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  • Obviously what Christer meant by a ‘lame stone’s throw away’ was a short distance. Berner Street was a short distance from Ma Lechmere’s house at the time and could easily have been on the route Lechmere used to get there.



    If you tell your wife and kids, ‘I’m off to see my mum for the evening’ and return several hours later, how on earth would they know what time you arrived/left your mother’s house?

    Comment


    • I had my doubts before, but now I’m inclined to believe that Sunday was indeed Lechmere’s day off work. So the earlier time and location of Stride’s murder fits very nicely.

      Comment


      • >> ... how on earth would they know what time you arrived/left your mother’s house?<<

        Scene #1: Couple of days after the murder Mrs L takes some food over for daughter, chats with Ma C,

        Mrs L: " Charlie was really late Saturday what were you two doing?"

        Ma C: " Whatcha mean late? He left here well before the rain started!"
        dustymiller
        aka drstrange

        Comment


        • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
          >> ... how on earth would they know what time you arrived/left your mother’s house?<<

          Scene #1: Couple of days after the murder Mrs L takes some food over for daughter, chats with Ma C,

          Mrs L: " Charlie was really late Saturday what were you two doing?"

          Ma C: " Whatcha mean late? He left here well before the rain started!"
          Who’s Ma C? Is this a new addition to the ‘cast of thousands?’ ;-)

          Ma L: “Yes, he left about the usual time but came back later, soaking wet.”


          Or,

          Ma L: “Did Charlie get wet on his way home on Saturday?”

          Mrs L: “I’ve no idea, I was fast asleep when he got in.

          Or,

          Mrs L: “I think I’ll pop some of this left over stew over to your mum later.”

          JTR: “No, it was delicious, I’ll finish off myself.”


          Comment


          • Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
            I had my doubts before, but now I’m inclined to believe that Sunday was indeed Lechmere’s day off work. So the earlier time and location of Stride’s murder fits very nicely.
            hi gary
            also that since he wasnt onhis way to work, he had time for eddowes and the whole apron/gsg events
            "Is all that we see or seem
            but a dream within a dream?"

            -Edgar Allan Poe


            "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
            quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

            -Frederick G. Abberline

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

              hi gary
              also that since he wasnt onhis way to work, he had time for eddowes and the whole apron/gsg events
              That’s right, Abby.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
                So the earlier time and location of Stride’s murder fits very nicely.
                Well, the idea that Lechmere couldn't have been there on a Saturday Night is, of course, nonsense; on the other hand, I don't see how a 1 a.m. murder preceding his day off 'fits nicely.'

                If he's slogging to work at 3.30 a.m. for years on end, then he's most likely in a routine of hitting the hay by 8 or 9 in the evening. (I speak from some experience on this score). And he's made a rather long day of it if he's worked the Saturday shift and is still roaming the streets at 1 a.m. later that night. Working men (and women) are famous for letting their hair down on Saturday night, but if he's a 3.30 a.m. riser with a large family, I'm thinking 11 p.m. would hit him like a brick wall. Nor is the idea of Lechmere getting up 2 1/2 hours early on his day off, in order to trawl the streets, after a six day work week, all that convincing. Even a murderer gets knackered.

                The American murderer David Berkowitz shot one of his victims at 3 a.m. on his day off (Sunday), but he worked the late-shift at the post office and was thus a 'night owl,' so the late/early hour of the crimes fit Berkowitz's normal work hours. Lechmere's schedule appears to have been the exact opposite of Berkowitz's.

                Lechmere doesn't have an alibi. I'll give him that, but I fail to see how the timings of the murders strengthens the case against him.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

                  Well, the idea that Lechmere couldn't have been there on a Saturday Night is, of course, nonsense; on the other hand, I don't see how a 1 a.m. murder preceding his day off 'fits nicely.'

                  If he's slogging to work at 3.30 a.m. for years on end, then he's most likely in a routine of hitting the hay by 8 or 9 in the evening. (I speak from some experience on this score). And he's made a rather long day of it if he's worked the Saturday shift and is still roaming the streets at 1 a.m. later that night. Working men (and women) are famous for letting their hair down on Saturday night, but if he's a 3.30 a.m. riser with a large family, I'm thinking 11 p.m. would hit him like a brick wall. Nor is the idea of Lechmere getting up 2 1/2 hours early on his day off, in order to trawl the streets, after a six day work week, all that convincing. Even a murderer gets knackered.

                  The American murderer David Berkowitz shot one of his victims at 3 a.m. on his day off (Sunday), but he worked the late-shift at the post office and was thus a 'night owl,' so the late/early hour of the crimes fit Berkowitz's normal work hours. Lechmere's schedule appears to have been the exact opposite of Berkowitz's.

