Was he lying?

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  • Geddy2112
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
    I don’t think that I’d need to be Sherlock Holmes because even Herlock Sholmes can work that one out.

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    I don’t think that I’d need to be Sherlock Holmes because even Herlock Sholmes can work that one out.

    Leave a comment:


  • Geddy2112
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Ripperana never went digital Geddy. Hard copy to the end. I’m pretty certain that I have those 4 btw.
    Bugger, was hoping someone had transcribed them for t'internet. I presume you can guess which articles I'm interested in...

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post

    Does anyone have or know where I can get digital copies of Ripperana, had a cursory look but nothing found, unless I'm being blind. Really after numbers 36, 37, 40 and 62, many thanks.
    Ripperana never went digital Geddy. Hard copy to the end. I’m pretty certain that I have those 4 btw.

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  • Geddy2112
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
    The genesis of the Cross Roadshow

    The Man Who Was Jack The Ripper by Derek Osborne

    From Ripperana No. 33 - July 2000
    Does anyone have or know where I can get digital copies of Ripperana, had a cursory look but nothing found, unless I'm being blind. Really after numbers 36, 37, 40 and 62, many thanks.

    Leave a comment:


  • John Wheat
    replied
    Originally posted by Newbie View Post

    Hi Frank,

    You should wonder about that.

    However, his estimate was not made by a glance; it was made over the course of time first seeing him and then waiting for him to arrive.
    Did he begin the estimate when he first barely saw him, or when he saw the full figure .... I'd opt for the former.

    His night vision should have been somewhat better than Paul's.
    Here is the sequence of activations of the human eye acclimatizing to darkness.
    • 5–7 minutes: Cone cells reach maximum sensitivity
    • 10 minutes: Rod cells start to catch up and take over
    • 20 minutes: Rods are doing their best and you can see as well as possible in the dark
    • 30–45 minutes or more: Rods reach 80% dark adaptation
    This isn't a desperate post honest.

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  • Newbie
    replied
    Originally posted by FrankO View Post
    Hi George,

    [FONT=Calibri][FONT=Verdana]


    I also wonder if Lechmere's estimate of 30 or 40 yards is accurate, partly, as you propose, because it would have been difficult to make an accurate estimate under the conditions and partly because I wonder if he would have been able to distinguish Paul's dark figure from the gloom immediately after turning towards the sound of the footsteps he heard.

    All the best,
    Frank
    Hi Frank,

    You should wonder about that.

    However, his estimate was not made by a glance; it was made over the course of time first seeing him and then waiting for him to arrive.
    Did he begin the estimate when he first barely saw him, or when he saw the full figure .... I'd opt for the former.

    His night vision should have been somewhat better than Paul's.
    Here is the sequence of activations of the human eye acclimatizing to darkness.
    • 5–7 minutes: Cone cells reach maximum sensitivity
    • 10 minutes: Rod cells start to catch up and take over
    • 20 minutes: Rods are doing their best and you can see as well as possible in the dark
    • 30–45 minutes or more: Rods reach 80% dark adaptation

    Leave a comment:


  • Newbie
    replied
    Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
    "I'm trying to come up with various possibilities that can explain how Paul missed Lech on Bath street, while walking under the lights of the Albion Brewery ..."

    There were no lights shining on Bath St. near Foster. That is just something Christer made up. When challenged about it he became very vague and referenced the fact there were lights at the front of the Brewery facing Whitechapel Road.

    Just another of the Lechmere myths, I'm afraid.
    Ed Stow made it up too Dusty?

    He's very careful and there were the two correspondents (I can dig them up) who stationed themselves on Buck's row, soon after the murder, between 11 pm and 5? am, and they wrote about the strong light coming from the Albion brewery.

    They didn't speak about the north wall, but its not a stretch to suppose they had them there.
    Last edited by Newbie; 07-02-2024, 07:56 PM.

