A little help with nothing, please

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  • jerryd
    replied
    Originally posted by Sleuth1888 View Post
    If there was a cover up, a proper, historical cover-up, of the killer and the events, the press and public would have been all over the police and would have been the first to cry foul of the investigative powers. Would the police have risked covering it up when they could be found out and have even more embarrassment and controversy to contend with?
    Hi Sleuth,

    I'm sure you've heard about Earnest Parke? He is a good example of what happens to a press man that speaks out against the police and government.

    There was a cover-up in the making on the other end of town in 1888/89. It went deeper into the government than just the police. Why is hard to think a cover-up is so far out of the question?

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  • Sleuth1888
    replied
    And also in my opinion the man seen asking Blenkingsopp about the couple was likely a plan clothes detective. Risky for the actual killer to interact with other people like this for fear of acting suspicious.

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  • Sleuth1888
    replied
    Originally posted by TTaylor View Post
    I mean the official legal record - the inquests. Some obvious witnesses were not called, and one eyewitness with a description of the suspect was told not to give evidence on that matter.
    I think it is more likely that the police and coroners wanted to keep information and witness statements out of the public eye in order to put the killer on the back foot. I think the official reports and evidence within them were kept out of the public eye as a failing attempt to restore some balance to the investigation, to stop it being so one sided and futile.

    If there was a cover up, a proper, historical cover-up, of the killer and the events, the press and public would have been all over the police and would have been the first to cry foul of the investigative powers. Would the police have risked covering it up when they could be found out and have even more embarrassment and controversy to contend with?

    Leave a comment:


  • TTaylor
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    What is "the record" that words are kept off?
    I mean the official legal record - the inquests. Some obvious witnesses were not called, and one eyewitness with a description of the suspect was told not to give evidence on that matter.

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  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=TTaylor;384007]Several authors have commented that this man who asked about the couple was most probably the killer. The other entrances to Mitre Square were watched by police officers. However - there is no description of this individual and Blenkinsop was not called as a witness at the inquest.

    There is a pattern, in the investigation, of avoiding the testimony of eye witnesses. Again and again, their words are kept off the record. This does look like a cover up.
    Hi TTaylor,

    Which sources do you refer to and which witnesses?

    Regards, Pierre

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by TTaylor View Post
    Again and again, their words are kept off the record.
    What is "the record" that words are kept off?

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  • jerryd
    replied
    I mentioned in another thread the Rose and Crown coffee shop. It was located on Houndsditch and IIRC near a little cross street that headed directly into St James square. I believe the cross street was Little Duke-street if not mistaken.

    In 1889, after the Cleveland Street scandal erupted, the Rose and Crown was being used by Abberline to sequester witnesses in the CSS case. One such witness for example was a young man named Algernon Allies. He stayed for a time at the Rose and Crown under police protection.

    Just wondering if this coffee shop was used prior to 1889 by the police as a surveillance spot. Possibly for the Clan-na-gael activity in the area and other relative surveillance needs. From this coffee shop, it would have been a short jaunt into St James passage. It's also along the most sensible route Kate might have taken to the square if she indeed turned down Houndsditch.

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  • TTaylor
    replied
    Originally posted by Ausgirl View Post

    - 1.30 am, James Blenkinsop's "respectably dressed man" asked about a couple passing through, which the watchman did in fact see.
    Several authors have commented that this man who asked about the couple was most probably the killer. The other entrances to Mitre Square were watched by police officers. However - there is no description of this individual and Blenkinsop was not called as a witness at the inquest.

    There is a pattern, in the investigation, of avoiding the testimony of eye witnesses. Again and again, their words are kept off the record. This does look like a cover up.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ausgirl
    replied
    Hakeswill, thanks for your thought on the times. I'd wondered whether they'd glanced at a watch, or estimated by walking speed and distance, and the like.

    David, I'm not married to this idea, and I felt slightly silly posting it, but all the same, these things bother at me. I don't like coincidences, at least not in murder cases. Not one bit. They hardly ever turn out to actually be coincidences.