                  Lechmere doesn't have an alibi. I'll give him that, but I fail to see how the timings of the murders strengthens the case against him.
                  hi rj
                  all that makes sense too. my take on it- he heads to mums after work for a visit then heads out after that. maybe he hits the pubs and or starts the hunt. he dosnt havent to worry about getting to work so theres no rush. he can take his time-which he does with stride but that dosnt work out so its then eddowes and the GSG/apron events. and im sure the thrill of the hunt and all the craziness that night would keep the adrenaline going. to me it strengthens the case case against him insomuch as its a logical series of events and timings with his known factual locations of visit. IMHO it fits nicely. very. better than most suspects anyway.
                  "Is all that we see or seem
                  but a dream within a dream?"

                  -Edgar Allan Poe


                  "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                  quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                  -Frederick G. Abberline

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
                    Obviously what Christer meant by a ‘lame stone’s throw away’ was a short distance. Berner Street was a short distance from Ma Lechmere’s house at the time and could easily have been on the route Lechmere used to get there.
                    To get from Stride's murder site to 23 Pinchin Street, you have to walk south on Berner Street past Fairclough, Boyd, and Everard Streets until you reach Ellen Street. Then you walk west to Philip Street, then south past Maryann and Severne Streets to Pinchin Street and then west to 23 Pinchin Street.

                    That is not a short distance on foot. That is quite a bit more than the "a lame stone´s throw away" that Fisherman claimed.

                    While it is true that Charles Lechemere could have taken Berner Street to get to his mother's it is not a likely choice as it angles against him. Christian Street south to Pinchin and then west to Pinchin Street would be shorter. So would Christian south to Ellen Street, Ellen west to Stutfield Street, Stutfield south to Pinchin, and then west to 23 Pinchin. Or several other routes.

                    So far no evidence had been provided that Lechmere visited his mother at 2am on that day, let alone that he went there by way of Berner Street.

                    Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
                    If you tell your wife and kids, ‘I’m off to see my mum for the evening’ and return several hours later, how on earth would they know what time you arrived/left your mother’s house?
                    This did not happen in the evening. Charles Lechmere normally left for work around 3:20 to 3:30am. To reach Berner Street in time to murder Elizabeth Stride, Charles Lechmere would have had to have left home at about 12:20 am, maybe earlier. Getting up three hours early on your day off is extremely odd behavior. If Lechmere had left home at 12:20am and walked directly to his mother's, he would have reached there at 12:45 to 12:50am. Nobody goes to visit their mother at that time of night unless it's an emergency and every minute late would be noted by his mother.

                    But if Lechmere was the Ripper, he would be a lot more than a couple minutes late. Catherine Eddowes was murdered around 1:40 am in Mitre Square. Getting from Mitre Square to Goulston Street to drop the apron and then from Goulston Street to 23 Pinchin Street would take 20 to 25 minutes, getting Lechmere to his mother's at 2am at the very earliest, roughly an hour-and-a-half late. Any mother who actually wanted to see her son at that ungodly hour of the morning would have been worried frantic. Lechmere would have to come up with a very good explanation for the massive delay, especially since during his delay two more women were butchered by the Ripper.

                    And we're supposed to believe that Charles Lechmere was a iceblooded, calculating psychopath that, when interrupted after killing Polly Nichols, he bluffed his way past Robert Paul and Constable Mizen, and go directly to work to avoid suspicion. Yet we're also expected to believe that when interrupted killing Elizabeth Stride, Lechmere was so compelled to kill again that he would spend an hour or more killing another person, dropping an apron in Goulston Street, and arrive at his destination an hour-and-a-half late with no reasonable excuse for the delay.
                    "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                    "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                      In short, somebody who makes for a red hot suspect. But why care about that when we can dream up people rounding the schoolhouse, blood-dripping knife in hand? Surely, a man who has a legit reason to be in place cannot possibly be a killer? That would be soooo unfair!!
                      Charles Lechmere goes from a red hot suspect to an icy cold one when Annie Chapman is killed while Lechmere was at work and had an alibi. Ditto for the Pinchin Street Torso, he was at work and would have had an alibi.

                      "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                      "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Fiver View Post

                        To get from Stride's murder site to 23 Pinchin Street, you have to walk south on Berner Street past Fairclough, Boyd, and Everard Streets until you reach Ellen Street. Then you walk west to Philip Street, then south past Maryann and Severne Streets to Pinchin Street and then west to 23 Pinchin Street.

                        That is not a short distance on foot. That is quite a bit more than the "a lame stone´s throw away" that Fisherman claimed.

