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  • Originally posted by The Baron View Post
    The Birmingham Post - Tuesday, September 04, 1888

    “He left his home at half-past three on Friday morning, and passed through Brady Street and Buck's Row. When he got near the gateway of the wool warehouse in Buck's Row, at about a quarter to four, he saw the figure of a woman on the opposite side of the road.”


    I swear, I’m talking about one suspect, and the lot are busy chasing some random guy who probably couldn’t even tie his own shoelaces, let alone commit a murder...

    Lechmere didn’t say he left his house around 3:30 AM, or maybe 3:30, or close to 3:30, or ‘give or take a few minutes.’ NO, NO, NO, Lechmere explicitly said he LEFT HIS HOUSE AT 3:30 AM. Not 3:29, not 3:31, but 3:30. 3:30.

    ​The Baron
    You are blatantly manipulating the evidence to match your theory rather than looking at the whole picture. The majority of newspapers said "about", not "at".

    "Charles A. Cross, a carman, in the employ of Messrs. Pickford and Co., said that on Friday morning he left his home about half-past three.​" - Echo, 3 September, 1888.

    "Charles Cross, the carman referred to, said he was in the employ of Messrs Pickford and Co. On Friday morning he left home about half-past three.​" - Evening Post, 3 September, 1888

    "H Charles Cross, a carman in the employ of Messrs. Pickford and Co., said he left home about 3:30 on the morning of the murder and he reached Pickfords at about four o'clock." North Mail, Newcastle Daily Chronicle · Tuesday, September 04, 1888​

    "Charles A. Cross, carman, said he had been in the employment of Messrs. Pickford and Co. for some years. On Friday morning he left home about half past three to go to work,..." - Daily News, 4 September, 1888.

    "Chas. Andrew Cross, carman, said he had been in the employment of Messrs. Pickford and Co. for over twenty years. About half-past three on Friday he left his home to go to work, and he passed through Buck's-row.​" - Daily Telegraph, 4 September, 1888.

    "Charles A. Cross, a carman, said that he was in the employment of Messrs. Pickford and Co. He left home about half-past three o'clock on Friday morning to go to work, and in passing through Buck's-row he saw on the opposite side something lying against a gateway.​" - Illustrated Police News, 8 September, 1888




    "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

    "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post

      OK, but like I said then for the YouTuber to be correct then when he opened it the door would surely have had to whack against her head if as he claims the door obscured his vision of the body when opened.
      I don't know about the Youtuber, but Christer has something like this in mind (not the hands in front of his face, mind you). He's sitting facing more or less towards the cellar, the view to his left being blocked by the door.

      Of course, at face value, he might have some point. If he was sitting like this, then while sitting, he probably wouldn't have been able to see Chapman's head and shoulders, but wouldn't he have been able to see her lower part of the body either? Or at least the left knee, that was turned outwards, towards the cellar?

      Furthermore, he was sitting on the middle step with his feet were on the flags of the yard. When he stood up, he will have moved his upper body forward, as we all do when we stand up, especially from a low point as the middle step was. So, at that point the door wouldn't have blocked his view any longer.

      But, aside from this theoretical approach, Richardson was clear in his testimony: it was getting light, he could see all over the place and could not have failed to notice the deceased had she been lying there then.

      Click image for larger version  Name:	Backyard with man on doorstep.jpg Views:	0 Size:	175.3 KB ID:	846465

      Another interesting point is that Richardson found the front door closed when he got there and closed it behind him when he left. But it was found wide open by John Davies, indicating that someone went through the front door after Richardson and left it wide open.
      Last edited by FrankO; 01-29-2025, 10:22 AM.
      "You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
      Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"

      Comment


      • Originally posted by The Baron View Post
        After he leaves his house AT 3:30, he strolls through Brady Street and Bucks Row, and by 3:45, he sees the woman by the wool warehouse. And what do we have here? We’ve got an 8-MINUTE GAP. 8 WHOLE MINUTES. Unaccounted for.

        ​The Baron
        And here you ignore what any of the police said to invent a gap.

        "police constable Neil said that on Friday evening at a quarter to four he was proceeding down Buck’s-row Whitechapel, from Thomas-Street, when he found the body of the deceased.​" - Evening Post, 1 September, 1888

        "Policeman George Myzen (sic) said that at a quarter to four on Friday morning he was in Hanbury-Street, Baker's-row. A man passing said to him, "You're wanted round in Buck's-row." That man was Carman Cross​." - Star, 3 September, 1888.

