David Orsam:
Fisherman - just to move away from the detail for the moment and look at the big picture. Once the blood of Nichols was embarrassingly washed away (removing any chance of finding footsteps in that blood) I don't believe that the police had any real interest in searching for more bloodstains. What did they care if the body was killed in another street a few yards away? How does it help them or make any difference to the investigation of the crime? There was no understanding of forensic psychology and I just don't think it mattered to them.
You seem to think, David, that they did not search the ground for bloodied footprints, that they did not look at the blood pool under Nichols´neck?
I think they did. I think they searched the ground thoroughly, looking for any lead or clue that could have been there.
Oddly, you also seem to think that the police cound not have cared less about where Nichols was killed. I disagree very much - they would have been very interested in such matters. That is why you find Helson in Brady Street, looking for bloodstains.
Sure, it mattered if the body was killed at an entirely separate location, hence the consideration of whether there were any wheel marks or tracks, thus bringing the body from a distance. And hence Helson gives evidence that the arrangement of the clothing showed to him that the body "could not have been carried far". Leaving aside how he came to this conclusion, it is obvious that he thought it might have been carried - but if had not been carried far then Helson didn't care.
If Nichols was killed in Brady Street and carried to Bucks Row, the police would certainly have asked themselves the pertinent question: "Why?"
Given such a scenario, I think the first suggestion to surface would be that the killer was either trying to deflect or suggest guilt. In the latter case, a killer who disliked the owner of Brown´s Stable Yards could have placed the body on his doorstep so as to evoke suspicion against that owner.
The more credible soilution to the riddle would however be the first alternative: That the killer had attacked Nichols in or close by his dwellings, wherefore he wanted to rid himself of the evidence by carrying her away from his premises.
In this context, I think the police would entertain a huge interest about exactly where she was killed, if she was not killed in Buck´s Row. In the end, they did decide that she WAS killed where she was found, and they would therefore be inclined to think that the suggested blood in Brady Street had nothing to do with the murder and that there was no need to specifically look in that street for the killer´s lair.
Note that there is no mention in Helson's report of 31 August of any search for bloodstains, despite the fact that the report was supposed to contain the "fullest obtainable information" and in my view the attitude of the police was shown when the coroner asked Spratling about the search for bloodstains and Spratling answered him by telling him about the search for a weapon, only to receive a telling off from the coroner to answer the question he had been asked. For me, Spratling's attitude was telling because it showed the police's priority at the time. Where was the weapon?
It would have taken one search of the area to conclude that the killer had brought the weapon with himself when leaving. The police would not feel that this would be anything strange at all.
They would, however, be equally interested in any blood trail if you ask me. What Helson says is that "...careful search was continued with a view to find any weapon that was used by the murderer(s), and I think it is very reasonable to suggest that this search was not one that was supposed to sift the weapon from any other evidence. Those who searched looked for the weapon, yes - but they of course simultaneously looked for anything else that could throw light on the events!
And Helson could not be extremely thorough on everything - he does not mention the blood under Nichols´ neck either, does he?
And the reason the coroner was asking about the bloodstains was probably because of the newspaper report that morning that there were bloodstains in Brady Street. On the defensive, all the police officers said that they didn't see any blood but if they weren't actually looking for it at the time then that's not surprising. Such splatter would not be easy to see. As soon as it's daylight and residents start walking around and everyone's chatting about the murder, any proper search, which you need to do very carefully if it's just small splashes, becomes almost impossible. And there is no way the police are going to admit that a reporter found blood but they didn't!
The coroner - and we know who! - may well have asked on acount of rumours and paper articles. His was a tricky ockupation, trying to defend the people who were supposed to uphold the law, and he was not in a position to look away from things like these. So yes, he would have wanted to clear things up. As far as I can see, Helson puts the question to bed by naming that one patch that MAY have been blood.
Blood does not just go away. If it was not there a few hours after Nichols was found, it would have been washed away. And if it was, the the police could not just have ignored things. You are in the deep end of a bottomless pool here, I´m afraid. It does not pan out.
Anyway, it's just my personal opinion and this, I believe, is true whether there were or were not stains in Brady Street. I may be wrong about reliance on the newspaper reports but I don't think they can simply be dismissed out of hand, especially if only on the basis of the police evidence.
Nor do I! The papers must be weighed in, but we have so many examples of them relying on hearsay and getting things badly wrong, so in this case I think they are telling an untrue story, plain and simple.
