Originally posted by Fisherman
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The first thing that strikes me is the word “fetched”. To me, that means: to get and bring back. And that’d make sense, as that would take extra time, putting Paul even more behind time than he already was, regardless of whether he would go fetch an officer at the station or one on the beat in the neighbourhood.
So, to me, it seems that Lechmere suggested to get a policeman & bring him back and that Paul responded he was disinclined to do so as he was late already. In other words, that he didn’t find that a good idea.
Summing up, we can see that Lechmere does claim in some sources that he was the instigator, and that he in no paper says that Paul was the instigator.
We may also see that Robert Paul in some sources claim that HE was the instigator and that he in no case claims that Lechmere was the instigator.
What I see is that we have a few quotes suggesting a one-man action:
“You had better go on, and if you see a policeman tell him."
“so I went on and told the other man I would send the first policeman I saw.”
“I sent the other man for a policeman.”
If we’d leave out these quotes (as we know that neither of the men went on alone in search of a PC), the picture would become clearer and we might see something along these lines:
- Paul suggests to prop Nichols up, but Lechmere refuses, suggesting instead that one of them goes to fetch a policeman.
- Paul then declines that, as going in search of a policeman and bringing him back to the scene would take too much time and he was already late as it was.
- Then Lechmere suggests that they continue on their way to work and alert the first policeman they see along their way. (That way, neither of them loses any more time, but they still get a policeman to the scene, so that the situation will be in the right hands.)
Something like this would fit with the unquestionable parts of the statements made by both carmen individually. It seems like a very natural course of discussion. And I (still) don’t see any reason why Lechmere should have lied about it.
In fact, if he did lie with regards to conversations he had with two different witnesses, then he would double the chance of being found out. Not only Mizen would know and could take action, but also Paul. And maybe one contradiction would not stick out so much, but would the police think the same about two contradictions? And looking at it through your eyes, I can understand why he would have lied to Mizen, as that would serve to get him past Mizen without being searched and/or taken back to the scene. But lying about who first suggested to go and tell a copper seems a rather unimportant thing to lie about in terms of gain versus risk.
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