Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Why Cross Was Almost Certainly Innocent

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • drstrange169
    replied
    "Wasn't there a story Lechmere's family got to look at some records and were unable to find their ancestral name in "the records"?"

    That's not something I've heard about, where did you read/hear that?

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

    After all, he was standing in the road when he saw her, so it couldn't have been that dark.

    If it was, he would't have seen her at all from his position.
    Hi RD, Lechmere said that he saw a shape and then crossed into the street, suggesting he was on the northern pavement to begin. At first he was not clear what he saw, it was just a dark shape.

    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

    But we know from his testimony that he drew Paul's attention to the body, meaning he knew that Nichols was there before Paul arrived.
    Yes, his testimony clearly says, he saw a shape on the opposite side of the road, crossed into the road to get a better look, and stopped as he realised it was a woman. It was only at this point he saw it was a body.
    At the SAME time, he heard footsteps and turned to see Paul around 40 yards behind him, suggesting before he stopped Paul was around 50 yards behind.
    So yes he clearly realised it was a woman, at the same time he heard Paul.

    Dusty did a good article in Ripperologist some years back, looking at this very point.
    I also cover it in some depth in Inside Bucks Row.

    That Lechmere had to cross into the road to make it what the shape was, surely indicates it was very dark.
    There is a recent thread on here which looks at the lighting in Bucks Row

    I’ve been trying to work out, primarily for my own head, how dark the scenes were. Using the map in Begg and Bennett’s CSI Whitechapel I’ve created a sketch map for various brightness of lamps for Mitre Square. Is anyone aware of anything similar for Bucks Row or Berners Street? Using the 1870s ordnance survey


    There is also a long , but older thread on Jtrforums, "Polly by Gaslight" that is worth a read.

    Steve
    Last edited by Elamarna; 04-09-2024, 10:10 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Geddy2112
    replied
    Originally posted by Mark J D View Post

    "Thanks for that, I saw her picture, got scared and left..."

    "I know what you mean."​

    -- Get in the bin. Both of you.
    'While Internet has transformed the world into a global village, it has also given a voice to people who would have been considered the village idiots.'

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

    Interestingly there were a couple of very early press reports they had Paul find Lechmere standing by the body, but that was obviously changed officially at the inquest and in statements to the police to reflect that Lechmere was instead seen standing in the middle of the road.
    There are numerous pitfalls inherent in the reportage, or "Rippertage" as the case may be, especially in early reports of the earlier murders. Clearly, they can't be taken as being in any way definitive. However, a committed suspectologist can treat a tabloid newspaper's 3rd-person précis in a single report (e.g. "standing by" instead of printing out in full "he was standing in the middle of the road opposite the body") as if it carried the same weight as a sworn, signed witness statement taken at an inquest.

    The idea that Lechmere was reported as having been seen standing by the body is NOT a modern concoction created by Lechmerianists, it was in the press at the time also.
    I don't think anyone's saying it's a modern concoction. However, what IS a modern concoction is Lechmerians turning "standing by the body" to "standing over a freshly-killed corpse" or, even more sinister, "he was CAUGHT standing over a freshly-killed corpse".

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Hi RD,

    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

    I agree Jeff

    The key differences though with Tabram and Nichols...

    Nichols had her eyes open, amplifying the visual likelihood she was dead
    But there's no report that suggests that either Cross/Lechmere or Paul noticed the state of her eyes. Given they didn't notice her throat had been cut to the spine, I think it's not a stretch to indicate that the reason they don't mention her eyes as being open is probably because they didn't take note of that fact either.
    There were 2 men in Paul and Lechmere and neither of them reacted typically to people who had just found a dead body.
    Which sort of suggests that they did not know she was dead at that time, doesn't it?
    The mistake they made was subsequently saying they had examined Nichols. It feels a little like their hand was forced because initially they never said they touched her.
    They never said they touched her, so what would compel them to add that later apart from being questioned (either by a reporter or the police) about everything they did and so mentioning things that, at the time, they considered inconsequential? If they thought she was probably just passed out drunk at the time they were talking to PC Mizen, then their very brief examination would be viewed by them as mentioning an irrelevant detail.
    Interestingly there were a couple of very early press reports they had Paul find Lechmere standing by the body, but that was obviously changed officially at the inquest and in statements to the police to reflect that Lechmere was instead seen standing in the middle of the road.

