Originally posted by GBinOz
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Just to be clear, the 15 or so seconds I mentioned was just referring to the time examining Mary, not the whole of their encounter (i.e. stopping, waiting for Paul, approaching him, and then moving to the body isn't included). Anyway, I could be making it too short, but even what's described above could just be "crouch down, a touch, pull down the dress" stand and leave, with the conversational bits occurring simultaneous with that. And, of course, given when they are recounting these things they now know she wasn't just drunk, but dead with throat cut and abdominal wounds, etc, their telling of what they did will be influenced by that. They may have done very little actual "inspection", but they will present what they did in the best possible light.
I do think something struck them as unusual about the situation as it takes something to get people to start even considering "hmmm, maybe they were dead?". That's just not the sort of idea that people consider, so something must have struck them as decidedly strange, but not to the point they were positive (i.e., they didn't see the blood or injuries).
Anyway, like you, not seeing the wound to her throat seems to me like they could not have spent much time at all in her actual vicinity, and that their presentation of their "well fare check" might tend to make it sound like they did more than they did, or at least spent more time doing it. It strikes me that perhaps what we're dealing with is simply a very quick crouching to touch, tug the dress down, and walk off. And if they're talking while doing that, their attention might not be fully on the body in front of them, so they're not really inspecting her.
I don't mean they're deliberately lying. I do think they checked her (pulling down her dress, for example), and describing a brief action one does often does make the actions sound a bit more extensive.
Anyway, I admit it's just an idea, and could just reflect me trying to find a way to make sense of how they didn't see her throat injury. Perhaps I'm over thinking it, and it was simply the case that given the lighting came from the other side of the street and so cast deeper shadows on the side of the body where the wounds were? I believe PC Neil required his lamp to see the injuries? Or am I mis-remembering that?
- Jeff
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