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  • #76
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

    Again conjecture on your part, and again evidence of conflicting newspaper reports

    www.trevormarriott.co.uk
    Trevor, in order to dispute that quote...which Josh used, you need to provide something that is equally published at the very least. Conflicting reports are at least something to debate, not accepting formal mention of the fact the remaining apron was on Kate when she is found because you feel differently isn't enough weight to launch any argument against it.
    Michael Richards

    Comment


    • #77
      Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

      I am all for challenging some evidence when it reveals something that is not directly contradicted within other known evidence Trevor. The apron section "still attached to the body", on the victim when she is found is certainly not worth disputing. It was noted as such, and there is no reason to imagine anyone was seeing things that were not there. Your beliefs that organs were not taken from the scene is a little more grey, and there is some room to challenge whether the people examining the victims on the street could immediately determine which, if any, organs were missing. In Kellys case it may have been every murkier.

      But that statement you rely on is in direct conflict with the other statement from Brown " “My attention was called to the apron it was the corner of the apron with the string attached.”This doesnt say anything about being attached to the body so it had to be the left or right corner, and each cornet would have had a string attcahed. So this statement makes perfect sense.

      I do not believe that the organs were "harvested" in the morgues myself, but at least you have some room to dicker on that point. You don't on the apron. It was used to match the Goulston piece, and they were from one apron. The one she was seen still partially wearing in Mitre Square.
      There is no argument that the two pieces matched, but there is no evidence to show that when matched they made up a full apron

      How can you partially wear and apron,? its either on or its not




      Comment


      • #78
        Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

        There is no argument that the two pieces matched, but there is no evidence to show that when matched they made up a full apron


        Multiple witnesses, mainly police officers, testified at the inquest that Eddowes was wearing an apron, not part of an apron.

        "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

        "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

        Comment


        • #79
          Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

          Hi Jeff
          look at the big picture.

          The ripper was interrupted/seen/ disturbed by several jews that night. he knew that. we know that. a portion of a victims bloody apron was found under grafitti incriminating jews. He may have come up with the idea he was going to do it at eddowes murder scene or later once he got back to his bolt hole with his goodies wrapped up in it. yes he may have wiped his hands and or the knife on it at some point.
          bottom line it was found under the GSG-both obviously the work of the ripper. even the police at the time thought so.

          I mean if they weren't both done intentionally, at the same time, by the ripper-what are we left with? what are the chances theyre unrelated?

          In my mind the most likely and logical scenario is the ripper was pissed off at being seen by a bunch of jews that night, decided at some point to use her apron for a little payback/ deflection/obsfucation. dosnt have anything to write with so goes back to his bolt hole to grab some chalk, clean up, drop off knife and goodies, and heads back out to drop the apron and write the gsg. On a well known jewish residence.
          Its a narrative that makes total sense and fits the evidence-such as Long not seeing it the first time around.

          Hi Abby Normal,

          I don't discount the possibility the graffiti was written by JtR, but graffiti was apparently not uncommon, nor was anti-antisemitism. The apron was found in the stairwell of a building primarily tenanted by Jews, as well, so there's a reasonable probability it could have been completely unrelated to the murders. Basically, the chance of them being unrelated is high enough that both options have to be considered. Certainly, the police at the time would have seen it as a potential clue because there was also good reason to believe that JtR did write it. Had they photographed it, preserving the handwriting, that might have been something they could use as a lead.

          Obviously, if it's not JtR, there's nothing but coincidence that the apron was found there and no particular meaning or intention is required other than discarding of evidence.

          If, on the other hand, he did write it, it possibly does refer to Lawende, Levy, and Harris, or if Stride is a victim of JtR, it could refer to his being interrupted and fleeing that crime to then commit a second, and so forth. Perhaps he dropped the apron to ensure the message was connected to him, or perhaps he dropped the apron and the notion of leaving a message occurred to him just then and he stuck around to do so. Or I suppose he may have had a compulsion to write a message, and dropped the apron to do so and just didn't bother picking it back up as he was done wiping up.

          Anyway, all I'm saying is that both the "JtR is and is not the author of the graffiti" arguments are strong enough to consider as reasonable, and neither requires dismissing any of the evidence we have, so both account for things.

