Originally posted by Ben
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The overwhelmingly vast majority of commentators on this subject accept that Mizen was wrong, for the simple reason that we know there was no policeman already waiting for him in Buck's Row.
If what you are suggesting is that Lechmere cannot have told Mizen that there was a PC waiting for him since there was not, you are totally missing out on the fact that bad people sometimes lie.
It's pretty much just you and maybe a couple of other Cross-as-ripper fanciers who believe he really did tell Mizen that his presence was requested by a fellow policeman.
As Jon points out, the details of the Mizen-Cross encounter have been noted and discussed for decades, but apparently nobody, in all that time, inferred any "Mizen scam" until Cross became your favourite suspect a few months ago...apparently as a consequence of meeting up in London with another hobbyist who already subscribed to that theory.
I have absolutely no belittling motive in pointing out that the "Mizen scam" is a brand new, extreme minority-endorsed idea, and I only do so because you use "we" quite a lot when pressing your views.
You say, for instance:
Whereas, in reality, "we" didn't need to try very hard at all, because "we" found very useful grounds for inferring a mistake on Mizen's behalf.
Whereas, in reality, "we" didn't need to try very hard at all, because "we" found very useful grounds for inferring a mistake on Mizen's behalf.
Yes, most probably because Cross didn't recall his exact words. He might, for instance, have said to Mizen something like, "you are wanted in Buck's Row", and the latter might have interpreted this to mean that his presence was requested by another figure of authority already at the scene, when it fact all Cross meant was that he needed to be there, i.e. that's where you ought to be. Extremely plausible misunderstandings like this happen all the time.
No, all of these musings do not carry much weight. Itīs helium, more or less. And at the end of the day, whenever we read Mizenīs testimony, we will see that he DID claim to have been told that a PC was in place. This must take precedence over anything us hobbyists may come up with 125 years later. Evidence trumphs such things. Always.
That is not doing things "backwards".
That is doing things properly.
You work from a presumption of innocence.
That is doing things properly.
You work from a presumption of innocence.
It would be good if we could always rule this possibility out - but letīs be for real!
It's extremely clear that one very important person who thought Mizen was in error was Mizen himself. When corrected by Cross at the inquest, he raised no protest, and had there been the vaguest insinuation that Mizen persisted in his recollection of events, Cross would have found himself under the spotlight as a suspect - irrefutably so.
If an earlier policeman really had discovered the body before the Mizen-Cross encounter took place, he'd have blown his police whistle and Mizen would have heard it immediately. He would certainly not have required one or two carmen to tell him he was "wanted" by another policeman. No, he evidently came to his senses.
The only thing we can infer from the lack of a blown whistle is that Mizen, when told that a fellow PC awaited him, could be certain that the errand was not one that called for any whistle-blowing. And therefore, it could not be a very serious errand. However, a PC could still have needed assistance, even if the errand was of a less grave nature. Just like I suggested, Mizen could have formed the opinion that the PC in Buckīs Row could have been ordered to stay in place - a very usual detail in many a case - and that the policeman had requested his help to take the woman to the infirmary with a bad ancle or to place her in a cell on account of being drunk. The important issue here is to keep in mind that the fact that Mizen heard no whistle would probably kept him calm.
At any rate, we know that Neil avoided to whistle when finding Nichols - but that was on account on him seeing Thain in Brady Street, meaning he did not HAVE to whistle.
If anything required the attention of more than one policeman on beat, whistling was the means of attracting their attention, unless they were in visual range, in which case they could use their lamps. But sending carmen "messengers" is hardly the way they went about things, as Cross himself would surely have realised. Why instigate such a "scam" when Mizen could easily have responded with "Why didn't I hear a whistle then?".
Well, yeah, if we knew it was Gary Ridgway and knew he was a serial killer, of course we would. That's completely circular reasoning. This is Cross we're discussing, and nearly everyone accepts his role as an innocent first-on-the-scene witness. Somebody had to be.
See above, but also because if this was another attack or murder, and the possibility must have occurred to him (woman, on back, needs police attention)
the sight of someone hovering out of earshot and slinking off down a street would have appeared suspicious, and Paul - unless he was really really stupid - wouldn't have risked incriminating himself this way either.
Best then do ascertain just who was "in on it" if it did turn out to a prank, rather than allow Paul to resort to a "I didn't know he said that" defense if later identified.
If ANYTHING had occurred that required the immediate assistance of another PC, all he had to do was whistle. Sending on-foot members of the public as messengers would have been a comically pointless thing to do regardless of the gravity of the situation.
And in the end, why would Mizen question it?
It must have been something more serious then - something that would require the use of a whistle to alert other officers, and yet no whistle was heard, evidently because the body's discoverer, Cross, did not have one. Mizen would ultimately have realised this, and understood that he cannot have been wanted in Buck's Row by a policeman already at the scene.
Because that's what he did and that's where he went. No reason to think he buggered off during the conversation between Cross and Mizen.
Black on white.
Maybe, Ben, you and I should give it a rest now. It seems the same items reappear over and over again.
The best,
Fisherman
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