        "police Constable John Thail (sic) said that on his beat he passed the end of Buck's row. Witness passed the end about every thirty minutes. He, however, saw nothing there on the night of August 30th. At about 3.45 he was signalled by another constable, by the flashing of his lantern.​" - Echo, 17 September, 1888

        "I beg to report that about 3.40. am 31st Ult. as Charles Cross, “carman” of 22 Doveton Street, Cambridge Road, Bethnal Green was passing through Bucks Row, Whitechapel (on his way to work) he noticed a woman lying on her back on the footway​...." - F.G. Abberline, 19 September, 1888
        "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

        "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

        Comment


        • There really can be no doubt about when Chapman was killed. As Kattrup said, Richardson couldn’t possibly have missed a mutilated corpse no more than a foot or so from his left boot. Anyone walking down those steps to end up with their feet on the flags would have been pushing that door further open with each step unless he wanted the door in his face. To stand on the flags the door would have had to have been at least 90 degrees open, probably more, with the corpse in easy view. Richardson also later saw the corpse from next door so he knew its exact location and how much floor space it took up and so he couldn’t have been mistaken about it somehow being obscured.

          Add to this Cadosch hearing sounds in the yard which couldn’t have occurred had there been a corpse there.

          Add to this Long seeing a man and a woman at just the right time (allowing for 5 minutes clock leeway or so)

          Against this we have a Doctor using methods that every medical expert who ever drew breath tells us were unreliable and the conclusion is a fairly obvious one to arrive at.

          Therefore, could Cross have killed Annie Chapman 90 minutes into his delivery schedule?

          There’s more chance of us learning that Katy Price has vowed to live in a convent for the rest of her days and combine a life dedicated to prayer and solitary contemplation and an intensive study of medieval manuscripts.
          Regards

          Sir Herlock Sholmes.

          “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

          Comment


          • Here’s what’s interesting, the fact that some reports say “about” while others say “at” proves one thing, Lechmere didn’t say “around 3:30” in some vague, wishy washy way. If he had been uncertain, every paper would have reported it that way. That’s how reporting works, if someone says “I think it was around 3:30”, you don’t suddenly get some papers confidently printing “He left at 3:30” out of nowhere. That doesn’t happen. So the fact that we have some sources giving a precise 3:30 means that at some point, Lechmere himself must have given a specific, exact time, not an approximation, not a hazy guess, but a clear-cut, definitive, unquestionable 3:30.

            And if that’s the case, then guess what? The “about” reports don’t matter. Because when faced with multiple versions, the more specific one wins. Every. Single. Time.

            If someone tells five people they left home “around 3:30” but tells two people “I left at 3:30,” you don’t just ignore the exact statement and pretend it never happened.

            But sure, if it helps people sleep better at night, let’s just pretend Lechmere was a timekeeping enigma who spoke in riddles, sometimes saying “about,” sometimes saying “at,” just to keep us all guessing...

            And even if we humor the idea that he said “about 3:30”, let’s be generous, how much wiggle room are we actually talking about here? One minute? Two? Five? Are we really supposed to believe he left at 3:37, just casually shuffling around for no reason before starting his walk? Even if we push it to 3:33 (which is already being way too charitable), the 8-minute gap doesn’t magically disappear. It’s still there, sitting in the middle of this case like an elephant in the room, waiting to be explained, except this elephant isn’t just sitting there, it’s stomping around, trumpeting at full volume, knocking over furniture, this one has a marching band, a spotlight, and a banner reading ‘HEY, WHAT ABOUT THESE 8 MINUTES?’ and yet some people are still desperately looking in the other direction, and would rather pretend that elephant isn’t there at all.

            Maybe if they close their eyes and wish hard enough, the missing 8 minutes will just cease to exist. Or better yet, maybe we can just argue that Victorian clocks ran slower when Lechmere looked at them. Because anything, anything, is apparently more believable than admitting that there’s an unexplained gap in his timeline.

            And since I know some people need to hear this again: the more specific one wins. Always. No exceptions. That’s how this works. That’s how it has always worked. That’s how it will always work.

            Oh, did I mention that he left AT 3:30?