    The idea that Lechmere was reported as having been seen standing by the body is NOT a modern concoction created by Lechmerianists, it was in the press at the time also.
    Sure, but we have all the information now, and we now know those early reports are not correct, which is fairly typical of the earliest news stories. It takes time for the facts to get determined, so many such details change from the less reliable initial coverage. The same occurs today, not just in 1888.
    I don't believe that Lechmere was the killer because he has NO connection to any of the other murders and no evidence of a history of violence.
    However, if Nichols was to be viewed as a solitary kill, then for me, Lechmere AND Paul would both come under scrutiny; not because they were guilty, but because thier combined reaction was atypical.

    Some may of course disagree, but seeing as Nichols eyes were open, and 2 of them both got close to her to examine her; with at least one of them physically touching her, then it becomes rather odd as to why neither of them could see she was dead, or at the very very least, dying.
    The location was quite dark. Remember, Cross/Lechmere couldn't even make out it was a person until he got half way across the street. They also didn't see that her throat was cut, or that there was blood on the ground beside her. It is how little they noticed that indicates to me their "examination" of her was very brief, in the order of a few (10ish maybe?) seconds - just long enough to pull her dress down and maybe touch her arm or face, and it was during that when Paul brushed against her and thought he may have noted her breathing. I suspect most of the time they were there, which was not long, was spent in discussion of what to do, rather than actually doing anything (i.e. Paul suggesting let's sit her up, etc and Cross/Lechmere saying no.)
    They walk off and conveniently meet Mizen, who judging by his reaction was almost certainly not told to hurry.
    Again, this to me is just another indication that it is unlikely they actually thought she was dead at that time.
    Can we blame Mizen's seemingly lacklustre reaction when 2 men both fail to relay to him the message with even a hint of urgency. It's no wonder that Pc Neil was already with Nichols when Mizen got to the scene; the men had no real intent to get Mizen to Nichols quickly.

    But why was that?
    Because they didn't think she was dead, but just drunk and in need of assistance. As rj points out, attitudes towards street woman was not positive, so while they probably felt they should alert the police, they clearly weren't going to raise a fuss over it. They do later, when the find out she had been murdered, but at the time they are acting like two men who think she's just passed out.
    It is also important to highlight the key differences with Tabram.

    A witness saw Tabram and essentially just left her, but...


    He did NOT examine her
    Tabram had her eyes CLOSED
    The witness had seen people sleeping in the same spot before
    Given he did not examine Tabram, he would not have known if her eyes were open or closed, so that point doesn't count. Also, there is nothing to indicate that either Cross/Lechmere or Paul noticed one way or the other Nichol's eyes.
    Whereas with Nichols...

    She was examined by TWO men
    Nichols had her eyes OPEN; as proven by Pc Neil and the mortuary photos
    It wasn't a regular spot for people to sleep it off
    Again, there's no indication that Cross/Lechmere or Paul took note of her eyes, so the fact they were open doesn't matter if they didn't notice that. They didn't notice her throat had been cut either, but it was, and PC Neil noted that too.
    But it wouldn't be uncommon to see people sleeping rough in the general area. Perhaps, though, if Buck's Row was uncommon to have rough sleepers, that is partly why Cross/Lechmere and Paul chose to have a brief look.
    Note also that BOTH Lechmere and Paul stated they thought Nichols had been raped.
    Now if they both could identify she had been raped, why did neither of them fail to see ANY of her wounds?
    We only get them saying they thought she was outraged after they had heard of the murder. Their actions at the time, combined with PC Mizen's inaction, suggests that was not something mentioned at the time.
    (and I think you mean ... why did neither of them see ANY of her wounds?). I have been suggesting they didn't see them because it was dark and they spent very little actual time examining her.
    When you combine...

    Both getting close enough to examine her
    Neither realizing she was dead
    Both walking off to find a policeman with no audible alarm given by either men.
    A lack of urgent reaction by Mizen due to not being relayed the seriousness of the situation

    It leaves Lechmere and Paul's reaction particularly atypical considering the circumstances.
    Actually, it makes their reaction entirely expected provided they are not of the belief she is dead, which is what I'm suggesting. That at the time they spoke to PC Mizen, their belief was that she was passed out, and in all probability, because she was drunk. The idea that she had been "outraged" or "was dead", might have been something they thought had a remote possibility at the time, but not one they appear to have seriously entertained at the time. However, once they hear she was murdered, and violently so, those thoughts become amplified and their memory of what they believed at the time changes. That is not uncommon.
    Now it may have been dark, but not as dark as it was in the case of Stride. It was also light enough for Lechmere to notice Nichols in the first place.

    After all, he was standing in the road when he saw her, so it couldn't have been that dark.
    When he first noticed her, he thought she was a piece of tarpaulin. It's not until he gets half way across the street that he can make out it was a person. PC Neil only notices the blood when he shines his lantern on her.
    If it was, he would't have seen her at all from his position.

