Hi Fisherman,
Not really. One can hardly expect the two men to quote each other verbatim. Mizen reported the essence of the conversation and so did Mizen, and both "versions" were aired at a public inquest. Thus any opportunity to discuss any obvious, insurmountable contradiction was presented there and then. No such discussion occurred in this case, evidently because nobody recognised any contradiction between the two men's accounts. Also, the revelation that a woman had been found "on her back" was bound to precipitate questions from Mizen as to what condition the woman was in, especially given the recent murder of Martha Tabram. She was unlikely to have been sunbathing, for instance!
I just don't buy it, Fisherman.
The evidence is quite clear that Cross did inform Mizen of his opinion that the woman was dead. Had he attempted to suppress this detail, Mizen had only to question Robert Paul (who almost certainly wasn't hovering suspiciously in the shadows) for the lie to be exposed, and the same is true of the proposed "a policeman wants" you "scam". It would have been a gamble that stood only a very slim, unlikely chance of coming off.
And...?
We have only one (1) source and one (1) source only for Mizen's recollection of events too - himself.
These divergent pieces of testimony were aired in public, and yet we have no evidence of Mizen offering any protest. Had Mizen heard Cross' version of events and thought "You lying hound! You DID tell me I was wanted by another policeman in Buck's Row, and you DIDN'T tell me that the woman was probably dead!", he would have made a song and a dance about it, rightly so, because he'd have known full well that Cross was lying under oath. He would have alerted his superiors, which would probably have opened the floodgates to Cross being investigated as a suspect. The fact that none of this happened is an excellent indication that Mizen simply accepted his error regarding being "wanted" in Buck's Row.
What's this stuff about Cross being "in charge"?
Nobody said or implied he was "in charge" of anything. He might have been the carman with whom Mizen had the most dialogue, but that hardly made him the big boss man. I certainly reject the notion that Mizen ignored Paul completely and allowed him to hover in the near distance or slink away down Hanbury Street without having to corroborate Cross' disclosures, just as I reject the notion that Paul would deliberately make himself appear as suspicious as possible in so doing.
As for your list of so-called "coincidences", I'm not sure what they're supposed to "coincide" with to make Cross appear suspicious. If it's a round-a-about way of saying you think they point to guilt, then I'm afraid you'll continue to find that it's pretty much just you and Lechmere (the poster) who thinks so.
We "believe" them both insofar as neither of them willingly peddled a lie, but also we accept that Mizen made an understandable error and accepted as much when corrected by Cross at the inquest - at least everyone apart from the Crossers do.
All the best,
Ben
Mizen does not acknowledge that Lechmere told him that the woman was dead or drunk.
Interesting, is it not?
Interesting, is it not?
You see, this is exactly in line with the overall scam Lechmere presented. He did NOT wish Mizen to think that the woman was dead, since that would potentially involve risks on his own behalf. He is therefore extremely economical with the truth.
The evidence is quite clear that Cross did inform Mizen of his opinion that the woman was dead. Had he attempted to suppress this detail, Mizen had only to question Robert Paul (who almost certainly wasn't hovering suspiciously in the shadows) for the lie to be exposed, and the same is true of the proposed "a policeman wants" you "scam". It would have been a gamble that stood only a very slim, unlikely chance of coming off.
Your brisk assertion that Lechmere and Paul made it clear to Mizen that they believed the woman to be dead or drunk was something that one (1) source and one (1) source only claimed.
We have only one (1) source and one (1) source only for Mizen's recollection of events too - himself.
Now, you say that the Mizen scam was probably Mizen mishearing or misinterpreting things. But here we have it again! Lechmere says one thing, Mizen says another, and the public - in this case you - choose the words of the carman over those of the police.
What's this stuff about Cross being "in charge"?
Nobody said or implied he was "in charge" of anything. He might have been the carman with whom Mizen had the most dialogue, but that hardly made him the big boss man. I certainly reject the notion that Mizen ignored Paul completely and allowed him to hover in the near distance or slink away down Hanbury Street without having to corroborate Cross' disclosures, just as I reject the notion that Paul would deliberately make himself appear as suspicious as possible in so doing.
As for your list of so-called "coincidences", I'm not sure what they're supposed to "coincide" with to make Cross appear suspicious. If it's a round-a-about way of saying you think they point to guilt, then I'm afraid you'll continue to find that it's pretty much just you and Lechmere (the poster) who thinks so.
So who do we believe?
Lechmere or Mizen?
Lechmere or Mizen?
All the best,
Ben
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