    And I'm not about to go the "Kelly" route, as Kate was living a man named Kelly and 'Mary' was the most common name there was at the time. I'm not that conspiracy-minded. Just a little bit.

    But there, in black and white, we have the possibility that someone was following Eddowes and her 'date'. Which, if any at all, was the killer, or both, is by necessity sheer guesswork. But still, the question is there. There's no mention by any other person, watchman or policeman, that they'd seen a couple in the area, until Lawende and co., a few minutes before Eddowes' death. There's no mention of any detective having followed a couple into the area.

    But there again, by what's said in the reports, one might suppose the streets were completely deserted. No mention of how many people might have actually been about, whether there was prostitutes working the area, people strolling about, or on some late-night business, which wasn't unusual. It seems off to me, that this is not mentioned as I'd expect there to be people here and there.

    If the couple seen passing and the Lawende sighting were the only couples seen in that hour or so, and the streets were otherwise deserted, it'd make some difference to the idea that they possibly were the same couple, and somebody was following them.

    Anyway, thanks for your thoughts, casebookers. It might just to be one of those things that will never cease to bother me, like so many "little things" in so many unsolveds I look at.

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  • Hakeswill
    replied
    I wouldn't go down that road...and don't call me Shirley

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  • David Orsam
    replied
    Surely, if we go down this road, we need to imagine the murderer on the hunt for Mary Kelly (per Stephen Knight) and, with Eddowes eventually giving her name to the police as "Mary Ann Kelly", the murderer, armed with this inside information, thinks he has his woman, only to later realise his mistake and ensure that the real Mary Kelly is his next victim.

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  • Hakeswill
    replied
    - 1.34 (oddly precise..) Lawende & co (jews) coming out of the nearby club, see a man with a woman resembling Eddowes.



    I find the way times were estimated very interesting, though in this case I suspect that the Lawende party left at half past one, then made an estimate that they stood at the doorway for more than a minute but less than five. In the absence of personal timepieces, I think people would feel safer maker guesses near to round numbers and regular occurrences, e.g. 'we leave the club at half one'. Of course for Kate Eddowes specifically the timings are very tight and being able to discount or validate one witness or the other could arguably have an important impact on the known events.
    It would be interesting to know how much variability and 'measurement error' occurs in the eyewitness' perceptions of time.

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  • Ausgirl
    replied
    Originally posted by Rosella View Post
    Yes, I agree, I don't think Kate was surly just cheerfully hiccuping and not wanting to give a name.

    It is intriguing though, all the same, isn't it, Kate's 'I have come back to earn the reward....I think I know him' (the Ripper.) The trouble is that there's no evidence that she really did.

    Did Blenkingsop possess a watch? Was he able to properly estimate the time? If he was twenty minutes out, the respectably dressed gent may well have been a detective. However, it's odd that Blenkingsop wasn't questioned further.
    I left the "I think I know him" part out, as it strikes me as probably apocryphal.

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  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Rosella View Post
    Yes, I agree, I don't think Kate was surly just cheerfully hiccuping and not wanting to give a name.

    It is intriguing though, all the same, isn't it, Kate's 'I have come back to earn the reward....I think I know him' (the Ripper.) The trouble is that there's no evidence that she really did.

    Did Blenkingsop possess a watch? Was he able to properly estimate the time? If he was twenty minutes out, the respectably dressed gent may well have been a detective. However, it's odd that Blenkingsop wasn't questioned further.
    Or Blenkingsop at some stage questioned and it is yet another record that we don't now have available to us.

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  • Rosella
    replied
    Yes, I agree, I don't think Kate was surly just cheerfully hiccuping and not wanting to give a name.

    It is intriguing though, all the same, isn't it, Kate's 'I have come back to earn the reward....I think I know him' (the Ripper.) The trouble is that there's no evidence that she really did.

    Did Blenkingsop possess a watch? Was he able to properly estimate the time? If he was twenty minutes out, the respectably dressed gent may well have been a detective. However, it's odd that Blenkingsop wasn't questioned further.

    Leave a comment:

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