Fisherman has two important questions about what he calls ”The Mizen Scam”. For those who are not familiar with the concept, just go to the threads about Lechmere (Suspects) and there you find it.
Now, Fisherman claims there are two questions about it that no one can answer intelligibly. His only suggestion of an intelligible answer is that ”Lechmere is Jack the Ripper”.
So I start this discussion with the serious purpose to answer these two questions. Anyone who´d like to join me is more than welcome.
This is the problem that Fisherman poses:
”Mizen must have written a report about the errand and handed it in to his superiors. In that report, if he had not been lied to, he must have written that he was guided to Bucks Row by a carman in company with a colleague.
So why is it that the police told all and sundry that PC Neil was the finder of the body, and even put him on the stand to testify about that?
And why did not Mizen tell his superiors that Neil was wrong? He would have been very much aware of this, unless he had been lied to. If that applies, he would have thought that Neil was truthful when claining to be the finder.
Nobody has - so far managed to answer these questions intelligibly.”
I start here by trying to answer these questions intelligibly:
1. "Why is it that the police told all and sundry that PC Neil was the finder of the body, and even put him on the stand to testify about that?"
By telling everyone that Neil was the finder of the body it is just a fact and nothing else that they wiped out the possibility that there had been another policeman in Buck´s Row before Neil.
The police knew that Mizen was told by Lechmere about another policeman in Buck´s Row. They had naturally read Mizen´s report.
They asked Neil if he had spoken to any carman. And he said "No".
So the police could not answer the question ”Who was the policeman at the murder site?"
And since they did not know who he was, and could not find him, the police prefered to assume that it was Neal who was that policeman, and they assumed that Lechmere was lying.
That is why the police told everyone that PC Neil was the finder of the body and even put him on the stand to testify about that.
2. "And why did not Mizen tell his superiors that Neil was wrong?"
Mizen was a policeman testifying at a murder inquest and Mizen knew what he had seen and heard. He knew that Lechmere had said that there was a policeman in Buck´s Row. And they could not ask Mizen to lie at an inquest about what had happened on the night of a murder.
So the police chose to assume that Lechmere had been lying to Mizen, since Mizen could not have lied in his report and since Mizen could not lie at a murder inquest.
The fact that Lechmere took back his statment means that either he was afraid of getting his statement about a policeman in the newspapers, or he was told by the police to be careful with it.
This is my suggestion for an intelligible solution of the so called ”Mizen scam”.
Kind regards, Pierre
Now, Fisherman claims there are two questions about it that no one can answer intelligibly. His only suggestion of an intelligible answer is that ”Lechmere is Jack the Ripper”.
So I start this discussion with the serious purpose to answer these two questions. Anyone who´d like to join me is more than welcome.
This is the problem that Fisherman poses:
”Mizen must have written a report about the errand and handed it in to his superiors. In that report, if he had not been lied to, he must have written that he was guided to Bucks Row by a carman in company with a colleague.
So why is it that the police told all and sundry that PC Neil was the finder of the body, and even put him on the stand to testify about that?
And why did not Mizen tell his superiors that Neil was wrong? He would have been very much aware of this, unless he had been lied to. If that applies, he would have thought that Neil was truthful when claining to be the finder.
Nobody has - so far managed to answer these questions intelligibly.”
I start here by trying to answer these questions intelligibly:
1. "Why is it that the police told all and sundry that PC Neil was the finder of the body, and even put him on the stand to testify about that?"
By telling everyone that Neil was the finder of the body it is just a fact and nothing else that they wiped out the possibility that there had been another policeman in Buck´s Row before Neil.
The police knew that Mizen was told by Lechmere about another policeman in Buck´s Row. They had naturally read Mizen´s report.
They asked Neil if he had spoken to any carman. And he said "No".
So the police could not answer the question ”Who was the policeman at the murder site?"
And since they did not know who he was, and could not find him, the police prefered to assume that it was Neal who was that policeman, and they assumed that Lechmere was lying.
That is why the police told everyone that PC Neil was the finder of the body and even put him on the stand to testify about that.
2. "And why did not Mizen tell his superiors that Neil was wrong?"
Mizen was a policeman testifying at a murder inquest and Mizen knew what he had seen and heard. He knew that Lechmere had said that there was a policeman in Buck´s Row. And they could not ask Mizen to lie at an inquest about what had happened on the night of a murder.
So the police chose to assume that Lechmere had been lying to Mizen, since Mizen could not have lied in his report and since Mizen could not lie at a murder inquest.
The fact that Lechmere took back his statment means that either he was afraid of getting his statement about a policeman in the newspapers, or he was told by the police to be careful with it.
This is my suggestion for an intelligible solution of the so called ”Mizen scam”.
Kind regards, Pierre
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