A man discovers a body. The spot that he finds her is one that he passes 6 days a week at the same time so he has an entirely legitimate reason for being there. Seconds later he finds her another man appears and they go for a Constable together.
We have no way of showing that he’d been with the body longer than he’d said that he had, apart from “well he could have been.”
The man (Paul) and the Constable both see nothing suspicious in the man’s appearance or in his behaviour.
We don’t know if the Police checked his alibi but it has to be a strong possibility.
He makes no attempt to flee the scene and he attends then Inquest so there’s no attempt to hide away.
He goes on to work at the same company for years and lives what, in appearance at least, appears to be a reasonable life with a family.
….
I know that some do but I have to say that I see absolutely nothing suspicious about anything that Lechmere did or said. So shouldn’t we ask…
How many people over the years who have found a body in the street have turned out actually to have been the killer?
How many serial killers have murdered a victim on his way to work and 20 minutes or so before he was due to arrive on a spot that he passed 6 days a week at the same time?
How many serial killers after a murder stand and wait for someone to arrive when they had ample opportunity to flee?
…..
Should we resort to stuff like manipulating times (leaving the house and the time that Paul and Lechmere met up) just to create a suspicious ‘gap’ out of very thin air. Take away the ‘sinister gap’ and we categorically can and we are left clutching thin air. There just is no case against Lechmere. I’m not saying that he couldn’t have killed her because we can’t prove that he didn’t, but there’s nothing that makes me suspect him.
We have no way of showing that he’d been with the body longer than he’d said that he had, apart from “well he could have been.”
The man (Paul) and the Constable both see nothing suspicious in the man’s appearance or in his behaviour.
We don’t know if the Police checked his alibi but it has to be a strong possibility.
He makes no attempt to flee the scene and he attends then Inquest so there’s no attempt to hide away.
He goes on to work at the same company for years and lives what, in appearance at least, appears to be a reasonable life with a family.
….
I know that some do but I have to say that I see absolutely nothing suspicious about anything that Lechmere did or said. So shouldn’t we ask…
How many people over the years who have found a body in the street have turned out actually to have been the killer?
How many serial killers have murdered a victim on his way to work and 20 minutes or so before he was due to arrive on a spot that he passed 6 days a week at the same time?
How many serial killers after a murder stand and wait for someone to arrive when they had ample opportunity to flee?
…..
Should we resort to stuff like manipulating times (leaving the house and the time that Paul and Lechmere met up) just to create a suspicious ‘gap’ out of very thin air. Take away the ‘sinister gap’ and we categorically can and we are left clutching thin air. There just is no case against Lechmere. I’m not saying that he couldn’t have killed her because we can’t prove that he didn’t, but there’s nothing that makes me suspect him.
Comment