The best,
Fisherman
Fisherman - just to move away from the detail for the moment and look at the big picture. Once the blood of Nichols was embarrassingly washed away (removing any chance of finding footsteps in that blood) I don't believe that the police had any real interest in searching for more bloodstains. What did they care if the body was killed in another street a few yards away? How does it help them or make any difference to the investigation of the crime? There was no understanding of forensic psychology and I just don't think it mattered to them.
You seem to think, David, that they did not search the ground for bloodied footprints, that they did not look at the blood pool under Nichols´neck?
I think they did. I think they searched the ground thoroughly, looking for any lead or clue that could have been there.
Oddly, you also seem to think that the police cound not have cared less about where Nichols was killed. I disagree very much - they would have been very interested in such matters. That is why you find Helson in Brady Street, looking for bloodstains.
Sure, it mattered if the body was killed at an entirely separate location, hence the consideration of whether there were any wheel marks or tracks, thus bringing the body from a distance. And hence Helson gives evidence that the arrangement of the clothing showed to him that the body "could not have been carried far". Leaving aside how he came to this conclusion, it is obvious that he thought it might have been carried - but if had not been carried far then Helson didn't care.
If Nichols was killed in Brady Street and carried to Bucks Row, the police would certainly have asked themselves the pertinent question: "Why?"
Given such a scenario, I think the first suggestion to surface would be that the killer was either trying to deflect or suggest guilt. In the latter case, a killer who disliked the owner of Brown´s Stable Yards could have placed the body on his doorstep so as to evoke suspicion against that owner.
The more credible soilution to the riddle would however be the first alternative: That the killer had attacked Nichols in or close by his dwellings, wherefore he wanted to rid himself of the evidence by carrying her away from his premises.
In this context, I think the police would entertain a huge interest about exactly where she was killed, if she was not killed in Buck´s Row. In the end, they did decide that she WAS killed where she was found, and they would therefore be inclined to think that the suggested blood in Brady Street had nothing to do with the murder and that there was no need to specifically look in that street for the killer´s lair.
Note that there is no mention in Helson's report of 31 August of any search for bloodstains, despite the fact that the report was supposed to contain the "fullest obtainable information" and in my view the attitude of the police was shown when the coroner asked Spratling about the search for bloodstains and Spratling answered him by telling him about the search for a weapon, only to receive a telling off from the coroner to answer the question he had been asked. For me, Spratling's attitude was telling because it showed the police's priority at the time. Where was the weapon?
It would have taken one search of the area to conclude that the killer had brought the weapon with himself when leaving. The police would not feel that this would be anything strange at all.
They would, however, be equally interested in any blood trail if you ask me. What Helson says is that "...careful search was continued with a view to find any weapon that was used by the murderer(s), and I think it is very reasonable to suggest that this search was not one that was supposed to sift the weapon from any other evidence. Those who searched looked for the weapon, yes - but they of course simultaneously looked for anything else that could throw light on the events!
And Helson could not be extremely thorough on everything - he does not mention the blood under Nichols´ neck either, does he?
And the reason the coroner was asking about the bloodstains was probably because of the newspaper report that morning that there were bloodstains in Brady Street. On the defensive, all the police officers said that they didn't see any blood but if they weren't actually looking for it at the time then that's not surprising. Such splatter would not be easy to see. As soon as it's daylight and residents start walking around and everyone's chatting about the murder, any proper search, which you need to do very carefully if it's just small splashes, becomes almost impossible. And there is no way the police are going to admit that a reporter found blood but they didn't!
The coroner - and we know who! - may well have asked on acount of rumours and paper articles. His was a tricky ockupation, trying to defend the people who were supposed to uphold the law, and he was not in a position to look away from things like these. So yes, he would have wanted to clear things up. As far as I can see, Helson puts the question to bed by naming that one patch that MAY have been blood.
Blood does not just go away. If it was not there a few hours after Nichols was found, it would have been washed away. And if it was, the the police could not just have ignored things. You are in the deep end of a bottomless pool here, I´m afraid. It does not pan out.
Anyway, it's just my personal opinion and this, I believe, is true whether there were or were not stains in Brady Street. I may be wrong about reliance on the newspaper reports but I don't think they can simply be dismissed out of hand, especially if only on the basis of the police evidence.
Nor do I! The papers must be weighed in, but we have so many examples of them relying on hearsay and getting things badly wrong, so in this case I think they are telling an untrue story, plain and simple.
The best,
Fisherman
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