    But we know from his testimony that he drew Paul's attention to the body, meaning he knew that Nichols was there before Paul arrived.

    In this instance, the excuse of darkness, is not Lechmere's friend.
    The darkness would make the blood hard to see, and failing to notice her throat was cut to the spine tells us they didn't examine her closely, or for long. Similar to how we know Llewellyn did a very cursory examination at the scene given he didn't know her abdomen had also been attacked.

    RD
    In the end, everything you've mentioned points to Cross/Lechmere and Paul spent a very brief time with Nichols and left her believing she was drunk and passed out. They may have had some slight concerns it may have been something more serious, but if so they appear to consider that as being far less likely. As such, they would feel no need to rush around looking for the police, but would send her assistance if they came across a PC. If they truly thought she was dead, they would be more apt to respond as others who found a body and recognized the person had been murdered. Their actions point to them having beliefs that are different from what they later say after hearing that she had been murdered. Such changes are not uncommon, and I've just been suggesting that we can evaluate their beliefs at the time by a careful examination of their actions at the time. And to me, their actions point to two men who did not realise or believe she was dead when they left her, but rather thought she was sleeping off a drunk.

    It's just an interpretation, of course, not a fact. But I think it is an interpretation that fits the facts as we have them.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • A P Tomlinson
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    Hi Abby,

    They do both say they mentioned the possibility she was dead to PC Mizen, so I could easily be wrong. But to me, for what it is worth, their actions appear to reflect that their belief was that she was just drunk and passed out, with the idea of her being dead only a remote possibility. Again, I am not claiming I know what they were thinking, only presenting what it appears like to me, and what it appears like to me may be different from the truth of course.

    - Jeff
    I think Cross reported saying to Mizen that he believed she was "...either dead or dead drunk" and Paul who said that he thought she was dead?

    As far as I remember Mizen didn't comment on what he thought either man said beyond that she was lying in the street.
    According to Mizen he only spoke to one man, and aside from the newspaper report, Robert Paul didn't say what, if anything, he told Mizen.
    Only Cross gave an account of the actual conversation, and when asked if he had seen Neil and/or told Mizen there was another policeman in the Row, and stated "no" in both instances, that didn't prove suggestive enough that he was lying while a copper was telling the truth to warrant further questioning.

    Probably because they already had realised after reading Pauls story on the Sunday, that Mizen had cocked up to a monumental level first by ignoring them, then not even asking their names, and worst of all not even telling anyone he had met them, leading to PC Neil walking into the inquest and telling Wynne Baxter that HE had been the first to find the body, when Mizen should have put the investigation straight on Friday, and the police SHOULD have been busy looking for the two men he let walk away.
    An embarassment compounded by Lloyd's getting there ahead of them and telling Pauls story!

    Leave a comment:


  • The Rookie Detective
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    Hi RD,

    While we can never know what they actually knew, obviously, if they knew she was dead, particularly if they saw the blood from her throat etc, I would expect them to react much more like all the other people who found murdered victims, where they run looking for help (nobody else seems to casually walk off in case they find the police after finding someone they know is clearly dead and murdered). Their actions appear to me to be more in line of two people finding someone they think is just passed out drunk, or even just sleeping rough, (neither of which was uncommon) but perhaps in need of some aid.

    Hmmm, actually I think there was one person who passed by Martha Tabram's body and did nothing at all other than went home to bed, or maybe it was off to work, I forget at the moment. But again, in that case I believe they didn't realize she had been murdered but just mistook her for someone sleeping rough in the stairway, and that is much more like the reaction of Cross/Lechmere and Paul.

    - Jeff
    I agree Jeff

    The key differences though with Tabram and Nichols...

    Nichols had her eyes open, amplifying the visual likelihood she was dead
    ​​​​​​
    There were 2 men in Paul and Lechmere and neither of them reacted typically to people who had just found a dead body.

    The mistake they made was subsequently saying they had examined Nichols. It feels a little like their hand was forced because initially they never said they touched her.

    Interestingly there were a couple of very early press reports they had Paul find Lechmere standing by the body, but that was obviously changed officially at the inquest and in statements to the police to reflect that Lechmere was instead seen standing in the middle of the road.

    The idea that Lechmere was reported as having been seen standing by the body is NOT a modern concoction created by Lechmerianists, it was in the press at the time also.

    I don't believe that Lechmere was the killer because he has NO connection to any of the other murders and no evidence of a history of violence.
    However, if Nichols was to be viewed as a solitary kill, then for me, Lechmere AND Paul would both come under scrutiny; not because they were guilty, but because thier combined reaction was atypical.

