Caz:
"I’m sorry"
Really?
"but I’ve never read such desperate straw-clutching to make Cross’s (unconfirmed) behaviour at the inquest look fishy."
I have no need for desperation, Caz - none at all. The case against Lechmere is as sound as any case that can (or can´t) be compiled.
"There are only two alternatives here"
And they are...?
"1) He stated his home address at the inquest, whether asked for it or not.
Not remotely fishy."
Think we can come very close to ruling this alternative out, to be honest. With only one paper having the address of the man that found Nichols, it´s a fairly reasonable bet that he never uttered one word about it. Others will say "Oh no, he MUST have mentioned it, but I think that both you and I realize that he "must" have done no such thing.
"2) He wasn’t asked to state his home address, so he didn’t state it (supplying his work details instead, as we have seen other, entirely innocent witnesses do, apparently without a problem).
Not remotely fishy. Apparently quite normal."
But, Caz, you can´t tell me that I am desperate, only to then speak of how entirely innocent people will give their working addresses. There is no connection between these two phenomena. You can give your work address and be a killer (like Ridgway did - he did not feel that since he was a killer, he´d better lie about where he worked).
An argument like this becomes slightly ludicrous, thus. But I think you can see that yourself? Stating where he worked does not make him "normal", as you seem to think. I have repeatedly said that he was not trying to avoid police interest - he had already awoken that interest and responded to it. But if he was trying to minimize the information he gave about himself, and STILL give the kind of information he could defend if the cops checked him out, then he was doing a first class job. Name: Cross - probably not something that would allow his wife to make the connection. Address: None - same result. Occupation: Carman - they came in tens of thousands. Workplace: Pickford´s (unspecified which depot) - a place where many, many men worked.
Much as there is information to go by, that information is scarce, unexisting or distorted. And that would have been the best he could do, if he wanted to meet the criteria mentioned above.
"If I, or anyone posting here, had just found someone horribly murdered within a short walking distance of our home, our spouse and our kids, and were attending the inquest to make a statement about it, would we gaily give out our full home address if we hadn’t actually been asked for it, or were not formally obliged to state it? I sure as hell wouldn’t!"
Aha? But Tomkins did. Holland did. Paul did. Davies did. Eagle did. Diemschitz did. Marshall did. And a whole heap of other witnesses too, some of them who could have seen the Ripper. It was clear from Lechmere´s testimony that he would run no risk because of such a thing. So your argument falls flat on it´s nose, I´m afraid. There seemed to be no scare about giving any address on behalf of any of the witnesses, on the contrary.
Desperation, Caz?
The best,
Fisherman
"I’m sorry"
Really?
"but I’ve never read such desperate straw-clutching to make Cross’s (unconfirmed) behaviour at the inquest look fishy."
I have no need for desperation, Caz - none at all. The case against Lechmere is as sound as any case that can (or can´t) be compiled.
"There are only two alternatives here"
And they are...?
"1) He stated his home address at the inquest, whether asked for it or not.
Not remotely fishy."
Think we can come very close to ruling this alternative out, to be honest. With only one paper having the address of the man that found Nichols, it´s a fairly reasonable bet that he never uttered one word about it. Others will say "Oh no, he MUST have mentioned it, but I think that both you and I realize that he "must" have done no such thing.
"2) He wasn’t asked to state his home address, so he didn’t state it (supplying his work details instead, as we have seen other, entirely innocent witnesses do, apparently without a problem).
Not remotely fishy. Apparently quite normal."
But, Caz, you can´t tell me that I am desperate, only to then speak of how entirely innocent people will give their working addresses. There is no connection between these two phenomena. You can give your work address and be a killer (like Ridgway did - he did not feel that since he was a killer, he´d better lie about where he worked).
An argument like this becomes slightly ludicrous, thus. But I think you can see that yourself? Stating where he worked does not make him "normal", as you seem to think. I have repeatedly said that he was not trying to avoid police interest - he had already awoken that interest and responded to it. But if he was trying to minimize the information he gave about himself, and STILL give the kind of information he could defend if the cops checked him out, then he was doing a first class job. Name: Cross - probably not something that would allow his wife to make the connection. Address: None - same result. Occupation: Carman - they came in tens of thousands. Workplace: Pickford´s (unspecified which depot) - a place where many, many men worked.
Much as there is information to go by, that information is scarce, unexisting or distorted. And that would have been the best he could do, if he wanted to meet the criteria mentioned above.
"If I, or anyone posting here, had just found someone horribly murdered within a short walking distance of our home, our spouse and our kids, and were attending the inquest to make a statement about it, would we gaily give out our full home address if we hadn’t actually been asked for it, or were not formally obliged to state it? I sure as hell wouldn’t!"
Aha? But Tomkins did. Holland did. Paul did. Davies did. Eagle did. Diemschitz did. Marshall did. And a whole heap of other witnesses too, some of them who could have seen the Ripper. It was clear from Lechmere´s testimony that he would run no risk because of such a thing. So your argument falls flat on it´s nose, I´m afraid. There seemed to be no scare about giving any address on behalf of any of the witnesses, on the contrary.
Desperation, Caz?
The best,
Fisherman
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