Originally posted by Mark J D
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If you want to get a stranger's attention, where do you gently tap them? On the back of the shoulder, as they are faced away from you.
This suggests to me that Paul had already walked past Crossmere when this tapping occurred, and, indeed, at the inquest Paul implies that he was leery of the man in the road and had attempted to avoid him.
Thus, my interpretation is that a genuinely concerned and innocent Crossmere quietly tried to get Paul's attention by waiting for him in the road--not certain yet if it wasn't a beat constable walking towards him--(which is hardly the behavior of a guilty man)--but Paul nonetheless blows past him, as if uninterested and unaware of what is transpiring. Paul doesn't want to be involved--he keeps going.
Crossmere then taps him on the back of the shoulder as Paul walks past, as if to say: 'Hey buddy...wait...don't leave...look over here...' Again, hardly the behavior of a guilty man.
It's entirely natural, particularly among people used to living in crowded conditions, making them less standoffish and prudish than we are today.
From the Daily Telegraph account of Paul's deposition, Sept 18th:
"he (Baul) stepped in the roadway to pass him. The man touched witness on the shoulder and asked him to look at the woman, who was lying across the gateway."
My translation: Paul stepped into the roadway and passed Lechmere. Lechmere then tap's Paul on the shoulder as his back was to him as he continued to walk away.
Recall that, according to Walter Dew, of the two men, Paul was the uncooperative one. Thus, this behavior of Paul in Buck's Row would align with that characterization--a man who didn't initially want to be involved was attempting to leave until Lechmere forced his hand and stopped him from simply walking past.
Ergo, there is nothing to see here. CAL's behavior is that of a concerned citizen. You seem to be interpreting this encounter as if Cross was aggressively thumping Paul on the chest as he faced him, but I don't think that is correct. Paul never suggested there was any aggression at the inquest, other than his initial suspicion of a man standing in the middle of the road in a rough neighborhood.
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