Hercule Poirot: It would be interesting to have a mathematical modeling tool which could weigh in each and every piece of evidence giving it a value that once added to the value of other pičces of evidence would offer a heuristic view of each suspect's level of guilt.
It would indeed! But I think it would be hard in the extreme to find acceptance among many posters out here when it comes to the suggested levels. For instance, I know quite well that the police would be extremely interested in a person found alone close to a freshly killed corpse, where it can be proven that the bleeding very much allows for the person in question to be the killer. It is a piece of evidence that should rate up at the very top of any sound list of evidence ratings.
The problem is that Lechmere answers up to this. And people out here do NOT like the idea that he was the killer of Nichols. The evidence implicates him, but most out here would swear that ANOTHER killer is more credible. None of these posters would be able to explain how that works, but that would not bother them - anybodyīs entitled to their own view, they would say. And somebody had to find the body, donīt you know!?
So much as it is an interesting excercise you suggest, you may as well drop the idea here and now. Out here, having been mentioned by a police officer back in 1888 trumps trifles like having been found with the body and having no alibi for it. Thatīs the way it goes, Hercule, and the sooner you realize it, the better you will fare here.
PS. I note that you think that I get too little credit. Thatīs of course true, but saying it out loud will do you no good.
It would indeed! But I think it would be hard in the extreme to find acceptance among many posters out here when it comes to the suggested levels. For instance, I know quite well that the police would be extremely interested in a person found alone close to a freshly killed corpse, where it can be proven that the bleeding very much allows for the person in question to be the killer. It is a piece of evidence that should rate up at the very top of any sound list of evidence ratings.
The problem is that Lechmere answers up to this. And people out here do NOT like the idea that he was the killer of Nichols. The evidence implicates him, but most out here would swear that ANOTHER killer is more credible. None of these posters would be able to explain how that works, but that would not bother them - anybodyīs entitled to their own view, they would say. And somebody had to find the body, donīt you know!?
So much as it is an interesting excercise you suggest, you may as well drop the idea here and now. Out here, having been mentioned by a police officer back in 1888 trumps trifles like having been found with the body and having no alibi for it. Thatīs the way it goes, Hercule, and the sooner you realize it, the better you will fare here.
PS. I note that you think that I get too little credit. Thatīs of course true, but saying it out loud will do you no good.
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