          Hmmm, that being said, let me speculate a little here. Let's consider the implications of the "JtR went home, cleaned up, came back out and discarded the apron piece and wrote the graffiti" for whatever reason. One thing we are probably safe to assume is that JtR does not want to get caught. So, if he fled to his bolt hole, and then came back out to discard the apron, then he's taking a huge risk by coming back out when the place is likely to have lots of police around. To reduce his risk he is going to want to avoid Mitre Square and head away from where all the activity will be so it seems most likely to me that when he leaves to discard the apron, he would head in a direction that puts more distance between himself and the crime scene and not head back towards the hornets nest. And, he's not going to go all that far, since the longer he's carrying it the greater the risk of getting caught with it. That would suggest his bolt hole would most likely be between Mitre Square and Goulston Street, or somewhere along Goulston Street south of the graffiti maybe? If he lived very near by then he would be aware of how much activity was in the vicinity, and so might also be aware that he had enough time to chalk a message as well.

          But, that whole idea all depends upon the apron being deposited after he went home and came back out. If it was deposited as he fled the crime scene, then what we have is an indication of his general direction of travel, suggesting he lives east of Goulston, rather than in the vicinity of it.

          - Jeff

          Comment


          • #80
            Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

            I am not suggesting they deliberately lied on oath I am suggesting that they were probably being over helpful in going with the flow.
            Which is tantamount to saying they lied under oath, that they testified they believed it was the apron she was wearing when in fact they could not have believed that according to you. You assume that they couldn't have recognized it, and then decide that your assumption is true, and build upon it. That is the definition of unsafe.

            What we have are multiple people all testifying that she was wearing an apron and that the one produced at the inquest was the one she was wearing. They aren't identifying the cut piece, they are identifying the one found at the scene of the crime. The cut piece is connected to that apron by the fact the cut and the seams on it match.


            Can you not see the flaws in their testimony which make their statements questionable?
            The assumptions you present as flaws boil down to "If we presume they were wrong, then they were wrong", and that doesn't constitute presenting evidence they were wrong. If I were to say "If we presume there were no murders at all, then there were no murders and the whole thing is a press hoax", we could debate that too. But it would be a waste of time.

            Your earlier posts were arguing she wasn't even wearing an apron, as in post #53 when you say

            "As to the two apron pieces which were matched there is no evidence to show that the two pieces made up a full apron, and therefore adds weight to the suggestion that she wasn't wearing an apron, but simply been in possession of two old pieces of white apron which at some point had come from a full apron."

            Clearly, if nothing else, you can see how that suggestion is refuted. She was wearing an apron.

            You now seem to be arguing that the apron produced at the inquest wasn't the one she was wearing. So where is that one? Are you going to suggest that JtR was not collecting organs but aprons?


            They were never cross examined, and their evidence tested so you cannot rely on it as being totally correct.
            That doesn't give one carte blanche to presume it is entirely false either. We look at what we have and compare it to what was stated, and nothing stated conflicts with the evidence presented.


            Just because they were police doesn't mean they told the truth.
            And you're back to the conspiracy theory approach here again. You need to produce evidence that conflicts with their statements, and not "what if" type assumptions, and we don't have any evidence that conflicts with their statements. Her doss house keeper reports she was wearing an apron that morning, and so do the police who find and release her just before she's murdered. You've been trying to argue she wasn't wearing one as per above, and clearly that's wrong.


            The same applies to Dr Brown, which of the reports is correct, the one he signed or the one perhaps mistakenly reported? There has to be an answer. It has to be the signed one and the other you seek to rely on mistakenly reported. You cant keep changing the goalposts to suit, which you seem to think I am doing, and that is certainly not the case. I seek to prove or disprove, and If I can disprove offer up alternative explanations with facts and evidence in support which I have done.

            www.trevormarriott.co.uk
            Except you haven't disproved anything. And the only goalpost shifts are from you. You resort to calling things "ambiguous" when they disprove your speculations but if something you present as support can be shown to be ambiguous through equally convoluted twists of the English language you refuse to consider it, and you claim some statements are unsafe and others safe despite the circumstances being the same. That's goal post shifting.

            The evidence we have access to, and the inability to re-interview witnesses, means proof or disproof is unachievable in one sense, so we have to work with what we have and see where it leads. Suggesting alternative notions for which there is no proof is not a solution.

            - Jeff

            Comment


            • #81
              Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

              Which is tantamount to saying they lied under oath, that they testified they believed it was the apron she was wearing when in fact they could not have believed that according to you. You assume that they couldn't have recognized it, and then decide that your assumption is true, and build upon it. That is the definition of unsafe.

              What we have are multiple people all testifying that she was wearing an apron and that the one produced at the inquest was the one she was wearing. They aren't identifying the cut piece, they are identifying the one found at the scene of the crime. The cut piece is connected to that apron by the fact the cut and the seams on it match.



