John Richardson sitting on the step
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This should probably be the subject of another thread but here goes: Richardson admits to be sitting on a stoop with a knife in a place where the mutilated body of Chapman shortly is found. Cross/Lechmere is encountered by Paul in the immediate vicinity of the ripped body of Nichols. Of these two persons of interest, who is more suspicious?
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dissertation
Hello Mike. Thanks. There is a dissertation, "Long vs. Cadosch" (or something of that sort). It claims that she mistook one for the other.
That would tie up a good many loose ends, if true.
Cheers.
LC
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Mike. Are you familiar with the conjecture that Mrs. Long heard the 5.15 strike--not the 5.30?
Cheers.
LC
"On Saturday, Sept. 8, about half past five o'clock in the morning, I was passing down Hanbury-street, from home, on my way to Spitalfields Market. I knew the time, because I heard the brewer's clock strike half-past five just before I got to the street."
Where did you hear she may have meant 5:15, Im curious?
Thanks Lynn, Cheers,
Mike R
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tempus fugit
Hello Mike. Are you familiar with the conjecture that Mrs. Long heard the 5.15 strike--not the 5.30?
Cheers.
LC
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Originally posted by Bridewell View PostHi Mike,
I entirely agree, although according to Swanson's report dated 19th October, Cadosch's first visit to the yard was at 5.25am and his second 3 minutes later. The 5.15am time was when he got out of bed. If the Swanson report's time-line is accurate Cadosch's time estimate is only about 4 minutes away from Elizabeth Long's. Cadosch said that he heard something fall against the fence where the body was later found. If Annie was already dead, then whatever it was must have fallen on top of her body - and subsequently vanished.
I don't subscribe to the alternative suggestion that it was a different prostitute with her client finding the body and keeping quiet about it. I can accept that the yard may have been used quite regularly by prostitutes and their clients, but two of them in succession after 4am seems most unlikely. If Cadosch heard what he said he did, the sound was that of Annie Chapman falling to the floor in my view.
Regards, Bridewell.
Im still recovering from a post that agrees in principal with what I had posted...must be a blue moon.
2 things though.....Cadosche said he got up and went outside at 5:15am, putting him in the yard before 5:20am, and he heard a voice say "no" as well as the thud. Mrs Long was certain her sighting was at 5:30am because she took the time from the clock at the Black Eagle Brewery. Thats pretty clearly at least 10 minutes between accounts.
I think the evidence suggests Cadosche heard the murder begin.
Best regards Bridewell,
Mike R
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T.o.d.
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostHi Colin
Quite rightly, one cannot ignore the witness testimonies of Long, and especially Cadosch, but I am interested in your view, as a retired Policeman, of the Police Surgeon`s estimate of a TOD of at the earliest 4.30am? Richardson was viewed with great suspicion at the time of the Inquest.
"The stiffness of the limbs was not marked but was evidently commencing" when Bagster Phillips arrived at the scene at 6.30am. Current medical opinion (and I confess to having done no more than research this on the internet) seems to be that rigor mortis commences after anything from 1 to 3 hours, depending on the circumstances (certainly a long way from Dr Bond's Kelly time of 6 hours.
If "evidently commencing" is an indication that the process is only just starting, presumably that points towards a TOD between about 3.30am & about 5.30am. On that basis it would be feasible for the murder to have occurred after Richardson's departure and for Cadosch's incident to be the sound of Annie's murder. Mrs Long's sighting would be, at best, right on the wire.
I should add that I don't think my police experience (or anybody else's) is of much use in this context because the issue (rigor mortis) is a medical one. I do recall a police surgeon saying that anyone who claimed to be able to give an exact time of death after examining a body was talking nonsense.
Regards, Bridewell.
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the case
Hello Jon. Thanks.
"Unofficially we read that many men carried some form of a knife."
Quite. But they were bright enough to keep their mouths shut.
"But a Leather apron really had nothing to do with the Whitechapel murders, did it."
But the Met THOUGHT it did. (And, actually, the aproned one had much more to do with Polly and Annie than one may imagine.)
"In itself, this is not unusual. Medical evidence at the Kelly inquest was inconclusive when compared with eyewitness testimony."
Indeed. But the reports from the Met fretted over it.
Did John do Annie? Hardly. But there can be made a tiny case.
Cheers.
LC
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Hi Lynn.
Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Mike. I think the case for Richardson could be:
1. He carried a knife.
2. He owned a leather apron.
3. His testimony as to time and place contradicts Dr. Phillips' TOD for Annie.
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Hi All,
Star, 13th September 1888
"Considerable doubt is being thrown on the evidence of John Richardson, who stated that he was almost on the exact spot where the body was found at a quarter to five on Saturday morning, and no signs of the murder were then apparent."
Regards,
Simon
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Jon:
"Well, we know he did cos he phoned his mum up after he did it and she told him to ring the police and wait in the house for them."
...and ...
"How many of them contacted the police after a murder claiming to have found the body, or that they they were at the murder site but the body was not there at that time?"
But that was not the issue, as I understood it. The issue was whether having a legitimate reason to be at a murder site had any impact on whether one would be a killer or not.
"Surely then, the best way to stay undetected would be to kill where you had a legitimate place to be, and not to contact the police?"
Yes. And that is what I suspect Lechmere hoped to achieve - but those hopes were crushed by Paulīs arrival, meaning that Lechmere needed to redesign his agenda.
"we know he walked through Bucks Row."
We know more than that, Jon. Not by means of any confirmation of him having used Old Montague Street and Berner Street on his travels - but a very compelling case can be made that he did so. That is, if he wanted to get to work as quickly as possible, and if he was in the habit of visiting his mother and daughter every now and then. Not much of a stretch, would you say?
"Thank you!!"
The pleasure is mine, Jon.
The best,
Fisherman
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It could have been the tongue area of the boot.
Thanks
Dave
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Hi Colin
Originally posted by Bridewell View PostI entirely agree, although according to Swanson's report dated 19th October, Cadosch's first visit to the yard was at 5.25am and his second 3 minutes later. The 5.15am time was when he got out of bed. If the Swanson report's time-line is accurate Cadosch's time estimate is only about 4 minutes away from Elizabeth Long's. Cadosch said that he heard something fall against the fence where the body was later found. If Annie was already dead, then whatever it was must have fallen on top of her body - and subsequently vanished.
I don't subscribe to the alternative suggestion that it was a different prostitute with her client finding the body and keeping quiet about it. I can accept that the yard may have been used quite regularly by prostitutes and their clients, but two of them in succession after 4am seems most unlikely. If Cadosch heard what he said he did, the sound was that of Annie Chapman falling to the floor in my view.Last edited by Jon Guy; 08-04-2012, 08:25 AM.
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Hi Dave
Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostIf Richardson cut a piece of leather from his boot "because it hurt him", does this not suggest the piece of leather was perhaps cut from the inside of the boot...necessitating him sitting on the top step and removing said boot?
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Hi Michael
Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostThanks for your reply to my earlier question Jon,..
Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post.and to address the theory above, isnt a simpler answer that Richardson saw nothing there because Annie hadnt been in the yard with her killer yet?
Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostHer death time is problematic, no doubt, when you have Long saying she saw Annie with Mr Shabby Genteel around 5:30am and you have Cadosche saying he heard the voices and thud nearer to 5:15, .....I give credence to Cadosche because if he heard anyone in that backyard at that time it was likely Annie and killer. How many couples are we to imagine slipped into that yard on that night and around that time?
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Mike. I think the case for Richardson could be:
1. He carried a knife.
2. He owned a leather apron.
3. His testimony as to time and place contradicts Dr. Phillips' TOD for Annie.
The stooping posture argument was merely exploratory--if I understand the intent of the thread. The idea is, roughly, given that John killed Annie, and he thought he had been spotted in that posture (ie, over the body and crouching) would it not be prudent to testify that he had assumed EXACTLY that posture but in innocuous circumstances, thus possibly defusing such later testimony?
Richardson knew he would have to tell a copper that he had been in the yard that morning as he regularly checked out the cellar lock on market mornings.
So, why the shoe and knife story? All he had to say to Insp Chandler was that he went into the yard to check the padlock and went no further than the foot of the steps. Instead, we get the whole trimming the leather with his blunt knife story.
At the inquest, after the dessert knife had been retrieved from John St and handed over to the Police, Richardson then tells us that he finished the trimming job at the market with a sharper knife!!
I wonder if that was mentioned because he feared someone who worked at the market might have noticed that it was no blunt dessert knife that they saw him trim his boot with. Was the sharper knife he used at the market the actual murder weapon?Last edited by Jon Guy; 08-04-2012, 07:52 AM.
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