                        While it is true that Charles Lechemere could have taken Berner Street to get to his mother's it is not a likely choice as it angles against him. Christian Street south to Pinchin and then west to Pinchin Street would be shorter. So would Christian south to Ellen Street, Ellen west to Stutfield Street, Stutfield south to Pinchin, and then west to 23 Pinchin. Or several other routes.

                        So far no evidence had been provided that Lechmere visited his mother at 2am on that day, let alone that he went there by way of Berner Street.



                        This did not happen in the evening. Charles Lechmere normally left for work around 3:20 to 3:30am. To reach Berner Street in time to murder Elizabeth Stride, Charles Lechmere would have had to have left home at about 12:20 am, maybe earlier. Getting up three hours early on your day off is extremely odd behavior. If Lechmere had left home at 12:20am and walked directly to his mother's, he would have reached there at 12:45 to 12:50am. Nobody goes to visit their mother at that time of night unless it's an emergency and every minute late would be noted by his mother.

                        But if Lechmere was the Ripper, he would be a lot more than a couple minutes late. Catherine Eddowes was murdered around 1:40 am in Mitre Square. Getting from Mitre Square to Goulston Street to drop the apron and then from Goulston Street to 23 Pinchin Street would take 20 to 25 minutes, getting Lechmere to his mother's at 2am at the very earliest, roughly an hour-and-a-half late. Any mother who actually wanted to see her son at that ungodly hour of the morning would have been worried frantic. Lechmere would have to come up with a very good explanation for the massive delay, especially since during his delay two more women were butchered by the Ripper.

                        And we're supposed to believe that Charles Lechmere was a iceblooded, calculating psychopath that, when interrupted after killing Polly Nichols, he bluffed his way past Robert Paul and Constable Mizen, and go directly to work to avoid suspicion. Yet we're also expected to believe that when interrupted killing Elizabeth Stride, Lechmere was so compelled to kill again that he would spend an hour or more killing another person, dropping an apron in Goulston Street, and arrive at his destination an hour-and-a-half late with no reasonable excuse for the delay.
                        Can we first establish the significance of 23, Pinchin Street in 1888?

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Fiver View Post

                          Charles Lechmere goes from a red hot suspect to an icy cold one when Annie Chapman is killed while Lechmere was at work and had an alibi. Ditto for the Pinchin Street Torso, he was at work and would have had an alibi.
                          You have no idea what Lechmere’s shift patterns were.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                            Correction: I am the one claiming that a bloodied apron was found at St Phillips church the day after the body was found in Pinchin Street, and I am also the one claiming that if we draw a line from the dumping site through St Phillips church, we end up at the doorstep of Charles Lechmere.

                            That is what I claim.
                            So you start your line with the Pinchin Street Torso, who was not a Ripper victim and who was deposited at a time Charles Lechmere could not have done it since he was at work. You then try to play connect-the-dots with the apron left at the construction site of St Phillips church, even though there is no evidence that apron had anything to do with the Pinchin Street Torso. You then ignore that St Phillips church is not a point on the map, it covers an entire block.

                            You would not have a line, you would have a cone. A line drawn through northwest corner of that block does pass near Lechmere's home. A line drawn through northwest corner of that block misses Lechmere's home by several blocks. And St Phillips church was well less than halfway to Lechmere's home.

                            Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                            I also claim that it would be a (further) monumental coincidence if this was all a total coincidence; if the apron was unconnected to the dumping and if the line cut through the arch/St Phillips/Lechmeres home with no connection to the cases whatsoever.

                            You are the one accepting that this was all a fluke. As was the placing of the other apron in Goulston Street, also corresponding with where Lechmere lived.
                            It is not a fluke or a coincidence., it is you deliberately targeting Charles Lechmere.

                            All you have proved is that you will pick points on the map that you can point towards Charles Lechmere, even though that requires using points that have nothing to do with each other and nothing to do with the Ripper killings, while ignoring all the other lines that can be drawn from the Pinchin Street Torso to St Phillips church.

                            If Charles Lechmere had a compulsion worse than any Batman villain to drop bloody aprons between his killing site and his home, where are are the aprons for Tabram, Nichols, Chapman, Stride, and Kelly?

                            Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                            As was how Lechmere happened to stumble on Nichols when she was still bleeding. As was how he declined to help prop her up. As was how her wounds were covered. As was how Lechmere disagreed with the police. As was how a Torso body was dumped in Lechmere´s old home street. As was how Paul never saw Lechmere in front of himself. As was how victims in both series had their abdominal walls removed. And so on and so on and so on.

                            Coincidences. All of them. Each and every one.
                            “You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.” -Inigo Montoya,

                            None of those are coincidences.

                            Neither Lechmere nor Paul noticed that Nicols was bleeding. PC Neil stumbled on Nichols while she was still bleeding and if blood stops flowing as fast as you claim that makes Neil a better suspect than Lechmere. Diemschutz stumbled on Stride while she was still bleeding. PC Watkin stumbled on Eddowes while she was still bleeding.