              The assumptions you present as flaws boil down to "If we presume they were wrong, then they were wrong", and that doesn't constitute presenting evidence they were wrong. If I were to say "If we presume there were no murders at all, then there were no murders and the whole thing is a press hoax", we could debate that too. But it would be a waste of time.

              Your earlier posts were arguing she wasn't even wearing an apron, as in post #53 when you say

              "As to the two apron pieces which were matched there is no evidence to show that the two pieces made up a full apron, and therefore adds weight to the suggestion that she wasn't wearing an apron, but simply been in possession of two old pieces of white apron which at some point had come from a full apron."

              Clearly, if nothing else, you can see how that suggestion is refuted. She was wearing an apron.

              You now seem to be arguing that the apron produced at the inquest wasn't the one she was wearing. So where is that one? Are you going to suggest that JtR was not collecting organs but aprons?



              That doesn't give one carte blanche to presume it is entirely false either. We look at what we have and compare it to what was stated, and nothing stated conflicts with the evidence presented.



              And you're back to the conspiracy theory approach here again. You need to produce evidence that conflicts with their statements, and not "what if" type assumptions, and we don't have any evidence that conflicts with their statements. Her doss house keeper reports she was wearing an apron that morning, and so do the police who find and release her just before she's murdered. You've been trying to argue she wasn't wearing one as per above, and clearly that's wrong.



              Except you haven't disproved anything. And the only goalpost shifts are from you. You resort to calling things "ambiguous" when they disprove your speculations but if something you present as support can be shown to be ambiguous through equally convoluted twists of the English language you refuse to consider it, and you claim some statements are unsafe and others safe despite the circumstances being the same. That's goal post shifting.

              The evidence we have access to, and the inability to re-interview witnesses, means proof or disproof is unachievable in one sense, so we have to work with what we have and see where it leads. Suggesting alternative notions for which there is no proof is not a solution.

              - Jeff
              There is no conspiracy from my part I can assure you of that.

              Let me give you an example of safe and unsafe

              Dr Browns original signed inquest testimony is safe to rely on, there can be no argument against it.
              The Telegraph Newspaper report is unsafe to rely on because we dont know if it was written by a reporter who was there or written by a third party and it conflict with Dr Brown description of the apron.

              Now to accept Dr Browns inquest testimony negates the Telegraph account, and also weakens the suggestion that she was wearing an apron. So of course you and others want to believe the Telegraph account.

              I am not going to go over again the flaws with the later identification of the apron by police officers who "recalled" she was wearing an apron but they dont give any indication as to why they remembered, and for the record none of them were involved with the apron piece or the piece from the mortuary. The officer in court could have been shown any old piece of white apron and he would still have said it was from Eddowes.

              All I will say is that you clearly have no concept of how to asses and evaluate witness testimony, whether it be on oath or in statement form, perhaps less talking about me in your posts and more about the flaws which I have identified might be more beneficial to your cause. But as it stands you like others simply ignore the obvious and retreat back to the old accepted beliefs, believing that all that was said back then must be the truth when clearly as has been shown to you that is not the case

              The conflicts in the testimony have been highlighted but again you choose to ignore them

              The evidence to show she was wearing an apron is unsafe, and the evidence to show she was not wearing one at the time of her murder is much greater, and that is a fact.

              and now I have wasted enough time yet again on this topic. which seems to keep resurfacing 3-4 times each year.


              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

                Hi Abby Normal,

                I don't discount the possibility the graffiti was written by JtR, but graffiti was apparently not uncommon, nor was anti-antisemitism. The apron was found in the stairwell of a building primarily tenanted by Jews, as well, so there's a reasonable probability it could have been completely unrelated to the murders. Basically, the chance of them being unrelated is high enough that both options have to be considered. Certainly, the police at the time would have seen it as a potential clue because there was also good reason to believe that JtR did write it. Had they photographed it, preserving the handwriting, that might have been something they could use as a lead.

                Obviously, if it's not JtR, there's nothing but coincidence that the apron was found there and no particular meaning or intention is required other than discarding of evidence.

                If, on the other hand, he did write it, it possibly does refer to Lawende, Levy, and Harris, or if Stride is a victim of JtR, it could refer to his being interrupted and fleeing that crime to then commit a second, and so forth. Perhaps he dropped the apron to ensure the message was connected to him, or perhaps he dropped the apron and the notion of leaving a message occurred to him just then and he stuck around to do so. Or I suppose he may have had a compulsion to write a message, and dropped the apron to do so and just didn't bother picking it back up as he was done wiping up.

