Columbo:
I agree it is important and of interest of who finds the body. It should always be the first person checked out if it was done in suspicious circumstances. Having said that, Lechmere did not act suspicious in the least to Paul, Mizen or the inquest. Just throwing that out there.
If he was lying, it would be a priority NOT to act suspiciously - succesful lying predisposes no suspicious behaviour.
Myself, I consider the manner in which Lechmere refused to help prop the body up is totally suspicious. And I think it is highly suspicious to mislead a PC...
I also think that it is very suspicious that the wounds in the abdomen were hidden. A killer who had fled the scene would not profit from that. Only a killer still present at the scene would.
The distance between Bucks Row and Mitre Square is around 1,1 miles. If we go northeast from Bucks Row for 1,1 miles, we end up close to Victoria Park.
If we go south from Mitre Square for 1,1 miles, we end up in Southwark, on the southern side of the Thames.
Of course, if any of the victims were there, it would be way out of Lechmere´s working trek zone.
So the correlation between Lechmere´s logical working routes and the murder spots remain of the utmost interest.
That is, if somebody is entertaining another idea for whatever reason.
As I've previously posted it's entirely possible that the routes work in favor of lechmere being a suspect but it's a jump to suspect that he would walk away from his cart and horse full of meat to take Annie Chapman to the back of Hanbury street that late in the morning, unless you can provide evidence that Lechmere was derelict in his duties on other occasions that would warrant that suspicion.
I think Chapman was slain in the dark hours around Lechmere´s working trek. I think Phillips was correct on the TOD. Cadosch and Long, both very sure of the times, contradict each other and Richardson is all over the place testimonialwise.
We don't know enough about the man. We do know he could've killed one poor prostitute but that's not enough because that has not been proven.
Jason Payne-James tells me that the body would not bleed for many minutes, and he says that Lechmere is caught in the eye of the storm, timewise. That is as close as anybody has ever come to nailing the Ripper. It´ll do for me.
I agree it is important and of interest of who finds the body. It should always be the first person checked out if it was done in suspicious circumstances. Having said that, Lechmere did not act suspicious in the least to Paul, Mizen or the inquest. Just throwing that out there.
If he was lying, it would be a priority NOT to act suspiciously - succesful lying predisposes no suspicious behaviour.
Myself, I consider the manner in which Lechmere refused to help prop the body up is totally suspicious. And I think it is highly suspicious to mislead a PC...
I also think that it is very suspicious that the wounds in the abdomen were hidden. A killer who had fled the scene would not profit from that. Only a killer still present at the scene would.
The distance between Bucks Row and Mitre Square is around 1,1 miles. If we go northeast from Bucks Row for 1,1 miles, we end up close to Victoria Park.
If we go south from Mitre Square for 1,1 miles, we end up in Southwark, on the southern side of the Thames.
Of course, if any of the victims were there, it would be way out of Lechmere´s working trek zone.
So the correlation between Lechmere´s logical working routes and the murder spots remain of the utmost interest.
That is, if somebody is entertaining another idea for whatever reason.
As I've previously posted it's entirely possible that the routes work in favor of lechmere being a suspect but it's a jump to suspect that he would walk away from his cart and horse full of meat to take Annie Chapman to the back of Hanbury street that late in the morning, unless you can provide evidence that Lechmere was derelict in his duties on other occasions that would warrant that suspicion.
I think Chapman was slain in the dark hours around Lechmere´s working trek. I think Phillips was correct on the TOD. Cadosch and Long, both very sure of the times, contradict each other and Richardson is all over the place testimonialwise.
We don't know enough about the man. We do know he could've killed one poor prostitute but that's not enough because that has not been proven.
Jason Payne-James tells me that the body would not bleed for many minutes, and he says that Lechmere is caught in the eye of the storm, timewise. That is as close as anybody has ever come to nailing the Ripper. It´ll do for me.
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