Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cross The Ripper?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #46
    Vote

    When I voted in this poll, I didn't vote for 'Highly Improbable'.

    How improbable is that???

    If I could vote again, I might change my mind.

    I'm surprised that the vote for Cross hasn't gone through the roof, frankly, considering how its endorsed by not one, but TWO authors and experts

    Comment


    • #47
      It's interesting how SUBJECTIVE comments become FACTS for some of our posters.

      Precisely WHERE L/C was in relation to Polly's body is entirely a matter of what people said. What is clear is that he was as close to the body of a murdered woman as any named individual we know of bar Diemschutz. Add to that, no other person was seen leaving the murder scene even though Nichols' body was allegedly still warm, maybe even still alive.

      We are happy to contemplate a murderer hiding in the shadows watching Cross and paul, but not to consider the one man discovered very close to a body.

      Moreover a man who's route to work would have made him familiar and put him in close proximity (and possibly at the right time) to the murder scenes of two other victims. A man, who - though supposedly wholly innocent - for the one and only time in his life gives something other than his usual name to the police.

      The hysterical attempts to "quibble" over WHERE L/C was standing strike me as an attempt to rule out rigorous scrutiny of the man - usually because he doesn't fit some preconceived theory - because his candidacy is inconvenient to the quibblers.

      I have NO preconceived view of the case - discussions on this board has opened my mind to many possibilities. But I know this - if I was a policeman in 1888 and I knew what we now know about L/C's subterfuge in regard to his name, then I would want to look at him very closely.

      We are now analysing in close detail the words and context of what was written by senior policemen and officials (with some claim to integrity). We are open to consideration of previously closed areas such as a Fenian angle. A hitherto unknown contemporary suspect such as Tumblety goes straight to the top of the heap because he is mentioned by an officer only tangentially connected to the case.

      And yet some of us remain lukewarm or even cole about a liar found standing over the still warm body of a Ripper victim when there is no clear evidence that he was either investigated or exhonerated at the time. I find that attitude amazing.

      Phil H

      Comment


      • #48
        "And yet some of us remain lukewarm or even cole (sic) about a liar found standing over the still warm body of a Ripper victim when there is no clear evidence that he was either investigated or exhonerated at the time. I find that attitude amazing."

        A liar?

        Can you cite the evidence he lied Phil? I'd like to see it.

        Monty
        Monty

        https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

        Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

        http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

        Comment


        • #49
          Isn't giving the police the name "Cross" - when it is clear that he was known as Lechmere in every other circumstance we know of - lying?

          My apologies for the spelling mistake.

          Phil H

          Comment


          • #50
            And so the misleading continues.

            Originally posted by Phil H View Post
            Isn't giving the police the name "Cross" - when it is clear that he was known as Lechmere in every other circumstance we know of - lying?

            My apologies for the spelling mistake.

            Phil H
            Not at all.

            It was a name used in connection with him perviously. Now if he used Smith, Jones, Mandela you'd have a point.

            The name is neither false or a sign of guilt. Its only those things to they who try to promote Cross as a suspect and is pure speculation.

            Monty
            Monty

            https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

            Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

            http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

            Comment


            • #51
              The name is neither false or a sign of guilt. Its only those things to they who try to promote Cross as a suspect and is pure speculation.

              Not the question asked - I was asked why I said he had lied and I cited my reason.

              Giving a false name to a policeman may nor may not be a sign of guilt.

              On the other hand, whether he had a claim to it or not, the name Cross does not appear to be the one under which he normally lived. Giving another name could obviously mislead and as the recipient of the "alias" was a policeman, i find that indicative of something.

              Using a screen name as an alternative to one's own, on Casebook, might be acceptable. Giving a misleading name to the authorities after finding a murder victim, I find to be lying.

              I am neither seeking to promote L/C as a suspect or not (though I think he is worthy of thorough investigation) but I could equally call your playing with words, "prevarication".

              Edited to add that what interpretation would you place on a major suspect in a murder investigation (say Sutcliffe, or Hanratty) who was shown to have given a false name when first questioned?

              Phil H
              Last edited by Phil H; 09-02-2012, 03:30 PM.

              Comment


              • #52
                Bridewell
                If you take a glance at newspaper reports of the inquests - as I know you do - you will notice all sorts of inconsistencies and inaccuracies as the reporter is rapidly writing in shorthand - which has to be deciphered afterwards. The reporter will be unfamiliar with personal names, street names and often the detail of the case - they have to join up the dots as best they can.
                Not that much has changed in the world of journalism. Many newspaper interviews as snatched over mobile phones that pass in and out of signal while the interviewee is perhaps driving (naughty) or walking about and wasnt 'prepared' for a formal interview.
                Bearing this in mind and given the lack of knowledge about the Ripper case that understandably nearly all reporters will have, the Telegraph report seems
                fairly accurate to me.

                There seems to be a lot of sour grapes around here at the moment.

                Comment


                • #53
                  Originally posted by Phil H View Post
                  The name is neither false or a sign of guilt. Its only those things to they who try to promote Cross as a suspect and is pure speculation.

                  Not the question asked - I was asked why I said he had lied and I cited my reason.

                  Giving a false name to a policeman may nor may not be a sign of guilt.

