Mike - I will comment below (in bold), having first taken the liberty of changing "O'Neill" to "Neil" and "inferring" to "implying" (you infer, I imply).
David's points:
1. Cross told Mizen he was wanted in Bucks's Row by a policeman. Yes
2. Neil came upon the body without prior knowledge of it. Yes
3. Mizen came upon Neil and assumed it was he who had sent for him. Yes
4. It was assumed by Neil that he had first discovered the body and this is what he told his superiors. Yes
5. This is what the early papers suggest Yes
6. The story changed after Paul's newspaper story Yes
7. No one saw anything strange about what Neil reported and what Paul said. No, this was not a point I made.
What David is implying:
1. Mizen said nothing to Neil, but just came in and supported him, not telling him that some men fetched him.
I am not implying this, it is the evidence. This is from the Evening Post of 1 September 1888: "Another constable [i.e. Mizen] passed along Baker’s-row, the next street and witness called to him to fetch the ambulance". That's all the evidence says passed between Neil and Mizen. There is no evidence that Mizen said anything at all to Neil. From the Morning Advertiser report of Mizen's evidence: "I went up Buck's row and saw a policeman shining his light on the pavement. He said, "Go for an ambulance," and I at once went to the station and returned with it. I assisted to remove the body. The blood appeared fresh, and was still running from the neck of the woman." From his evidence, therefore, it seems that he did not even see the body of Nichols until he returned with the ambulance and helped to move the body.
2. No questions were asked by any higher officials because they knew no different than what Neil and Mizen told them. They didn't put the stories together because there was only Neil and Mizen's stories and they corroborated because nothing extra was said regarding Paul and Cross.
Sort of. I doubt Mizen spoke to any "higher officials". There was no need for Spratling to "corroborate" PC Neil's account.
3. The difference in stories only came out during the inquest.
No, I did not imply this unless by "came out" you mean in public.
4. After the inquest, there was no sorting out of the discrepancies.
I can't say because there is no clear evidence as to what happened about the discrepancy (singular) after the inquest. However, there is no evidence that it was "sorted out".
David's points:
1. Cross told Mizen he was wanted in Bucks's Row by a policeman. Yes
2. Neil came upon the body without prior knowledge of it. Yes
3. Mizen came upon Neil and assumed it was he who had sent for him. Yes
4. It was assumed by Neil that he had first discovered the body and this is what he told his superiors. Yes
5. This is what the early papers suggest Yes
6. The story changed after Paul's newspaper story Yes
7. No one saw anything strange about what Neil reported and what Paul said. No, this was not a point I made.
What David is implying:
1. Mizen said nothing to Neil, but just came in and supported him, not telling him that some men fetched him.
I am not implying this, it is the evidence. This is from the Evening Post of 1 September 1888: "Another constable [i.e. Mizen] passed along Baker’s-row, the next street and witness called to him to fetch the ambulance". That's all the evidence says passed between Neil and Mizen. There is no evidence that Mizen said anything at all to Neil. From the Morning Advertiser report of Mizen's evidence: "I went up Buck's row and saw a policeman shining his light on the pavement. He said, "Go for an ambulance," and I at once went to the station and returned with it. I assisted to remove the body. The blood appeared fresh, and was still running from the neck of the woman." From his evidence, therefore, it seems that he did not even see the body of Nichols until he returned with the ambulance and helped to move the body.
2. No questions were asked by any higher officials because they knew no different than what Neil and Mizen told them. They didn't put the stories together because there was only Neil and Mizen's stories and they corroborated because nothing extra was said regarding Paul and Cross.
Sort of. I doubt Mizen spoke to any "higher officials". There was no need for Spratling to "corroborate" PC Neil's account.
3. The difference in stories only came out during the inquest.
No, I did not imply this unless by "came out" you mean in public.
4. After the inquest, there was no sorting out of the discrepancies.
I can't say because there is no clear evidence as to what happened about the discrepancy (singular) after the inquest. However, there is no evidence that it was "sorted out".
Comment