Originally posted by GUT
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And have you noticed that Swanson in this report claims that the carmen found the body together?
Could it be that Swanson - as the rest of the police - were led astray by the carman, failing to realize the true scenario?
What evidence is there that the police made inquiries about the carman? In what memoirs does it show that "Cross" was of much interest and thoroughly looked into, as he should have been? Where can we see that the police realized that there would have been time unaccounted for, when Lechmere was alone with the body?
The fact that the police thinks he is called Charles Cross more or less proves that they never found out who he was - and that would have been child´s play, had they made the effort.
Have you noticed that Dew points a finger at Paul, whereas he cannot even remember what that other carman was called?
Finally, if you work from the assumption that the police did NOT look into Lechmere - do you still think that the name swop and the ommission to state his address would be something that needed not be looked into?
We all know that he told the police his address - the question that remains to be answered is why he did NOT tell the inquest the same thing.
Let´s assume that he did not want to give up his killing carreer in London by means of running and going into hiding some place else.
In such a case, he would have chosen to stay home, stay at work and go to work along his normal routes.
Would the police in such a case be able to find him?
Yes, they would.
Would he be able to get away with calling himself Higginbottom, stating his address as Buckingham Palace and naming his job as Bottomcrackers Limited if the police looked into him?
No, he wouldn´t.
So what could he do, if he wanted to go on killing on his home soil?
Well, he would need to try and stay undetected to the ones who saw what he did on a daily basis. As long as the police did not suspect him, he would be fine with having the police know his real name, his real address and his real workplace - people who are not suspected are free to keep on killing.
But since he was to appear at an inquest, he would have to give the same name to the inquest as he had given to the police. And if he wanted to stay undetected by his family and friends, Charles Allen Lechmere would not do.
So he had a problem: He wanted to have a clean sheet with the police, but he could not get that unless he was willing to reveal to his family and friends that he was a witness in the Ripper case.
Solution: Use a name that people - and hopefully the police - may think would have been his to use, a name that is a common name, and that wouldn´t reveal his ID to his wife and friends.
Next problem: Even though he could say "That must have been a mistake", it would still look odd if "Charles Cross" placed himself at 22 Doveton Street.
Solution: Do not give the address and hope the coroner won´t make you.
It all adds up: If he wanted to come clean with the police to as high a degree as possible, and hide his identity to as large a degree as possible at the same time, then he did ALL he could do. He maximized it on EVERY point.
He fooled the inquest, he fooled the papers, he most probably fooled his wife and family. And lately, he fooled you too, GUT!
All the best,
Fisherman
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