    Some may of course disagree, but seeing as Nichols eyes were open, and 2 of them both got close to her to examine her; with at least one of them physically touching her, then it becomes rather odd as to why neither of them could see she was dead, or at the very very least, dying.

    They walk off and conveniently meet Mizen, who judging by his reaction was almost certainly not told to hurry.

    Can we blame Mizen's seemingly lacklustre reaction when 2 men both fail to relay to him the message with even a hint of urgency. It's no wonder that Pc Neil was already with Nichols when Mizen got to the scene; the men had no real intent to get Mizen to Nichols quickly.

    But why was that?

    It is also important to highlight the key differences with Tabram.

    A witness saw Tabram and essentially just left her, but...


    He did NOT examine her
    Tabram had her eyes CLOSED
    The witness had seen people sleeping in the same spot before

    Whereas with Nichols...

    She was examined by TWO men
    Nichols had her eyes OPEN; as proven by Pc Neil and the mortuary photos
    It wasn't a regular spot for people to sleep it off

    Note also that BOTH Lechmere and Paul stated they thought Nichols had been raped.
    Now if they both could identify she had been raped, why did neither of them fail to see ANY of her wounds?

    When you combine...

    Both getting close enough to examine her
    Neither realizing she was dead
    Both walking off to find a policeman with no audible alarm given by either men.
    A lack of urgent reaction by Mizen due to not being relayed the seriousness of the situation

    It leaves Lechmere and Paul's reaction particularly atypical considering the circumstances.

    Now it may have been dark, but not as dark as it was in the case of Stride. It was also light enough for Lechmere to notice Nichols in the first place.

    After all, he was standing in the road when he saw her, so it couldn't have been that dark.

    If it was, he would't have seen her at all from his position.

    But we know from his testimony that he drew Paul's attention to the body, meaning he knew that Nichols was there before Paul arrived.

    In this instance, the excuse of darkness, is not Lechmere's friend.



    RD

    ​​​​​
    Last edited by The Rookie Detective; 04-09-2024, 07:12 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • A P Tomlinson
    replied
    Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
    "That could mean the records for Cross/Lechmere were lost."

    When I asked many years ago, Pickfords said there were no records of any kind for the period. I believe everyone else that got the same answer.
    Wasn't there a story Lechmere's family got to look at some records and were unable to find their ancestral name in "the records"?
    .

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    But both Robert Paul and Charles Cross admitted publicly that they thought Nichols had been raped ("outraged").

    "I thought she had been outraged and had died in the struggle." --Robert Paul, quoted in Lloyd's, 2 September.

    "In his opinion, deceased looked if she had been outraged and gone off in a swoon." Charles Cross's inquest testimony, paraphrased in Lloyd's, 9 September.

    Another account has Cross deposing that "from the position of the body he formed the opinion she had been outraged."

    It's difficult to whitewash their behavior if, by their own admission, they left a rape victim on the pavement. It shows just how little street women were regarded in East London in the Victorian era.
    Hi rj,

    Fair enough, however, by the time Paul is talking to Lloyd's he has already heard she was murdered. His descriptions, therefore, may very well be influenced by that later knowledge rather than his statements reflecting what he thought at the time in question. It's just a possibility, and I could very well be wrong of course and that your suggestion that it reflects the low regard people had for street woman at the time is the more closer to the truth. The Lloyd's article, though, seems to be Paul at his most combative, and his assertions made there are both more definite, and specific, than he later testifies to in the inquest (and before he's spoken to the police, who appear to come get him based upon that interview). Their behaviour at the time would be based upon their beliefs at the time, while their later statements would, or at least could, reflect their beliefs after having learned more about the situation.

    We do have them saying they mentioned the possibility that she might be dead to PC Mizen, but the way that gets described sounds to me like they were not very convincing on that (indicating they probably didn't believe she was at the time, but something did strike them as being off - perhaps nothing more than her complete lack of responding).

    Anyway, I don't claim that what I suggest is the only possibility, but I do think it is worth being on the table as representing on end of the spectrum of possibilities, and nothing more than that.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

    hi jeff
    it was crow on his way to work. he thought she was sleeping as he had seen people sleeping there before.

    and they said nichols was dead or drunk. but also said they might have detected breathing. either way in obvious need of aid and care, not the cavalier oh well if we run into a copper well tell him attitude.
    Hi Abby,

    They do both say they mentioned the possibility she was dead to PC Mizen, so I could easily be wrong. But to me, for what it is worth, their actions appear to reflect that their belief was that she was just drunk and passed out, with the idea of her being dead only a remote possibility. Again, I am not claiming I know what they were thinking, only presenting what it appears like to me, and what it appears like to me may be different from the truth of course.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
    Their actions appear to me to be more in line of two people finding someone they think is just passed out drunk, or even just sleeping rough, (neither of which was uncommon) but perhaps in need of some aid.
    But both Robert Paul and Charles Cross admitted publicly that they thought Nichols had been raped ("outraged").

