Originally posted by Lewis C
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"'Charles Lechmere could have worked anywhere in London, north, south, west or east of Doveton Street. Instead, his working place was positioned in the only miniscule area that is geographically in perfect line with him having been the killer of the four Whitechapel victims, right between where the Old Montague Street and the Hanbury Street trail ends up."
This sounds impressive at first blush, but how can anyone, thinking it over carefully, deny that it is actually a mirror reflecting itself?
[Nor am I the only one who sees this circularity because David Barrat refers to this same passage in his book review of Holmgren's theory].
It was the circumstance of Lechmere living in Doveton Street and commuting through a red-light district to Broad Street that led to him discovering the body in the first place.
This circumstance is then turned around and used to 'prove' Lechmere's guilt through what is apparently meant to be an odds-defying geographical argument.
It strikes me as a rather low blow, and certainly others must see it, too.
Here's a thought experiment.
There were 11 victims in the Whitechapel Murder files. Eleven.
The bodies of half or slightly over half of these victims were discovered by policemen.
Nichols* (for the second time); Eddowes; Mylett; McKenzie; the Pinchin Street torso; Coles.
Over half were discovered by the same profession, and there are dozens if not hundreds of professions.
What are the odds?
What if half of them had been discovered by circus performers or by female chimney sweeps, wouldn't this require explaining?
Does this strange circumstance point to police involvement in the crimes?
Probably not. Considering that the victims were killed (or dumped) in the street in the middle of the night, who else is likely to find the body other than the constables who were forced to walk lonely beats around these scantily populated streets?
This is obvious enough. Now apply the same reasoning to Charles Cross.
Who else was likely to find Polly Nichols in a darkened backstreet other than a worker whose commute forced him to walk those streets at 3.30 in the morning?
And there is also this. The murders (discounting Mylett) were committed in a small area of roughly a square mile. Any normal citizen finding a body would likely have geographical connections to other parts of that same square mile.
It's true that Lechmere does have some of these 'connections.'
But recall that Alfred Crow from George Yard once lived closer to Dutfield's Yard than Lechmere or his mother ever did. The Winthrop Street watchman Patrick Mulshaw--unlike Lechmere--still lived in St. George in the East at the time of the Stride murder and had a son living in Batty Street (or at least did in 1887, perhaps later, too); PC John Neil had in-laws in SGE; etc.
Abby Normal can point to Maria Lechmere living down in St. George in the East, and it's true that this isn't quite circular--but is this really a jaw dropping fact or is it only a minor coincidence of geography, applicable to many?
Drew Gray used a similar technique to implicate James Hardiman, pointing out that his mother lived at No. 29 Hanbury Street--the murder site itself---(and Hardiman himself had lived in Hanbury Street in 1881).
Drew further pointed out that Hardiman's job as a horse flesh salesman and cat's meat man would have made him familiar with Winthrop Street.
Which it very probably did.
But it's a slippery slope.
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