Originally posted by Fisherman
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"The timings really hurt him because she could have been very very recently fatally killed. You can inflict injuries, as I'm sure a pathologist will tell you, with a knife in seconds and the question is, "where were you?" "what were you doing during that time?" Because actually he has never given a proper answer. He is somebody who seems to be acting in a way, behaving in a way that is suspicious, which a jury would not like. A jury would not like that. When the coincidences add up, mount up against a defendant, and they mount up in this case, it becomes one coincidence too many. The fact that there is a pattern of offending, almost an area of offending, of which he is linked geographically and physically, you add all those points together, piece it all together and the prosecution have the most probative powerful material the courts use against individual suspects. What we would say is that he has got a prima facie case to answer which means there is a case good enough to put before a jury which suggests that he was the killer."
* The timings only "really hurt" Lechmere if you fudge the timings for the Nichols murder. The timings for the Chapman, Stride, and Eddowes murders help Lechmere.
* Charles Lechmere did not act in a suspicious manner. Everything he did makes sense for an innocent man to do and some of the things he did would have been quite stupid for a guilty man to do.
* There are no "coincidences' to mount up.
* There is no "pattern of offending" tied to Charles Lechmere.
* Charles Lechmere was no more "linked geographically" to the crimes than Robert Paul or hundreds of other men who lived and worked in the area.
* Charles Lechmere was only "physically" linked to the Nichols murder. This only happened because Lechmere chose to testify - neither Robert Paul nor PC Mizen knew who he was. There was no physical evidence that proves Lechmere killed Nichols.
As the old saying goes "Garbage in, garbage out."
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