            The Baron

            Comment


            • I recall a thread titled ''Richardson'' that had over 3000 post , most of which showed plenty of doubt over the Chapmans time of death. Whoever the killer was, 1.10, 1.35 ,3.30 ,3.45 , shows consistency for early morning kills.
              'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

              Comment


              • Originally posted by The Baron View Post
                Here’s what’s interesting, the fact that some reports say “about” while others say “at” proves one thing, Lechmere didn’t say “around 3:30” in some vague, wishy washy way. If he had been uncertain, every paper would have reported it that way. That’s how reporting works, if someone says “I think it was around 3:30”, you don’t suddenly get some papers confidently printing “He left at 3:30” out of nowhere. That doesn’t happen. So the fact that we have some sources giving a precise 3:30 means that at some point, Lechmere himself must have given a specific, exact time, not an approximation, not a hazy guess, but a clear-cut, definitive, unquestionable 3:30.

                And if that’s the case, then guess what? The “about” reports don’t matter. Because when faced with multiple versions, the more specific one wins. Every. Single. Time.

                If someone tells five people they left home “around 3:30” but tells two people “I left at 3:30,” you don’t just ignore the exact statement and pretend it never happened.

                But sure, if it helps people sleep better at night, let’s just pretend Lechmere was a timekeeping enigma who spoke in riddles, sometimes saying “about,” sometimes saying “at,” just to keep us all guessing...

                And even if we humor the idea that he said “about 3:30”, let’s be generous, how much wiggle room are we actually talking about here? One minute? Two? Five? Are we really supposed to believe he left at 3:37, just casually shuffling around for no reason before starting his walk? Even if we push it to 3:33 (which is already being way too charitable), the 8-minute gap doesn’t magically disappear. It’s still there, sitting in the middle of this case like an elephant in the room, waiting to be explained, except this elephant isn’t just sitting there, it’s stomping around, trumpeting at full volume, knocking over furniture, this one has a marching band, a spotlight, and a banner reading ‘HEY, WHAT ABOUT THESE 8 MINUTES?’ and yet some people are still desperately looking in the other direction, and would rather pretend that elephant isn’t there at all.

                Maybe if they close their eyes and wish hard enough, the missing 8 minutes will just cease to exist. Or better yet, maybe we can just argue that Victorian clocks ran slower when Lechmere looked at them. Because anything, anything, is apparently more believable than admitting that there’s an unexplained gap in his timeline.

                And since I know some people need to hear this again: the more specific one wins. Always. No exceptions. That’s how this works. That’s how it has always worked. That’s how it will always work.

                Oh, did I mention that he left AT 3:30?



                The Baron
                and you are aware that Victorian`s had a habit of rounding the time off to the quarter hour?
                They were not anally retentive digital time keepers like us

                Last edited by Jon Guy; 01-29-2025, 12:01 PM.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Kattrup View Post

                  I don’t follow….some youtube comment that is clearly wrong is wrong. So what? I just commented on the claim that the door was not self closing. It was.
                  It wouldn’t have touched her, Richardson had a clear view and stated the body was not there, and had the special attention of the police examining his story. Which was accepted. This means she was killed after Richardson left.
                  The main part of the point was that he claimed the door was self closing and thus he could not have seen the body, or more to the point the bottom of the door hid his view of the body, which to me is complete rubbish as I said it's approx 19 inches from the floor. And of course he would have had to open the door to sit on the step. So if the door when open obscured the view surely opening the door would have smacked her in the head. I did think from the photos I've seen the door was not self closing but as you correctly say Richardson said it was, so I guess in 1888 it was, apologies for the misunderstanding.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by FrankO View Post
                    Another interesting point is that Richardson found the front door closed when he got there and closed it behind him when he left. But it was found wide open by John Davies, indicating that someone went through the front door after Richardson and left it wide open.
                    Very true, thank you. I just can't see how the door would have obscured his view like the poster suggested even if it was self closing. It's 19 inches from the floor and like I said if it did as he said he would have hit her in the head as he opened it.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by The Baron View Post
                      Oh, did I mention that he left AT 3:30?
                      Okay I'll give you exactly 3:30am, precisely 3:30am. Ready for some basic maths?

                      7-8 mins walk from Doveton St to Bucks Row. We can't be exact because we do not know his exact route or walking speed. Some papers even mention a Parson Street which did not exist.