                            Lechmere did decline to prop up Nichols, but not wanting to touch a dead body is hardly suspicious. John Reeves did not touch Tabram's body. John Davis did not Chapman's body. The police questioned 28 people who had gone into Dutfield's yard. Edward Spooner appears to have been the only one that touched Stride's body. Thomas Bowyer did not touch Kelly's body.

                            Robert Paul testified that he pulled Nichols clothes down to try to cover her. I pointed this out at least once before. It was not a coincidence - Robert Paul said he did it.

                            Lechemre did disagree with PC Mizen. That's not a coincidence, let alone proof of guilt.

                            Why do you keep claiming Paul did not see Lechmere? Paul testified that he saw Lechmere in front of himself. This has been pointed out to you before.

                            Part of one of the Torso victims was left on a street where Lechmare and many other people had lived. The Torso Killer dropped bodies along a twenty mile stretch of the Thames, the idea that he'd drop one a block from a place he used to live makes no sense at all. Most importantly, Lechmere was at work when the Pinchin Street Torso was deposited, so he could not have done it.



                            "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                            "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Fiver View Post

                              To get from Stride's murder site to 23 Pinchin Street, you have to walk south on Berner Street past Fairclough, Boyd, and Everard Streets until you reach Ellen Street. Then you walk west to Philip Street, then south past Maryann and Severne Streets to Pinchin Street and then west to 23 Pinchin Street.

                              That is not a short distance on foot. That is quite a bit more than the "a lame stone´s throw away" that Fisherman claimed.

                              While it is true that Charles Lechemere could have taken Berner Street to get to his mother's it is not a likely choice as it angles against him. Christian Street south to Pinchin and then west to Pinchin Street would be shorter. So would Christian south to Ellen Street, Ellen west to Stutfield Street, Stutfield south to Pinchin, and then west to 23 Pinchin. Or several other routes.

                              So far no evidence had been provided that Lechmere visited his mother at 2am on that day, let alone that he went there by way of Berner Street.



                              This did not happen in the evening. Charles Lechmere normally left for work around 3:20 to 3:30am. To reach Berner Street in time to murder Elizabeth Stride, Charles Lechmere would have had to have left home at about 12:20 am, maybe earlier. Getting up three hours early on your day off is extremely odd behavior. If Lechmere had left home at 12:20am and walked directly to his mother's, he would have reached there at 12:45 to 12:50am. Nobody goes to visit their mother at that time of night unless it's an emergency and every minute late would be noted by his mother.

                              But if Lechmere was the Ripper, he would be a lot more than a couple minutes late. Catherine Eddowes was murdered around 1:40 am in Mitre Square. Getting from Mitre Square to Goulston Street to drop the apron and then from Goulston Street to 23 Pinchin Street would take 20 to 25 minutes, getting Lechmere to his mother's at 2am at the very earliest, roughly an hour-and-a-half late. Any mother who actually wanted to see her son at that ungodly hour of the morning would have been worried frantic. Lechmere would have to come up with a very good explanation for the massive delay, especially since during his delay two more women were butchered by the Ripper.

                              And we're supposed to believe that Charles Lechmere was a iceblooded, calculating psychopath that, when interrupted after killing Polly Nichols, he bluffed his way past Robert Paul and Constable Mizen, and go directly to work to avoid suspicion. Yet we're also expected to believe that when interrupted killing Elizabeth Stride, Lechmere was so compelled to kill again that he would spend an hour or more killing another person, dropping an apron in Goulston Street, and arrive at his destination an hour-and-a-half late with no reasonable excuse for the delay.
                              hi fiver to my way of thinking, lech goes to his mums after work on saturday then heads out hunting after that.
                              dosnt that make more sense?
                              "Is all that we see or seem
                              but a dream within a dream?"

                              -Edgar Allan Poe


                              "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                              quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                              -Frederick G. Abberline

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

                                hi fiver to my way of thinking, lech goes to his mums after work on saturday then heads out hunting after that.
                                dosnt that make more sense?
                                Of course it does, Abbey. Or maybe he goes home first to freshen up and then goes to see his mum, daughter, step-father in the early evening.

                                And let’s not forget that area of St George’s is where he had spent most of his life - 30 years or so. His friends and old neighbours were there, the pubs, shops etc he was familiar with. According to the electoral register, his mother etc were living 1, Mary Ann Street in 1888. Ellen Street ran across the bottom of Berners Street and Mary Ann Street was immediately behind that. ‘A stone’s throw’ is not meant to be taken literally, it means a short distance away. Mary Ann Street was a short distance from Berners Street - a few minutes walk away.

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