    "I thought she had been outraged and had died in the struggle." --Robert Paul, quoted in Lloyd's, 2 September.

    "In his opinion, deceased looked if she had been outraged and gone off in a swoon." Charles Cross's inquest testimony, paraphrased in Lloyd's, 9 September.

    Another account has Cross deposing that "from the position of the body he formed the opinion she had been outraged."

    It's difficult to whitewash their behavior if, by their own admission, they left a rape victim on the pavement. It shows just how little street women were regarded in East London in the Victorian era.



    Leave a comment:


  • Fiver
    replied
    Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
    "That could mean the records for Cross/Lechmere were lost."

    When I asked many years ago, Pickfords said there were no records of any kind for the period. I believe everyone else that got the same answer.
    That's what I was guessing, but the Pickford's website doesn't say that and, so far as I know, the descendant who supposedly tried to look through the records didn't say that there are no records.

    Leave a comment:


  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    Hi RD,

    While we can never know what they actually knew, obviously, if they knew she was dead, particularly if they saw the blood from her throat etc, I would expect them to react much more like all the other people who found murdered victims, where they run looking for help (nobody else seems to casually walk off in case they find the police after finding someone they know is clearly dead and murdered). Their actions appear to me to be more in line of two people finding someone they think is just passed out drunk, or even just sleeping rough, (neither of which was uncommon) but perhaps in need of some aid.

    Hmmm, actually I think there was one person who passed by Martha Tabram's body and did nothing at all other than went home to bed, or maybe it was off to work, I forget at the moment. But again, in that case I believe they didn't realize she had been murdered but just mistook her for someone sleeping rough in the stairway, and that is much more like the reaction of Cross/Lechmere and Paul.

    - Jeff
    hi jeff
    it was crow on his way to work. he thought she was sleeping as he had seen people sleeping there before.

    and they said nichols was dead or drunk. but also said they might have detected breathing. either way in obvious need of aid and care, not the cavalier oh well if we run into a copper well tell him attitude.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fiver
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    Hi Frank,

    you will no doubt recall the following from Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper, 30th September 1888

    "Mr. Paul says that after he made his statement to our representative, which appeared in Lloyd's, he was fetched up in the middle of the night by the police, and was obliged to lose a day's work the next day, for which he got nothing...."

    If the police fetched up Paul "in the middle of the night," and he lost a full day's pay (he must have normally started work around 4 a.m.) might this not suggest that the police treated him rather unceremoniously, and kept him down the nick with questions?

    Sadly, we have no further details about this midnight welcoming party, but I don't get the impression from the above that the police treated Paul in a naive, blinkered, and trusting manner and I doubt Lechmere received much better.


    RP​
    Things to consider are that Lechmere went to the police, while Paul went to the press. Also, Paul's initial account badmouthed the entire force, while Lechmere's only portrayed PC Mizen negatively. That doesn't mean that they wouldn't try to confirm Lechmere's account, but they likely had a better opinion of him than they did of Paul.

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post


    I think the reason why they didn't mention their examination of Nichols, was because they already knew she was dead.

    Her eyes wide open, unresponsive and blood oozing from a severe cut in her throat.

    If they already knew she was dead, then that would give them a reason to not tell the policeman about having examined her.

    They must at the very least realized that Nichols was in some kind of distress

    If they thought she was alive, you would expect them to have reacted with more intensity and urgency by calling for help or running to tell a policeman that a woman was dying in the street.

    If they knew she was dead, it then helps their defense; because a dead woman on the street wouldn't have required urgent help the same way a woman who was dying would have.


    RD
    Hi RD,

    While we can never know what they actually knew, obviously, if they knew she was dead, particularly if they saw the blood from her throat etc, I would expect them to react much more like all the other people who found murdered victims, where they run looking for help (nobody else seems to casually walk off in case they find the police after finding someone they know is clearly dead and murdered). Their actions appear to me to be more in line of two people finding someone they think is just passed out drunk, or even just sleeping rough, (neither of which was uncommon) but perhaps in need of some aid.

    Hmmm, actually I think there was one person who passed by Martha Tabram's body and did nothing at all other than went home to bed, or maybe it was off to work, I forget at the moment. But again, in that case I believe they didn't realize she had been murdered but just mistook her for someone sleeping rough in the stairway, and that is much more like the reaction of Cross/Lechmere and Paul.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X