Originally posted by GBinOz
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I think you’re right about the acoustics with regards to the stretch from the crime spot to Brady Street. To the west would be much less of an echo chamber, because the first 20 to 25 metres to the board school there was only a wall of perhaps 2 metres high on either side of the street and beyond the board school the street was about 4 times as wide as the narrow stretch. I, personally, don’t think it would have taken more than a few seconds for the murderer to assess from which direction footsteps would be coming, especially if they came from the east. But, of course, I could be wrong.
This, combined with the fact that Neil heard Thain pass the end of Buck’s Row about 120 metres away and, as Dusty suggests, Neil didn’t seem to have trouble determining Thain was east of him, makes it rather hard for me to imagine that Lechmere, if he was the killer, would only have heard Paul when he the latter had already covered some 50-60-70 metres down Buck’s Row. Whoever the killer was, he had every reason to listen for sounds while this wouldn’t necessarily/particularly be true of any innocent carman on their way to work.
When he heard the footsteps he took the time to pull down the clothing and, presumably wipe off the knife and his hands. Could he have had some confusion as to which direction to flee away from the approaching footfalls until he was visually spotted at a range of 30-40 yards?
Cheers,
Frank
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