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Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
You haven't read the item, Christer. When you do, you will realise that it was the 1876 inquest being discussed.
As I keep saying, the name is one iof many matters that MUST be added to the list, but it is not the most damining ingredient. It is but one of many things that make him look suspicious, as Scobie said. A jury would not like him, and the name issue is one of the reasons why.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
Checking it, I find you are correct, so my bad. Anyways, we know next to nothing about any procedures preceding the inquest, and I do not share your conviction about how Pickfords representatives must have been involved. The options are endless, more or less - which is NOT the case when it comes to bleeding times and suchlike. Moreover, I have always saud that the carman MAY have been called Cross at work, itīs just that we have no evidence of it and his everyday calling himself Lechmere in officaldom speaks against it. There is even the possibility that he called himself Lechmere at work, that he spoke to his superiors at Pickfords and told them that he was goint to attend the inquest as Cross since he didnīt want his family name to get involved.
As I keep saying, the name is one iof many matters that MUST be added to the list, but it is not the most damining ingredient. It is but one of many things that make him look suspicious, as Scobie said. A jury would not like him, and the name issue is one of the reasons why.
Not a good start.
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostOnce again I see the errerroneous caim that on the 2nd September the police were denying the lloyds/Paul account.
You know, Steve, you do no have any sort of monopoly when it comes to decideing what is erroneous or not. You are carrying too heavy a rucksack of obvious errors for that, although you are not very interested in discussing them.
Let's look at what was actually said..
The Times reported
"It is not true, says Constable Neil, who is a man of nearly 20 years' service, that he was called to the body by two men. He came upon it as he walked, and flashing his lantern to examine it, he was answered by the lights from two other c2onstables at either end of the Street."
Daily News 3rd
"It is not true, says Constable Neil, who is a man of nearly 20 years' service, that he was called to the body by two men. He came upon it as he walked, and, flashing his lanthorn to examine it he was answered by the lights from two other constables at either end of the Street. These officers had seen no man leaving the spot to attract attention, and the mystery is most complete."
Now nowhere in the Lloyds account does it claim or even imply that the two carmen took or even spoke to Neil. The report cannot therefore logically be refering to the Lloyds account, which never says, what the police deny.
So what does this denial refer to?
Clearly it's refering to the Star account of 31st, reprinted in regionals on 1st, which claimed that two men had found the body, and then found PC Neil( mentioned by name) and taken him to the body.
It's therefore clear that the Times and Daily news reports 3rd, refers to the Star story, which was untrue, and not to the Lloyds account of Robert Paul, which NEVER mentions two men contacting Neil.
You have a dodgy habit of taking your own ideas as gospel when they really cannot be. Itīs not the first time we can see this. I would advice anybody reading anything by your hand and starting out "It is therefore clear..." to take it with a barrel of salt.
Did it never occur to you that the idea that the idea that there were TWO stories about, both of them speaking about two men helping the police to find the body, is somewhat over the top?
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
It was John Richardson. “There was not a shred of evidence, suspicion could not rest upon him, although police specially directed their attention to him.” —Swanson, 19 October 1888, HO 144/221/A49301C
Robert Paul was also investigated. Deeply shocking, I know.
I think that is a helpful thing to digest.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
Actually, the shocking thing is that Lechmere was seemingly NOT investigated. Have you read Dew on the matter, where he describes Lechmere as a rough but thouroughly honest man, whereas he paints a picture of Paul as a man trying to avoid the law?
I think that is a helpful thing to digest.
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Originally posted by Greenway View Post
I've not seen anything to suggest he was capable of the crimes. For me a good suspect needs to show evidence that they are capable of such violence.
All the best
1. People who have been proven to be in place at one or more of the murder sites, who have no alibi and who would have been physically able to commit the murder. The top suspects in this group are the ones who produce inconsistencies, anomalies and contradictions as they are heard. There is no need whatsoever for them to be proven violent. If there are no person/s around who answer to this description, the police will move on to group 2.
2. People who have personal relations with the victim, mainly spouses, but also relatives, aquaintances, business associates etcetera. There is no need whatsoever for them to be proven violent. If the police cannot identify any person as belonging to groups 1 and 2, they will look for suspects in group 3.
3. People who have a history of violence, in particular violence that is of a similar nature as the violence recorded in the murder investigated.
Tghis is where ripperology has it backwards. Since no person from the first two groups were originally identified (although efforts were made to turn George Hutchinson into a suspect), the focus has long since been on group 3 instead. And over the years, it has become a contest of which violent "suspect" is the one most likely to be the killer. This is why for example William Bury has been much spoken for, because he did cut the belly of his wife open in Scotland, and he had lived in the East End (Bow) at the time of the Whitechapel murders.
Personally, I think he is a bad suspect; his murder was a domestic affair, and clearly the Ripper murders were not. Moreover, Bury was hanged in April of 1889, and so he could not have killed Liz Jackson and the Pinchin Street woman, and I am quite convinced that the Thames Torso murders had the exact same originator as the Ripper murders.
Anyways, a propensity for violence is not the first thing the police go looking for when searching out a killer. It is something they resort to only if they have to. Of course, if suspects in groups 1 and 2 are known to have a history of violence, that will make the police interested in them. But it is not required to produce a prime suspect.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
Apologies if I misunderstood you - but the sheer fact that we do have a barrister that says that he would warrant a trial puts him lightyears before any other suspect. Thatīs the point I am making.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
Just imagine a barrister asking him, ‘Is Cross your real name?’ And following that question up with, ‘Did you not feel it was appropriate to disclose your real name to the court?’
Not a good start.
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Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
The above is a rather confusing statement. Firstly you claim that Lechmere was not investigated, then say that Dew describes him as a "thoroughly honest man". This is an odd statement from an experienced police officer, desccribing a person as "thoroughly honest" when he has no evidence to back up such a committed comment.
If Dews view mirrors that of the contemporary police, then it offers a possible explanation for why Paul was investigated while Lechmere was seemingly not.
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Quite true Trevor,that the police are sometimes blamed without justification.Anderson's reference to the different powers and resources of foreign police forces,to me,indicates he(Anderson) was saying that laws restrickting British policemen,and not the efforts of the police,were the cause of the Ripper not being identified.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
But the barrister was not provided with the full facts so his opinion you seek to rely on is unsafe, this you keep being told but you cant seem to accept that
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
If the carman at such a trial would be able to provide information that spoke against guilt, and if that information had not been available to Scobie, I am sure that the QC would have considered that too and he would perhaps have been inclined to free Lechmere.
That is how it goes, but it is not the issue at hand. The issue at hand is that there are enough points of accusation, suggesting that Lechmere was the killer, to warrant a trial.
How about Feigenbaum, do you think that any barrister today would say that you have enough to warrant a modern day trial against him?
How about Kosminski?
How about Levy? Druitt? Bury? Barnett? Tumblety?
Would any barrister waste any time at all on trying to take them to court?
No. Not a chance in hell.
Once we know this, we are able to put two and two together and find out who is the prime suspect. Itīs embarrasingly easy.
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