Originally posted by harry
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"We left together and went up Baker's row, where we met a constable."
My main problem is this:
If Paul went off first, saying that he would find a PC and send him to Bucks Row, whereupon Lechmere let him walk off, before suddenly changing his mind and setting off in hot pursuit of Paul - why does neither man mention such a curious matter at the inquest?
In fact, if it had not been for the clear wordings in the papers, I suppose it could be argued that the reason that Paul did not see the inch-wide gap in the neck or any blood on the pavement could be that Lechmere told him to walk on ahead, only to use the opportunity to then cut the neck.
It would also explain how the blood could run for such a long time - it would take a minute or two off the bleeding time.
So you open up an interesting avenue of research. And we do have the Echo, where your suggestion finds a little corroboration. This is how things are described in there:
"He (Paul) then said, "Sit her up," I replied, "I'm not going to touch her. You had better go on, and if you see a policeman tell him." When I found her, her clothes were above her knees. There did not seem to be much clothing. The other man pulled her clothes down before he left.
Did you touch the clothes? - No, Sir.
Did you notice any blood? - No, it was too dark. I did not notice that her throat was cut. I then left her, went up Baker's-row, turned to the right, and saw a constable. I said to a constable - the last witness - "There's a woman lying in Buck's-row. She looks to me as though she was dead, or drunk." The other man then said, "I believe she is dead."
How about that, Harry? here - and nowhere else - it seems that we can fit your scenario in:
Lechmere tells the other man to go find a PC.
Lechmere says that HE left the woman, not THEY.
Lechmere implicates that as he reached the PC, the other man was there.
Now, Harry, given that Lechmere is the man who generates the most discussion as a suspect today, how do you think a thing like this looks?
Paul said he could not see that the neck was cut in the darkness. But he also says that nobody would iss the woman, as she was easy enough to see. SO could we have the explanation here why he dod not see the neck cuts - bacause Lechmere sent him on his way before cutting the neck?
And we have Jason Payne-James saying that a bleeding time of seven minutes seems not very credible. Maybe we are looking at five minutes only - which Payne-James said was more credible.
But not to worry, Harry - one of the other papers confirm this version. And Pauls wording at the inquest - the man walked with me to Montague street - seems to discard the sinister Echo article.
Of course, if we need even more confusion, we can always look at what Paul said at the inquest, according to the Morning Advertiser: "I sent the other man for a policeman."
At the end of the day, all we can do is to weigh the different sources against each other and opt for the more credible solution. And much as I would have loved for all the other papers to carry the Echo version, I do think that Lechmere would have been made the prime suspect long before today. It would be a behaviour that called for some serious attention, wouldn´t you say?
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