Originally posted by Fisherman
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While you believe him guilty, there is no evidence of guilt, only creative stories that weave in sinister speculations behind objectively innocent behaviours and events.
Is Cross/Lechmere worth looking into? Of course, anyone who finds a body is always looked into, and either they are cleared of involvement, in which case they are of little interest to the police other than as a witness. And that's exactly what we see in the surviving police summary notes, little interest in him other than he is at the inquest to present his testimony. We see occasional mention of people who were presented as suspects, and how they get eventually lead nowhere and get cleared (i.e. Pizer) because the internal letters that survive to this day reflect their interest in finding the killer, not chatting about how they've cleared various witnesses. That information would have been detailed in notebooks, and reports, that are lost to us; not only for Cross/Lechmere, but for all of the other witnesses who occasionally get placed upon the podium of guilt (i.e. Barnett). The typical approach is to point to the absence of notes on investigating these people, and to then claim that proves they were not checked out. Such a claim is smoke and mirrors, it presumes the police didn't investigate anyone other than the few cleared suspects who we are lucky enough to have documents preserving their names. But those documents are not the investigative documents, they are internal summary notes and communications about the investigations, the details of which are lost to us.
The blood testimony is, as Darryl points out, self contradictory. Moreover, it is not even a validated forensic test. There are no studies on this, nor were there any objective measurements taken at the time. What we have is a made up test, and the opportunistic utilization of common speech by non-medical experts to describe a murder victim in order to dress up a guilty preconception.
His presence at the crime scene is not suspicious, he's where he should be given he's going to work. He has every reason to be walking down Buck's Row at that time. Therefore, his presence at the crime scene is not guilty evidence. It would be if he had no reason to be there, but given it's where he should be, it's not evidence.
His disagreement with Mizen is nothing but clarification of what is nothing more than a misunderstanding between them. It is presented as if PC Mizen could not possibily be the one who is creating the disagreement, because like everything, the preconceived conclusion is used to shape events into a foregone conclusion.
Nothing being presented as guilty evidence is evidence of guilt. The very fact that every one of them has a trivially easy innocent explanation is not "various innocent alternatives", they are demonstrations that to call these things "evidence of guilt" is a misnomer.
In short, there is no "evidence of guilt" for Cross/Lechmere. There is only confirmation bias in the selection of adjectives.
- Jeff
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