Hello Lechmere,
>... you cannot see Baker’s Row from anywhere in the vicinity of Brown’s Stable Yard.<
Actually , that not true.
PC Neil only had to take a couple of steps back from the body, towards the middle of the road and he could see straight down. He had already seen Thain by this stage so if he was looking for another constable it wouldn't be from the Brady Street end.
As the times wrote,
" ... in the meantime ... (Neil) .. had rung the bell of Essex Wharf." (Times)
So we know he did move around before Dr. Llewellyn arrived, whether he did so before Mizen's arrival is not so clear.
>If Mizen believed ...<
We're talking known facts not, if, buts and maybes.
>While this was going on there would have been little time for Mizen and Neil to compare notes – and neither would have seen the need.<
Again, would, could and might, are spin.
It's hardly "comparing notes", to ask, "Did you see the killer running your way. Aren't all police debriefed after a major murder? Don't they write reports?
>Then we have the Paul press story – which was in a Sunday evening paper (not morning).<
I didn't know that, thanks.
>This was partially a work of fiction by Paul but also partly accurate.<
What is relevant here, is the accurate part, namely, Mizen did continue "knocking up" before going to Buck's Row". This means he went into the witness on the defensive.
> ... It was in the context of the press attempting to set the police’s investigatory agenda that Paul’s story appeared.
In those circumstances it is hardly surprising that Paul’s story was dismissed ...<
Except, none of the stories you cited were "dismissed until they were investigated.
>The officers at either end of Buck’s Row ... were reported as saying they:‘…had seen no man leaving the spot to attract attention.’
Not no one leaving, just no one leaving to attract attention.<
Re-read my last post, I've already answered that.
>Mizen's written report - which would have been in front of the coroner ...<
I see, so he wrote a report mentioning two men, on the same Sunday that the police were denying there were two men;-)
>It seems obvious ...<
But we're not talking, seems, appears and look to be's. "Just the facts ma'am."
>Was Mizen consulted about the statement that had been issued by the police the night before?<
As I've already posted,
"These constables had seen no men leaving the spot"
(Manchester Guardian)
"These officers had seen no one leaving the spot to attract attention"
(The Times)
The facts as we know them, with no spin.
>I suspect not ...<
No, suspect, feel or fancy. Just the facts.
>Paul’s testimony tallied with Lechmere’s. His newspaper interview did not.<
Actually, minus the self aggrandizing, his newspaper interview did.
I reiterate my last post, looking at the facts not the spin, there are genuine grounds for questioning Mizen behaviour. Was he right, was he wrong? I don't know. But if, as Fisherman was, you're trying to build case against "Crossmere" based on Mizen's honesty then you have to offer actual evidence to support it, otherwise it's just another Cornwellian Sickert syndrome.
>... you cannot see Baker’s Row from anywhere in the vicinity of Brown’s Stable Yard.<
Actually , that not true.
PC Neil only had to take a couple of steps back from the body, towards the middle of the road and he could see straight down. He had already seen Thain by this stage so if he was looking for another constable it wouldn't be from the Brady Street end.
As the times wrote,
" ... in the meantime ... (Neil) .. had rung the bell of Essex Wharf." (Times)
So we know he did move around before Dr. Llewellyn arrived, whether he did so before Mizen's arrival is not so clear.
>If Mizen believed ...<
We're talking known facts not, if, buts and maybes.
>While this was going on there would have been little time for Mizen and Neil to compare notes – and neither would have seen the need.<
Again, would, could and might, are spin.
It's hardly "comparing notes", to ask, "Did you see the killer running your way. Aren't all police debriefed after a major murder? Don't they write reports?
>Then we have the Paul press story – which was in a Sunday evening paper (not morning).<
I didn't know that, thanks.
>This was partially a work of fiction by Paul but also partly accurate.<
What is relevant here, is the accurate part, namely, Mizen did continue "knocking up" before going to Buck's Row". This means he went into the witness on the defensive.
> ... It was in the context of the press attempting to set the police’s investigatory agenda that Paul’s story appeared.
In those circumstances it is hardly surprising that Paul’s story was dismissed ...<
Except, none of the stories you cited were "dismissed until they were investigated.
>The officers at either end of Buck’s Row ... were reported as saying they:‘…had seen no man leaving the spot to attract attention.’
Not no one leaving, just no one leaving to attract attention.<
Re-read my last post, I've already answered that.
>Mizen's written report - which would have been in front of the coroner ...<
I see, so he wrote a report mentioning two men, on the same Sunday that the police were denying there were two men;-)
>It seems obvious ...<
But we're not talking, seems, appears and look to be's. "Just the facts ma'am."
>Was Mizen consulted about the statement that had been issued by the police the night before?<
As I've already posted,
"These constables had seen no men leaving the spot"
(Manchester Guardian)
"These officers had seen no one leaving the spot to attract attention"
(The Times)
The facts as we know them, with no spin.
>I suspect not ...<
No, suspect, feel or fancy. Just the facts.
>Paul’s testimony tallied with Lechmere’s. His newspaper interview did not.<
Actually, minus the self aggrandizing, his newspaper interview did.
I reiterate my last post, looking at the facts not the spin, there are genuine grounds for questioning Mizen behaviour. Was he right, was he wrong? I don't know. But if, as Fisherman was, you're trying to build case against "Crossmere" based on Mizen's honesty then you have to offer actual evidence to support it, otherwise it's just another Cornwellian Sickert syndrome.
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