                Anyway, all I'm saying is that both the "JtR is and is not the author of the graffiti" arguments are strong enough to consider as reasonable, and neither requires dismissing any of the evidence we have, so both account for things.

                Hmmm, that being said, let me speculate a little here. Let's consider the implications of the "JtR went home, cleaned up, came back out and discarded the apron piece and wrote the graffiti" for whatever reason. One thing we are probably safe to assume is that JtR does not want to get caught. So, if he fled to his bolt hole, and then came back out to discard the apron, then he's taking a huge risk by coming back out when the place is likely to have lots of police around. To reduce his risk he is going to want to avoid Mitre Square and head away from where all the activity will be so it seems most likely to me that when he leaves to discard the apron, he would head in a direction that puts more distance between himself and the crime scene and not head back towards the hornets nest. And, he's not going to go all that far, since the longer he's carrying it the greater the risk of getting caught with it. That would suggest his bolt hole would most likely be between Mitre Square and Goulston Street, or somewhere along Goulston Street south of the graffiti maybe? If he lived very near by then he would be aware of how much activity was in the vicinity, and so might also be aware that he had enough time to chalk a message as well.

                But, that whole idea all depends upon the apron being deposited after he went home and came back out. If it was deposited as he fled the crime scene, then what we have is an indication of his general direction of travel, suggesting he lives east of Goulston, rather than in the vicinity of it.

                - Jeff
                hi jeff
                good post. i doubt he would have chalk on him so he would have to go to his bolt hole to get some. i beleive it was about an hour between when eddowes was killed and the gsg discovered so my guess would be he couldnt live more than a half hours walk radius from the vicinty of mitre square/ goulston street.

                he didnt go straight to goulston from mitre because long was adament it wasnt there the first time around. the police belived the gsg was written by the killer. i dont like to start discounting witnesses and police for no good reason.

                the chances that the graffitti and the apron are unrelated is almost nil in my mind:
                no mention of otjer graffiti in the area
                the graffiti mentions jews in a disparaging way on a night the ripper was seen by and interupted by several that night. its also deposited in a jewish reidence. obvious implication being hes trying to throw blame on the jews.
                and as the residence was mostly inhabited by jews and the grafitti written in plain sight so if it had been there for any length of time it would have been wiped clean. that graffiti never saw the light of day.
                the police thought it was written by the ripper.

                long said it wasnt there the first time around. he was adament he would have seen it. no reason to discount him at all. so more than likely the ripper didnt cut the apron to wipe his hands as he bolted and dropped it there as he fled home.
                any way it would be much quicker and less risky to just wipe his hands on her clothing right before he left. and if he did cut it to wipe his hands as he was fleeing no reason to hold onto as far as goulston street. the cutting the apron to wipe his hands dosnt really make much sense anyway you look at it.

                everything points to it was intentionally cut away and used to sign the grafitti. i think the police got that part right.
                "Is all that we see or seem
                but a dream within a dream?"

                -Edgar Allan Poe


                "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                -Frederick G. Abberline

                Comment


                • #83
                  Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post


                  Dr Browns original signed inquest testimony is safe to rely on, there can be no argument against it.
                  He signed what Crawford and/or his clerk managed to summarise, which can only ever be a précis of what was actually transpired. Luckily, we can fill in the blanks by - carefully - scrutinising what the newspaper reporters recorded, practised as they were, and far more so than the court officials, in shorthand. It is in this way we build up a picture as to what was most likely said.
                  Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                  "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

                    hi jeff
                    good post. i doubt he would have chalk on him so he would have to go to his bolt hole to get some. i beleive it was about an hour between when eddowes was killed and the gsg discovered so my guess would be he couldnt live more than a half hours walk radius from the vicinty of mitre square/ goulston street.
                    That's true, there is a definable maximum distance (within 30 minutes walking distance), though I think there are a few valid ways to reduce that. Such as, presumably he goes home not only to drop off the organs, but he has to grab chalk, probably spend some time washing up better, and change clothes, etc. If we allow for 15 minutes spent in his bolt hole (I just pulled that number out of a hat as something that seems reasonable without being overly reductive), then we have 45 minutes left for travel time. From Mitre Square to the graffiti is about a 5 minute walk (in a straight line rather than along streets, so that will be a bit of an underestimation but good enough for present purposes, so he could get apporximately 4x that distance away from Mitre Square, which is pretty far a field (one could get a bit more sophisticated, and start working out distances that allow for travel from Mitre Square to X then to Goulston street, etc, but we don't need to get too far down those rabbit holes, we could just place a circle centred on Mitre Square with a radisus 4x the distance from Mitre Square to Goulston Street as a very crude estimate.

