With the name issue of course all sorts of inventive reasons can be thought of for an innocent use of Cross based on information that we don't have. In other words not actually based on any information or evidence. Therefore as an exercise in 'breaking' a guilty reason for the name swap, it fails and has to fail.
This does not mean that the guilty reason for the name swap is proven, but when assessing a suspect's 'suspect status' a vigorous attempt must be made to 'break' the elements that go towards suggesting guilt or find something that proves innocence.
When dealing with a suspect this is the natural way to proceed (and is I believe the way police forces proceed) and a suspect cannot be dismissed unless the case against him is in some way broken.
This does not mean that the guilty reason for the name swap is proven, but when assessing a suspect's 'suspect status' a vigorous attempt must be made to 'break' the elements that go towards suggesting guilt or find something that proves innocence.
When dealing with a suspect this is the natural way to proceed (and is I believe the way police forces proceed) and a suspect cannot be dismissed unless the case against him is in some way broken.
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