                      So that gives us 3:38am when he spots the tarpaulin, as soon as that happens he hears Paul from 40 yards away and turns to attract his attention (Cross was 10 yards from the body in the middle of the road at this point.) Paul and Cross then approach the body say from half of the 40 yards as they had travelled 20 yards each, plus the 10 yards starting point.. lets round that up to 3:39am, not unfair I think. They then examine the body and plot what they are going to do. Let's say another minute or two. That takes us to 3:41am. Paul states not more than four mins had passed to them meeting Mizen. Mizen states this was at 3:45am. So this is collaborated by two witness under oath. Yes correct Paul, Cross and Mizen were at the end of Hanbury Street at 3:45am.

                      Cool... so 3:41am plus 4 mins 3:45am. Great it's all adding up. PC Neil and Thain confirm that Mizen is correct with his 3:45am timing, the doc claims she died around 3:30 to say 3:35. Abberline states the body was found around 3:40am.

                      So amazingly THERE IS NO MISSING TIME, NOT ONE SECOND, IT ALL ADDS UP WHEN YOU READ THE EVIDENCE AND USE BASIC MATHS. It's that simple. Where the hell you get 8 mins missing time from all of that is astonishing.

                      BUT there is a nice 5 to 10 min gap for the real killer to have done the deed and buggered off before Cross got there... I really can't see how Team Lechmere can't understand basic maths.
                      Last edited by Geddy2112; 01-29-2025, 02:17 PM.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by The Baron View Post
                        And if that’s the case, then guess what? The “about” reports don’t matter. Because when faced with multiple versions, the more specific one wins. Every. Single. Time.

                        If someone tells five people they left home “around 3:30” but tells two people “I left at 3:30,” you don’t just ignore the exact statement and pretend it never happened.

                        The Baron
                        Your example bears no resemblance to reality.

                        This wasn't Charles Cross telling seven people at seven different times. This was Cross publicly stating his evidence once at the inquest. The majority of witnesses to this one time record Cross as saying "around", not "at".

                        The only way to manufacture a gap is:
                        * Assume Robert Paul and Charles Cross had precisely accurate, synchronized clocks.
                        * Assume we can precisely time how long it would take to get to Bucks-row, even though we don't know Charles Cross' length of stride, walking pace, or precise route.
                        * Ignore the majority of accounts about the time when Charles Cross left home.
                        * Ignore all of the police accounts about when events occurred.


                        "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                        "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                          There really can be no doubt about when Chapman was killed. As Kattrup said, Richardson couldn’t possibly have missed a mutilated corpse no more than a foot or so from his left boot. Anyone walking down those steps to end up with their feet on the flags would have been pushing that door further open with each step unless he wanted the door in his face. To stand on the flags the door would have had to have been at least 90 degrees open, probably more, with the corpse in easy view. Richardson also later saw the corpse from next door so he knew its exact location and how much floor space it took up and so he couldn’t have been mistaken about it somehow being obscured.

                          Add to this Cadosch hearing sounds in the yard which couldn’t have occurred had there been a corpse there.

                          Add to this Long seeing a man and a woman at just the right time (allowing for 5 minutes clock leeway or so)

                          Against this we have a Doctor using methods that every medical expert who ever drew breath tells us were unreliable and the conclusion is a fairly obvious one to arrive at.

                          Therefore, could Cross have killed Annie Chapman 90 minutes into his delivery schedule?

                          There’s more chance of us learning that Katy Price has vowed to live in a convent for the rest of her days and combine a life dedicated to prayer and solitary contemplation and an intensive study of medieval manuscripts.
                          Exactly Herlock
                          richardson would have undoubtedly seen a dead woman lying at his feet had Chapman been there. And added to the three witnesses you mention there was also Richardson’s testimony that the front door was open later pointing to a killer leaving in a hurry . Chapman was killed later in the morning.
                          Last edited by Abby Normal; 01-29-2025, 02:44 PM.
                          "Is all that we see or seem
                          but a dream within a dream?"

                          -Edgar Allan Poe


                          "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                          quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                          -Frederick G. Abberline

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post

                            Okay I'll give you exactly 3:30am, precisely 3:30am. Ready for some basic maths?

                            7-8 mins walk from Doveton St to Bucks Row. We can't be exact because we do not know his exact route or walking speed. Some papers even mention a Parson Street which did not exist.