                    But if he was able to get that far away from the area where the crime was committed, and wants to return to the streets and is willing to spend 20 minutes in public with the apron on him, then heading back towards the high risk area seems improbable to me. Rather, once he's gotten away from the danger zone, heading to some other distant location from his bolt hole (20 minute walk), and leaving his message with the apron, would seem more probable to me. That's why, to me, I think if he's got a bolt hole, then it's very close to Goulston Street. This is all very hypothetical, and there's no way to prove it nor do I expect anyone to stop considering alternatives,. While I'm presenting what I think is reasonable inferences, I'm not convinced I'm correct here. I agree, for example, that JtR may very well be of the sort that thinks heading back into the high risk area is no big deal, particularly if he was disturbed in his thinking, such as a Kosminski might be. His risk assessment thinking might very well be disturbed, and his choice of crime locations make that a very distinct possibility.


                    he didnt go straight to goulston from mitre because long was adament it wasnt there the first time around. the police belived the gsg was written by the killer. i dont like to start discounting witnesses and police for no good reason.
                    I agree. It's Long's testimony that he's quite sure it wasn't there an hour earlier that makes me reluctant to dismiss the notion that JtR fled home and then returned. It's the possibility he didn't recognize the apron for what it was, and mistook it for just random rubbish, that prevents me from dismissing the possibility he's mistaken, but that's why I'm suggesting it's a point where making too firm a conclusion either way is starting to get a bit iffy.


                    the chances that the graffitti and the apron are unrelated is almost nil in my mind:
                    no mention of otjer graffiti in the area
                    There used to be some threads on graffiti and its frequency, and quite a few posters of repute did argue that graffiti was common. I can't say whether those views were well founded as I don't know upon what sort of evidence it was based, but I recall it was more than conjecture. However, that being said, I do admit I myself can't provide any support for that, so I certainly can't expect anyone to just take my word for it.

                    the graffiti mentions jews in a disparaging way on a night the ripper was seen by and interupted by several that night. its also deposited in a jewish reidence. obvious implication being hes trying to throw blame on the jews.
                    and as the residence was mostly inhabited by jews and the grafitti written in plain sight so if it had been there for any length of time it would have been wiped clean. that graffiti never saw the light of day.
                    the police thought it was written by the ripper.
                    True, but there was a fair bit of anti-Jewish sentiment at the time, particularly after the Pizer thing. There are differing reports on how recent the writing was thought to be by various police officers, so it's a bit hard for us at this point to really be sure of how recent it was written. Again, though, I'm not dismissing the possibility it was by JtR for much the same reasons as you mention above. I just also think there's a good case to be made that it might have been unrelated, so the only real thing I have a different point of view on is the "chance being unrelated = nil" part, but that's not a big deal.


                    long said it wasnt there the first time around. he was adament he would have seen it. no reason to discount him at all. so more than likely the ripper didnt cut the apron to wipe his hands as he bolted and dropped it there as he fled home.
                    any way it would be much quicker and less risky to just wipe his hands on her clothing right before he left. and if he did cut it to wipe his hands as he was fleeing no reason to hold onto as far as goulston street. the cutting the apron to wipe his hands dosnt really make much sense anyway you look at it.

                    everything points to it was intentionally cut away and used to sign the grafitti. i think the police got that part right.
                    The last bit implies JtR decided to write a message while at the crime scene, which is unknowable. He might have, he might not have. If he wrote it, he obviously made the decision to at some point. The cutting of the apron, and the descriptions of the stains on it appearing to reflect that something (hand or knife) was wiped on it, does seem to indicate that's what it was used for, and really, that's an entirely plausible reason. If he's fleeing because PC Harvey's patrol of Church Passage, then bolting and getting out of there will be his first priority. He later wipes and cleans up, and by that time, he could about 5 minutes away, and drops it. It's not that he spent 5 minutes wiping up, rather, he fled for a few minutes, cleans up, drops it, and continues (this is the "didn't go home first" idea). If he did go home first, then again, flee for a few minutes, clean up a bit on the way (since he seems to have wiped something on it), then at some point later, go out and get rid of the soiled material. I suppose he could have used it to wrap up the organs in that case, wiped up after taking them out, etc.

