Originally posted by rjpalmer
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If you have been reading these boards for the last ten or so years, it is strange that you have managed to miss the explanation given for the conundrum you think you see.
Yes, Lechmere gave his real address and working place to the police. It seems he only gave his working place to the inquest, however.
Now, put your thinking cap on and ask yourself what would happen if the carman had said that his name was Charles Allen Cross, that he lived in 5 Rotten Row and that he worked in the bath house in Castle Alley - and if the police checked him out thoroughly.
Answer: They would find that he had a former stepfather by the name of Thomas Cross who had signed him as Charles Cross in 1861, and so they would probably ask him why he used that name 19 years after his stepfathers death. If he said: "To honour him", he would be in the clear. But that would only last until the address and working place were checked. When that happened, he would become a suspect and raked over the coals.
I trust you see how that works? If there is any risk of being checked out, you do not serve the police obvious lies. Its called self preservation.
However, you can take the chance not to mention your address before the inquest, and it seems he did just that. The mentioning of the address in The Star seems to be the result of an enterprising reporter asking a clerk about it. None of the other papers had a go at the address and so they arguably never heard it mentioned.
Now, the name: If he wasn´t going to try and con the police by swopping names, who WAS he going to con? The question answers itself: anybody who read the press reports and were served a story where a carman Cross, working for Pickfors, figured. No mentioning of Lechmere, no mentioning of the address he lived at.
They were the ones who would not be able to identify him: the public. Those who were not at the inquest. His family, his friends, associates, aquaintancies and so on.
And the overall question remains: Since he otherwise always said as it was when speaking to any kinds of authorities, that he was named Lechmere - why did he not do so when he was involved in a case of violent death? it can NEVER be a point in favour of innocence to do so. It is another matter entirely that we can always conjure up innocent alternative explanations to any such point, regardless of how many they are. And boy, is that what you guys do!!
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