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  • Geddy2112
    replied
    Originally posted by Scott Nelson View Post

    I know it is. I was wondering what your preoccupation was with Lechmere.
    I explained this in a thread where I'd been away from the forums for a long time due to X, Y and Z but on my return the largest number of posts appear to be about Lechmere so I thought I'd start there. Obviously I'm still rather stuck there due to the volume of posts and I'm rather curious that such a huge 'industry' has been made out of a man that basically found a body on his way to work. It's rather intriguing to say the least. The more I read and understand the more I'm shocked that folk still peddle this bloke as a serious candidate with such vigour and after so many years when basically there is nothing on him. All the reasons for him being Jack have been debunked numerous times.

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  • Scott Nelson
    replied
    Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post

    What you talking about Willis? (This is a Lechmere thread..)
    I know it is. I was wondering what your preoccupation was with Lechmere.

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  • Lewis C
    replied
    Originally posted by A P Tomlinson View Post

    Technically it is also a noun, but if they are using it as such, and haven't simply misplaced the rather important word "suspect" or something similar... well, to paraphrase Inigo Montoya, "That word they are using... I do not think it means what they think it means..."
    They're using it as a noun. I've spent quite a bit of time on that site, and usually they call someone a "notable" if they have at least some historical importance, such as a governor of a state, or a major musical artist, or a Hall of Fame athlete. Calling Lechmere a "notable" is the oddest use of that label that I've ever seen on that site.

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  • A P Tomlinson
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    I won’t bore you to death with the full story Caz but I think I could tell you a tale about British Gas that took incompetence and ineptitude to previously unscaled peaks. It was to do with electricity vouchers awarded to my mum to help with fuel costs. They kept sending them in my Dad’s name and as he’d died 4 years previously she was unable to redeem them. It went on for 8 months with them sending her voucher after voucher in my Dad’s name and me making 16 phone calls in total. As you would no doubt assume, I was a model of patience and diplomacy. When it was finally sorted they again apologised profusely and sent her a compensatory cheque for £80….in my Dad’s name!!!
    Don't want to derail this thread, but since this happened yesterday... my good Lady's phone performed some form of seppuku, and she got on the laptop and ordered an emergency replacement. No human interaction was possible because... she didn't have a phone so had to contend with the "Interactive Chat Assistant"
    When everything was sorted and the phone was ordered the ICA aoounced that she would need a specially generated personal code to give to the delivery agent when they brought the phone, "The Code has been sent as a text message to your phone."

    Now my phone has a new OS and all the naughty words I had told the Spell Checker to ignore and let me use have been reset... as the result of emergency transplant surgery in order for her to get one bloody text message.

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post

    Ha ha! You bet I did, Herlock. I got out of that place, nicknamed Colditz, after a year of hell.

    My job was to dictate responses to customer queries, which would go to the typing pool and be checked - and often 'corrected' - by a supervisor who had terrible grammar, spelling and punctuation skills, so my letter would end up a mess. Hell on earth.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    I won’t bore you to death with the full story Caz but I think I could tell you a tale about British Gas that took incompetence and ineptitude to previously unscaled peaks. It was to do with electricity vouchers awarded to my mum to help with fuel costs. They kept sending them in my Dad’s name and as he’d died 4 years previously she was unable to redeem them. It went on for 8 months with them sending her voucher after voucher in my Dad’s name and me making 16 phone calls in total. As you would no doubt assume, I was a model of patience and diplomacy. When it was finally sorted they again apologised profusely and sent her a compensatory cheque for £80….in my Dad’s name!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Did you “Tell Sid” that you weren’t happy with it Caz?
    Ha ha! You bet I did, Herlock. I got out of that place, nicknamed Colditz, after a year of hell.

    My job was to dictate responses to customer queries, which would go to the typing pool and be checked - and often 'corrected' - by a supervisor who had terrible grammar, spelling and punctuation skills, so my letter would end up a mess. Hell on earth.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

    Leave a comment:


  • A P Tomlinson
    replied
    Originally posted by Lewis C View Post

    Hi RJ,

    That reminds me of the geneological website, wikitree. On the pages of historically important people, there is a small rectangle that says "____ is a notable". According to Lechmere's wikitree page, he's a notable.
    Technically it is also a noun, but if they are using it as such, and haven't simply misplaced the rather important word "suspect" or something similar... well, to paraphrase Inigo Montoya, "That word they are using... I do not think it means what they think it means..."

    Leave a comment:

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