                    Anyway, there are a lot of scenerios that could happen once one starts getting too detailed in filling in the gaps between the bits of evidence. As a result, I think "good stories" can be built around either road in the divergence, meaning the divergence between "dropped during the escape" vs "dropped after making it home first". I suspect the latter makes the graffiti more probable by JtR (but not conclusively so) and the former makes it less likely (but also not conclusively so), as they are different issues.

                    - Jeff

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                      There is no conspiracy from my part I can assure you of that.

                      Let me give you an example of safe and unsafe

                      Dr Browns original signed inquest testimony is safe to rely on, there can be no argument against it.
                      The Telegraph Newspaper report is unsafe to rely on because we dont know if it was written by a reporter who was there or written by a third party and it conflict with Dr Brown description of the apron.

                      Now to accept Dr Browns inquest testimony negates the Telegraph account, and also weakens the suggestion that she was wearing an apron. So of course you and others want to believe the Telegraph account.
                      No, accepting Dr. Browns inquest testimony does not weaken the arguement she was wearing an apron. It weakens the argument that the apron was still tied to the body after she was murdered. What it does not do is weaken the argument that she was wearing an apron at the time she was murdered. You are misinterpreting the evidence that suggests the apron might have been cut such that it was no longer tied to her as if it means she was never wearing it in the first place. That is an invalid inference.


                      I am not going to go over again the flaws with the later identification of the apron by police officers who "recalled" she was wearing an apron but they dont give any indication as to why they remembered, and for the record none of them were involved with the apron piece or the piece from the mortuary. The officer in court could have been shown any old piece of white apron and he would still have said it was from Eddowes.
                      "....The officer in court could have been shown any old piece of white apron and he would still have said it was from Eddowes."

                      Could have ... really? Ok, my counter-argument, which is of equal value to what you just presented is, "No, they wouldn't have'.


                      All I will say is that you clearly have no concept of how to asses and evaluate witness testimony, whether it be on oath or in statement form, perhaps less talking about me in your posts and more about the flaws which I have identified might be more beneficial to your cause. But as it stands you like others simply ignore the obvious and retreat back to the old accepted beliefs, believing that all that was said back then must be the truth when clearly as has been shown to you that is not the case
                      See, you're tendency to resort to adhomin attacks is what results in similar responses. I recognize, though you seem to ignore it when I do, that witness testimony is sketchy. I actually agree with you that, if we had the luxury of being able to interview the witnesses again that there are lots of points that would need to be explored, and clarified, and so forth. But we can't do that as none of them are talking anymore.

                      The difference is, while accepting that witness testimony is often fraught with problems related to the ambiguity of language, mis-recollections, over/under confidence, etc, I don't think it's valid to just throw it all away and fill it in with completely unsubstantiated conjecture at each and every turning point. Some things are clear, like the fact that Eddowes was wearing an apron on the night she was murdered, and that a piece of it was later found in Goulston Street with blood and fecal matter on it. This isn't a theoretical belief that is being held on to, it's just summarizing what the evidence is.

                      How and when it got there is unclear, and there are various theories about that. While I think the "old established belief" is that he dropped it while fleeing the scene, that is challenged by the alternative view that JtR didn't drop it until an hour later. And if you've followed anything I've posted, you will see that your inference that I refuse to consider other possibilities is also unfounded. You have been arguing for changing the evidence, not changing theory.


                      The conflicts in the testimony have been highlighted but again you choose to ignore them
                      Because they are not conflicts, we do not have some people saying "she was definately not wearing an apron" and other saying "she was definately wearing an apron", we only have people saying she was wearing an apron, nobody states she wasn't wearing one, though some failed to mention one (Lawende et al, if they saw Eddowes, did not mention it, but then he didn't see her front on as the man she was with was between them, - and of course, it might not have been Eddowes as well), and the booking officer you mentioned, who simply didn't mention it - he didn't say she was not wearing one. And you of all people should recognize the difference that makes with regards to witness testimony.

                      The evidence to show she was wearing an apron is unsafe, and the evidence to show she was not wearing one at the time of her murder is much greater, and that is a fact.
                      There's an old joke that goes, "How many legs would a dog have if you called it's tail a leg?", and the answer being "Four, calling a tail a leg doesn't make it one". The evidence she was wearing an apron is not unsafe, it comes from multiple independent sources. While yes, I recognize that witness testimony can be blurry and erroneous, we have nothing evidential to suggest that point is incorrect, and given that multiple witnesses all confirm she was wearing an apron, if that is not sufficient to establish that as safe, then you might as well just say "all of the evidence is unsafe", and stop there. Because anything offered that differs from those witnesses is even more unsafe, because it will be based upon nothing at all. Either we draw inferences based upon the information we have, cautious though we have to be in them, or we should just draw no inferences at all.

                      and now I have wasted enough time yet again on this topic. which seems to keep resurfacing 3-4 times each year.