                  On the other hand, whether he had a claim to it or not, the name Cross does not appear to be the one under which he normally lived. Giving another name could obviously mislead and as the recipient of the "alias" was a policeman, i find that indicative of something.

                  Using a screen name as an alternative to one's own, on Casebook, might be acceptable. Giving a misleading name to the authorities after finding a murder victim, I find to be lying.

                  I am neither seeking to promote L/C as a suspect or not (though I think he is worthy of thorough investigation) but I could equally call your playing with words, "prevarication".

                  Edited to add that what interpretation would you place on a major suspect in a murder investigation (say Sutcliffe, or Hanratty) who was shown to have given a false name when first questioned?

                  Phil H
                  Im fully aware of what question was asked, I asked it.

                  Im stating that the answer you gave is no indication that he lied. The name is not a false one.

                  Monty
                  Monty

                  https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                  Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                  http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    And I have explained why I think it was misleading - deliberately so.

                    We'll have to differ. You obviously entertain a different interpretation of "truth" to that which I hold.

                    Phil H

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Obviously,

                      I hold to the legal definition as opposed to the unsupported one used often on this site by those pushing a suspect.

                      Monty
                      Monty

                      https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                      Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                      http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                      Comment


                      • #56
                        And which suspect do you think i am pushing, Monty?

                        Comment


                        • #57
                          Originally posted by Phil H View Post
                          And I have explained why I think it was misleading - deliberately so.

                          We'll have to differ. You obviously entertain a different interpretation of "truth" to that which I hold.

                          Phil H
                          Ah, the name thing.

                          It has been established that C/L went to work for Pickford's while his stepfather was still alive. I personally know a number of people who are sometimes called by the household name -- even had someone give me her children's names as her maiden name (to which she had reverted during a divorce) during an interview and story although they went by their father's name at school.

                          Now, we do not know how C/L ended up at the inquest dressed in his work clothes.

                          To me, the simplest answer was that somehow on that Monday morning he was located and informed he should attend the inquest. We have no idea where he may have been found -- by a PC on his beat, even someone checking with companies like Pickford's to see if one of their employees had been the person who discovered the body.

                          We don't know, but this would explain the work clothes and I believe would also be a reasonable explanation for the name he gave. I would speculate that he thought far less about it than various people on these boards have.

                          Now, just to be plain: I find Cross/Lechmere very interesting and I am very glad he is being thoroughly explored.

                          However, to my way of thinking, there are some very big obstacles.

                          To me the biggest one is that his life was so incredibly stable -- at work and at home.

                          I have been looking at known serial killers and have not found any example of one even close to C/L for stability. If one has a stable marriage, then the employment history is unstable, and vice versa.

                          I haven't been shown any kind of believable stressor for the killings starting and stopping.

                          At this point, I simply do not believe C/L was a killer. I will of course welcome any new finds and could possibly be persuaded, but at the moment -- I don't think he killed anyone.

                          curious
                          Last edited by curious; 09-02-2012, 05:09 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #58
                            Originally posted by Phil H View Post
                            And which suspect do you think i am pushing, Monty?
                            No idea Phil, wasn't referring to you specifically.

                            Monty
                            Monty

                            https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                            Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                            http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                            Comment


                            • #59
                              I long ago gave up having specific suspects, Monty. I think the last I "championed" was Druitt back in the 70s.

                              There is insufficient "evidence" ( I think I prefer the word material on balance) to make a real case against anyone.

                              If I have a view, it is (I suppose) that the killer - and I have doubts about some of the canonicals being JtR's work) of Nichols, Chapman and Eddowes, plus possibly McKenzie, was someone of the ilk of "Kosminski" - a poor local man.

                              I have a sort of mental - actually in part physical - matrix of names and victims/factors against which I review new material as it emerges, or reassessments of old "facts". I'll simply say that with L/C I find he ticks quite a few boxes.

                              Back in about 1972, when I started to look into the case seriously, I looked for clues in each murder. I never then questioned the first people who's names I read, one of which was Cross (interesting that for so long there was confusion over his first name too) as being a possible suspect!! I just feel it would be strange if it turned out that there was more to L/C than meets the eye.

                              Curious's interesting post shows how much sopeculation id needed to justify his using a name which was not that by which he went day-to-day.

                              Phil H

                              Comment


                              • #60
                                Monty
                                And what is the ‘legal’ definition of the truth so far as Charles Lechmere’s name is concerned?
                                His ‘legal’ name was Charles Allen Lechmere.
                                Lechmere was the name he used for his family and everyone of his blood used for his family name in every single known record. There are about 90 such records as he was clearly a meticulous, one might say anal, kind of bloke.
                                The range of records that make up that 90 includes a wide range of authorities.
                                Birth records, Death records, Baptismal records, Marriage records, including being the witness, census records, electoral records, the post office directory, school rolls, his will, funeral records, cemetery records.
                                Everywhere Lechmere.
                                He is listed as Cross in a census entry which is in any case riddled with errors. A census entry that his step father will have compiled.
                                Then this meticulous bloke turns up at a police station after finding a murdered victim and calls himself Cross. And because the police don’t find out that his true name was Lechmere, or perhaps were unconcerned whether he gave his true name or not, then somehow Cross became his true legal name?
                                An interesting outlook.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X