Franks pointing out that Lechmere said:
“No; I did not see anyone at all around except the constable I spoke to. I don't think I met anybody after I left my house till I got to the body.”
...makes Dusty say:
...the key and big point here is not this, but the fact that were he the killer, it is to his great advantage to to say he did hear or see something.
This claim has been made before. I have pointed out that although it may SEEM smart to invent sounds made by another person, it can instead by extremely counterproductive. Letīs assume, for example that Lechmere would have said:
Yes, as I drew closer to the site, there were sounds of a man running away to the west, and then round the corner of the schoolhouse building!
The obvious inference would then be that Lechmere had heard the killer. So far so good. But what if it emerged that somebody had been awake and looking out of his window at the time Lechmere claimed somebody ran past it? And was able to convince the police that the information was false?
What seems initially clever can in fact end up being totally stupid. Leaving all the options open for a killer to have escaped in any direction is making yourself unreachable for that kind of criticism.
“No; I did not see anyone at all around except the constable I spoke to. I don't think I met anybody after I left my house till I got to the body.”
...makes Dusty say:
...the key and big point here is not this, but the fact that were he the killer, it is to his great advantage to to say he did hear or see something.
This claim has been made before. I have pointed out that although it may SEEM smart to invent sounds made by another person, it can instead by extremely counterproductive. Letīs assume, for example that Lechmere would have said:
Yes, as I drew closer to the site, there were sounds of a man running away to the west, and then round the corner of the schoolhouse building!
The obvious inference would then be that Lechmere had heard the killer. So far so good. But what if it emerged that somebody had been awake and looking out of his window at the time Lechmere claimed somebody ran past it? And was able to convince the police that the information was false?
What seems initially clever can in fact end up being totally stupid. Leaving all the options open for a killer to have escaped in any direction is making yourself unreachable for that kind of criticism.
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