                      - Jeff

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Hi Trevor,

                        Basically, what I'm saying, is that on one level I agree with you, that we cannot forget that eyewitness testimony and statements can be quite wrong. That's always something people need to keep in mind. So, in that respect, all testimony is open to concerns regarding it's safety. Unlike a current investigation, though, we're stuck with what we have and no new testimony can be obtained, and we have no ability to ask questions of those witnesses to get clarification.

                        Where we differ, however, is that while I agree one could argue "all of the evidence is unsafe", if one does that then one has to stop there. We can't then go on to introduce a new interpretation based upon a speculative notion of how that evidence is unsafe. We can't say "what they said is wrong, and I know they should have said this other thing" and then put that forth as evidence. With regards to the apron, if you think the police and other witnesses who state she was wearing an apron is unsafe to rely upon, then all evidence of anything is unsafe. That means you have nothing upon which to build a theory because all the evidence gets thrown away, and we don't get to say "it really was this way" because that opens the door for us to just invent evidence, and that is even more unsafe.

                        Given we're stuck with the statements we have, the best we can do is start with the assumption that while the statements will not be perfectly accurate, they will not be way off base. If we have multiple people, for example, all reporting that Eddowes was wearing an apron, and we have the police confirming that they matched the piece found on Goulston Street with a cut apron found at the crime scene, and we have multiple witnesses stating the apron found at the crime scene looks like the one they saw her wearing, then that has to be treated as a fact; Eddowes was wearing the apron when she was murdered, at some point it was cut, and the missing piece ends up in Goulston Street and was found about an hour later. Arguing that all the witnesses are wrong in stating she was wearing an apron, or arguing that the one found was not the one she was wearing, means that the one was found was a second apron for which we have absolutely no documented evidence independent of the evidence in dispute. This 2nd apron is infinitely more unsafe than accepting the corroboration of multiple witnesses in describing what is as close to a fact as we can ever get in a historical murder case.

                        Now, when we come to suggesting how the cut piece got to Goulston, when was it put there, what was it used for, and so forth, there we are talking about theory, which can be debated, and there outside the box thinking can be very useful. But when it comes to "outside the box thinking" with regards to the basic facts, there has to be an awful lot of compelling reasons that directly contradict the statements and not just the standard "sometimes witnesses get it wrong" concern, which always exits. In a current investigation, those concerns can be addressed by re-interview, double checking details, and so forth. In an historical context, those options are out. I get that your experience with actual criminal investigations must create frustrations because of the inadequacy of the evidence set we have, but that's what we have to work with. If you think what we have is not good enough to work with, then there's no point in trying to interpret any of it. My view is that we need to try and bring the fuzzy bits into focus, and we do that by chipping, very cautiously, at the existing evidence that doesn't fit together as it is given to us.

                        Anyway, I doubt I'll change your mind, and you'll continue to view my statements and arguments as nothing more than touting some established view. The problem is, sometimes the evidence is so clear that it was easy to establish what it meant right away. Simple things, like the wearing of the apron, the taking of organs, victims killed on the spot they were found, are established. Others, like exactly which victims should be considered part of the series, that's more open to debate, and certainly not something I've got any firm conclusions on (so when I do get into discussions, such as about Stride, I'll tend to pick one side and state which assumption I've adopted for the time being, but that's how conversations work, but I also try and make it clear I'm not convinced I've picked the right side).

                        - Jeff

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
                          Hi Trevor,

                          Basically, what I'm saying, is that on one level I agree with you, that we cannot forget that eyewitness testimony and statements can be quite wrong. That's always something people need to keep in mind. So, in that respect, all testimony is open to concerns regarding it's safety. Unlike a current investigation, though, we're stuck with what we have and no new testimony can be obtained, and we have no ability to ask questions of those witnesses to get clarification.

