person goes into a forest, and in there he finds a dea body of a child that he picks up and carries. He then looses his way, and starts wandering around in circles, carrying the body in his arms. A large search party heads into the woods to try and find him - but they canīt.
Why? Because he has found a body, and once you have found a body, you cannot be found yourself.
Genius. Absolutely genius.
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostA person is not a "Suspect" if simply found with the body, he is a Person of Interest by virtue of the timing of his being at that location and his proximity to a recently murdered person, and surely someone whose statement needs to be taken.
Like Cross's was, the surname Lechmere adopted.
You seem to believe that access is the be all and end all in terms of naming someone as a Suspect, using those parameters anyone within walking distance of the site is a "Suspect".
Forget about motives. Forget about evidence.
Fisherman, your pursuit of having this persona named a genuine Suspect in all the Ripper assumed murders, as well as the Torsos murders is solely dependent on a premise that is false. And doomed to fail due to the wide variety of murder styles, weapons and techniques used in all these individual murders.
Him "finding" Nichols is not something that a priori makes him a suspect. It is only when you look at the other parameters, like disagreeing with the police about what was said, for example, the matter of him having been found by the body becomes of increased interest.
Once such "merits" are on your list, it does not help that you have been seen alone by a victims side at the remove in time she was killed.
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Originally posted by etenguy View PostYou have constructed a scenario in which you invite us to confirm that Lechmere must be the better suspect since he found the murdered body soon after the murder.
Please stick with what I am actually saying instead of inventing alternative truths!
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostI don't know where the "six strikes" come from, for a start. Or are you speculatively adding other victims with tenuous links to bolster your already-weak case?The "ties" you refer to are ENTIRELY SPECULATIVE. We can place Cross nowhere else, factually or logically, apart from Bucks Row and possibly - possibly - Hanbury Street... but only if we accept the earlier TOD and we know that Cross worked that day (and what his hours were, come to that).
Donīt try and get smart if you do not have the disposition to pull it off.
And donīt keep repeating that we canīt place Lechmere on more than one site, nobody is saying anything else! What is said is that a logical and viable case can be made for how he will have passed through Spitalfields en route to work on the murder mornings.
Please let that sink in, so that you donīt have to wast more space out here telling us what we already know.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostLechmere is found on these boards in the suspect department. Guess why? Because he was found by the body of Nichols? No, becasue there are a number of matters that are in phase with him being the killer.
Him "finding" Nichols is not something that a priori makes him a suspect. It is only when you look at the other parameters, like disagreeing with the police about what was said, for example, the matter of him having been found by the body becomes of increased interest.
Once such "merits" are on your list, it does not help that you have been seen alone by a victims side at the remove in time she was killed.
Notice the frequently re-appearing "one"...
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostDidn't Robert Paul's work route also take him past two of the murder sites (Buck's Row & Hanbury Street)?
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostI don't object to your pursuit of Cross as Suspect in the Nichol's case at all Fish, its the only one where one has something one might speculate about.
Notice the frequently re-appearing "one"...
If you are at liberty to do that, when we all can see the similarities inbetween the Ripper deeds, then how am I not at liberty to speculate about how a man whose work trek traversed Spitalfields may have killed there?
There is speculation and then there is speculation.
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Since an effort seems to be made to throw the thread into the ordinary nonsense bog, head first, I will return to the true aim of it and provide an example:
Having been found alone close by one of the victims in Sptialfields, at a remove in time that is consistent with being the killer, plus having a working trek that will take you no longer away from the other three Spitalfields murder sites than a three minute walk is - or so says Gareth - not as good a geographical indication of possible guilt as it is to have an address in Spitalfields, all other parameters left to the side.
It is enough that you have a residence in Whitechapel to make you a better suspect than Lechmere. On account of him having his residence in adjoining Bethnal Green, he must be a less viable suspect, geographically speaking. Or so I am told.
Letīs assume that tomorrow brings sensational news. Letīs assume that a record surfaces that shows us that PC Watkins was NOT the finder of Kate Eddowes. Instead, a long forgotten record shows us that a man by the name of William Henry Bury had passed through the square inbetween Watkinsī visits there, and he had found the body of Eddowes. He was all alone when doing so, but a few seconds after, a flower seller came into the square and found Bury there. Or so Bury says, at least; the flower seller only knows that she found him there, not how long he had been in place.
Does anybody seriously entertain the idea that such a thing would NOT catapult Bury sky high up the suspect rankings?
Yes, there is actually such a poster out there, who would say that it is of no consequence at all, since that would only connect Bury to ONE of the sites and prove that he was in place there, and such a thing counts for nothing. And Bury would not be a better suspect geographically than any man who had a home address in Whitechapel. In fact he would be a worse one, depending on how he had his lodgings some distance to the East.
And we would all listen to him and say "Yes, you are correct, we should not hold any grudge against Bury on account of this - it is only if he had lived in Whitechapel that he would become a truly worthy suspect."
That, ladies and gentlemen, is the standards on offer out here.
While I do something useful, you can spend some time chewing on that. Not Gareth, though, because he will at long last be preparing an answer to post 4 on this thread.Last edited by Fisherman; 11-10-2018, 04:02 AM.
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