Another aspect of this whole thing that stands out to me, Christer.
You dismiss the fact that Cross lived a rather good life, taken as whole, as either proof of nothing or proof of guilt (citing examples of other serial killers (members of distinct minority) who did similarly). You discount his stable employment. You discount his marriage and family. You discount his lack of criminal record. You discount the inheritance he was able to pass on to the next generation. All irrelevant, you say. Immaterial.
Yet, when we discuss Mizen, you bring up his faith, his service record. This matters, you say. Even though lying to cover up his assuming that Buck's Row was another false alarm and not reacting appropriately wouldn't invalidate anything that may recommend Jonas Mizen for Cop of the Century or Sainthood, for that matter.....you still cite it and say, "Let's believe this man."
Then we have what you said about Abberline:
Abberline attended days two and three of the Nichols inquest, so he would have seen and heard Lechmere speaking.
Now, let's look at Abberline. Was he not a long time veteran of the force? You cite this as plus for Mizen. Was he not highly regarded and decorated? Yet, he sat in court, heard Cross give testimony. And suspected him not at all. Ah! But he was, perhaps "Lechmere´s personality - or at least the personality that came across at the inquest - disagreed with the notion that he could be the killer. I think that people overall expected some kind of flamboyancy from the killer - that he was exotic, looked dangerous, was a criminal mastermind, lashed out at the audience at the inquest, something like that.Here, again, you pick and choose what matters and what doesn't. Personal history and accomplishment matter when it serves your conclusion. It doesn't what it may harm it." Too bad you weren't there instead of Abberline, Christer. You'd have nailed him!
Of course, everything works when you "try viewing Lechmere's actions with an eye on him being guilty", eh Christer?
You dismiss the fact that Cross lived a rather good life, taken as whole, as either proof of nothing or proof of guilt (citing examples of other serial killers (members of distinct minority) who did similarly). You discount his stable employment. You discount his marriage and family. You discount his lack of criminal record. You discount the inheritance he was able to pass on to the next generation. All irrelevant, you say. Immaterial.
Yet, when we discuss Mizen, you bring up his faith, his service record. This matters, you say. Even though lying to cover up his assuming that Buck's Row was another false alarm and not reacting appropriately wouldn't invalidate anything that may recommend Jonas Mizen for Cop of the Century or Sainthood, for that matter.....you still cite it and say, "Let's believe this man."
Then we have what you said about Abberline:
Abberline attended days two and three of the Nichols inquest, so he would have seen and heard Lechmere speaking.
Now, let's look at Abberline. Was he not a long time veteran of the force? You cite this as plus for Mizen. Was he not highly regarded and decorated? Yet, he sat in court, heard Cross give testimony. And suspected him not at all. Ah! But he was, perhaps "Lechmere´s personality - or at least the personality that came across at the inquest - disagreed with the notion that he could be the killer. I think that people overall expected some kind of flamboyancy from the killer - that he was exotic, looked dangerous, was a criminal mastermind, lashed out at the audience at the inquest, something like that.Here, again, you pick and choose what matters and what doesn't. Personal history and accomplishment matter when it serves your conclusion. It doesn't what it may harm it." Too bad you weren't there instead of Abberline, Christer. You'd have nailed him!
Of course, everything works when you "try viewing Lechmere's actions with an eye on him being guilty", eh Christer?
Comment