                          Where we differ, however, is that while I agree one could argue "all of the evidence is unsafe", if one does that then one has to stop there. We can't then go on to introduce a new interpretation based upon a speculative notion of how that evidence is unsafe. We can't say "what they said is wrong, and I know they should have said this other thing" and then put that forth as evidence. With regards to the apron, if you think the police and other witnesses who state she was wearing an apron is unsafe to rely upon, then all evidence of anything is unsafe. That means you have nothing upon which to build a theory because all the evidence gets thrown away, and we don't get to say "it really was this way" because that opens the door for us to just invent evidence, and that is even more unsafe.

                          Given we're stuck with the statements we have, the best we can do is start with the assumption that while the statements will not be perfectly accurate, they will not be way off base. If we have multiple people, for example, all reporting that Eddowes was wearing an apron, and we have the police confirming that they matched the piece found on Goulston Street with a cut apron found at the crime scene, and we have multiple witnesses stating the apron found at the crime scene looks like the one they saw her wearing, then that has to be treated as a fact; Eddowes was wearing the apron when she was murdered, at some point it was cut, and the missing piece ends up in Goulston Street and was found about an hour later. Arguing that all the witnesses are wrong in stating she was wearing an apron, or arguing that the one found was not the one she was wearing, means that the one was found was a second apron for which we have absolutely no documented evidence independent of the evidence in dispute. This 2nd apron is infinitely more unsafe than accepting the corroboration of multiple witnesses in describing what is as close to a fact as we can ever get in a historical murder case.

                          Now, when we come to suggesting how the cut piece got to Goulston, when was it put there, what was it used for, and so forth, there we are talking about theory, which can be debated, and there outside the box thinking can be very useful. But when it comes to "outside the box thinking" with regards to the basic facts, there has to be an awful lot of compelling reasons that directly contradict the statements and not just the standard "sometimes witnesses get it wrong" concern, which always exits. In a current investigation, those concerns can be addressed by re-interview, double checking details, and so forth. In an historical context, those options are out. I get that your experience with actual criminal investigations must create frustrations because of the inadequacy of the evidence set we have, but that's what we have to work with. If you think what we have is not good enough to work with, then there's no point in trying to interpret any of it. My view is that we need to try and bring the fuzzy bits into focus, and we do that by chipping, very cautiously, at the existing evidence that doesn't fit together as it is given to us.

                          Anyway, I doubt I'll change your mind, and you'll continue to view my statements and arguments as nothing more than touting some established view. The problem is, sometimes the evidence is so clear that it was easy to establish what it meant right away. Simple things, like the wearing of the apron, the taking of organs, victims killed on the spot they were found, are established. Others, like exactly which victims should be considered part of the series, that's more open to debate, and certainly not something I've got any firm conclusions on (so when I do get into discussions, such as about Stride, I'll tend to pick one side and state which assumption I've adopted for the time being, but that's how conversations work, but I also try and make it clear I'm not convinced I've picked the right side).

                          - Jeff
                          Finally
                          The evidence is there to be challenged and not readily accepted as being correct. Now I accept we cannot cross examine witnesses and that should have been done at the time by both the police and at the inquest, because there were conflicts, which we are now left with. I feel that I have given enough examples of not only conflicts but flaws in the testimony, and that it has now not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt that at the time of her murder she was in fact wearing an apron.

                          If she was not wearing an apron then the killer could not have cut or torn a piece from it and dropped it off in Gouston Street, and that kicks a big hole in the old accepted theory. a big hole that clearly you and others would not wish for.




                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                            it has now not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt that at the time of her murder she was in fact wearing an apron.
                            No it hasn't. The only thing that's been proven is that your definition of "reasonable doubt" is at odds with any sensible application of that term.
                            Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                            "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                              He signed what Crawford and/or his clerk managed to summarise, which can only ever be a précis of what was actually transpired. Luckily, we can fill in the blanks by - carefully - scrutinising what the newspaper reporters recorded, practised as they were, and far more so than the court officials, in shorthand. It is in this way we build up a picture as to what was most likely said.
                              Thats not how it works, when depositions are recorded at court, on completion the witness is asked to read and sign it as being correct, Stop using weak excuses to try to negate that statement of Brown.

                              You build up a picture as to how you want it to be, by inferring that the court deposition is wrong, and that the newspaper reports are right ! Because as I keep stating his deposition weakens the argument that she was wearing an apron, and that apron was still on the body, which we know it wast because had it have been it would have been listed amongst her clothing and not amongst her possessions. Is that so difficult to accept ?

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post

                                No it hasn't. The only thing that's been proven is that your definition of "reasonable doubt" is at odds with any sensible application of that term.
                                Its not about definition, its about the facts and the evidence which go to make up reasonable doubt

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