Paradoxically, one of the things that convinces me of Richardson's innocence is the fact that at the inquest the man plainly and blatantly lied about the knife that he'd used to trim his boot leather, but no-one, not the coroner, nor the jury, nor the police, called him on it. Why would that be?
It's obvious from accounts written at the time that the rusty table knife he produced, and for the provenance of which he told such an unlikely story, couldn't have trimmed his boot. That would have been as obvious in 1888 as it is to us today. As a market porter, he would almost have certainly owned and commonly carried a clasp knife with a strong blade to use in his job, and he probably kept it razor sharp.
I don't know enough about inquest procedures to say for sure (perhaps someone else can speak to this), but had he produced a sharp clasp knife, and admitted to having it at the murder scene, it seems likely to me that it would have been siezed as evidence, and not returned for some days at least. He was a poor man, and this was a tool without which he'd have difficulty earning his living.
This is complete speculation on my part, but I'd not be surprised to learn that he'd shown the actual knife off the record to the police and/or coroner before he gave his testimony, they'd concluded that it wasn't the murder weapon and he wasn't the murderer, and let him give his **** and bull story to avoid the regrettable necessity of taking his good knife from him, the replacement of which might have represented a substantial expense for a man of his station in life.
It's obvious from accounts written at the time that the rusty table knife he produced, and for the provenance of which he told such an unlikely story, couldn't have trimmed his boot. That would have been as obvious in 1888 as it is to us today. As a market porter, he would almost have certainly owned and commonly carried a clasp knife with a strong blade to use in his job, and he probably kept it razor sharp.
I don't know enough about inquest procedures to say for sure (perhaps someone else can speak to this), but had he produced a sharp clasp knife, and admitted to having it at the murder scene, it seems likely to me that it would have been siezed as evidence, and not returned for some days at least. He was a poor man, and this was a tool without which he'd have difficulty earning his living.
This is complete speculation on my part, but I'd not be surprised to learn that he'd shown the actual knife off the record to the police and/or coroner before he gave his testimony, they'd concluded that it wasn't the murder weapon and he wasn't the murderer, and let him give his **** and bull story to avoid the regrettable necessity of taking his good knife from him, the replacement of which might have represented a substantial expense for a man of his station in life.
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