                            So that gives us 3:38am when he spots the tarpaulin, as soon as that happens he hears Paul from 40 yards away and turns to attract his attention (Cross was 10 yards from the body in the middle of the road at this point.) Paul and Cross then approach the body say from half of the 40 yards as they had travelled 20 yards each, plus the 10 yards starting point.. lets round that up to 3:39am, not unfair I think. They then examine the body and plot what they are going to do. Let's say another minute or two. That takes us to 3:41am. Paul states not more than four mins had passed to them meeting Mizen. Mizen states this was at 3:45am. So this is collaborated by two witness under oath. Yes correct Paul, Cross and Mizen were at the end of Hanbury Street at 3:45am.

                            Cool... so 3:41am plus 4 mins 3:45am. Great it's all adding up. PC Neil and Thain confirm that Mizen is correct with his 3:45am timing, the doc claims she died around 3:30 to say 3:35. Abberline states the body was found around 3:40am.

                            So amazingly THERE IS NO MISSING TIME, NOT ONE SECOND, IT ALL ADDS UP WHEN YOU READ THE EVIDENCE AND USE BASIC MATHS. It's that simple. Where the hell you get 8 mins missing time from all of that is astonishing.

                            BUT there is a nice 5 to 10 min gap for the real killer to have done the deed and buggered off before Cross got there... I really can't see how Team Lechmere can't understand basic maths.
                            Hi geddy
                            lets be fair. If lech left at three thirty there could be missing time. Could. I don’t think he stood there for minutes gazing at the body nor do I think the encounter with Paul lasted many minutes. From the time lech stopped to look at the body from the time he left with Paul was at most five minutes? And I think the time to kill and gash her stomach could have happened in seconds or a minute. Plus if lech was the killer he probably lied about the time he left home and actually left earlier. So lech could clearly have been her killer anyway you look at it .

                            but I agree with your last statement .. more than likely the killer left before lech arrived and or lech scared him off. But let’s not over egg the pudding on the opposite side.
                            "Is all that we see or seem
                            but a dream within a dream?"

                            -Edgar Allan Poe


                            "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                            quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                            -Frederick G. Abberline

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

                              Hi geddy
                              lets be fair. If lech left at three thirty there could be missing time. Could. I don’t think he stood there for minutes gazing at the body nor do I think the encounter with Paul lasted many minutes. From the time lech stopped to look at the body from the time he left with Paul was at most five minutes? And I think the time to kill and gash her stomach could have happened in seconds or a minute. Plus if lech was the killer he probably lied about the time he left home and actually left earlier. So lech could clearly have been her killer anyway you look at it .

                              but I agree with your last statement .. more than likely the killer left before lech arrived and or lech scared him off. But let’s not over egg the pudding on the opposite side.
                              Hi Abby, sorry but I've just shown the calculations that follow the known evidence, there is no missing time. Even if you pinch a minute here or there it does not add up to the 8 mins the Baron was bleating on about and certainly not enough time to kill Polly. There could be missing time of you say Cross left home at 3:20am or 3:00am but we generally should accept the majority time of about 3:30am. Anything else is speculation.

                              Another point if we go, as I've mentioned earlier that Cross as a killer heard Paul from 40 yards away, he according to the theory would have to pull her clothes down, cut her throat twice, wipe his hands and knife on a rag, hide his rag and knife about his person, plot his bluff, get back to the middle of the road as Paul did not see him move back and then appear calm and collected. All this in the time it would have taken Paul to encroach on him from 40 yards. What 10 seconds or so, now we really are into Fantasy Island territory if we think he could have done that.

                              Comment


                              • As the person putting more top soil on his garden once said... 'the plot thickens.'

                                Regarding last night's YouTube claim that Cross spoke to the press the night of the Double Event we now have...

                                i carnt be ARSED with YOU its obviouse your a know all that knows nothing id guess about late teens . so do you want to bet 5k cash on it 5k cash that SOMEBODY who called himself cross gave an interview to a reporter on night of the murder said he heard the police mans whistle that found her
                                Swiftly followed up by...

                                just to clarify he gave the name letchmere to the reporter not cross dosnt matter az the POINT is the same .
                                So now he claims that Cross gave the name Lechmere to the reporter on the night of the Double Event.... sometimes words are not enough... and I'm not sure what 'late teens' have to do with anything.. crikey.

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