Originally posted by Fisherman
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You say Lechmere only told Mizen that the woman lying in Buck's Row was probably drunk, even though he also told him that a PC was waiting for him there. This alone should already have made him wonder ("Why does this colleague call for me, if she's only drunk?"), but it didn't. Unless, of course, we’d know it was common practice for policemen to send passers-by for a fellow officer’s help without having them pass on why they needed help, it’s odd that Mizen didn’t wonder about it. Then, he went over to Buck's Row and when arriving there and discovering that the woman actually had her throat severely cut instead of just probably being drunk, it wouldn't have been odd at all if he would have tried to clear up the contradiction. Yet, apparently, he didn't wonder and didn't say a thing about it to either Neil or Spratling (who put him in his report as (Jona)”Smizen”). It would have been far from odd if, in fact, he had done so.
So Mizen did NOTHING until he, quite likely not of his own volition, helped to clear things up more than 2 days after the murder. He may have done everything “by the book” on the night of the murder, but 'on a human level', if you will, he was apathic. He didn’t ask a question when he was told so very little by Lechmere, he didn’t say what he was going to do about it (just “allright” or something), he didn’t clear things up directly after the murder and he didn’t take any action after learning he’d been lied to, not directly after and not after every next murder.
And I leave it here.
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