Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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Hers is a view looking down Fairclough Street I took recently, from it's junction with Christian Street.
Berner Street crosses where the car on the left side of the road in the distance,( not the one at immediate left of course) is viewed. Notice that I am standing in the middle of the road, Spooner would of course have been on the pavement. I attempted to take a photograph exactly where Spooner would have stood, but from that position Berner Street would have been difficult to point out. Spooner was canoodling with his young woman in the doorway of the Beehive Public House when he was alerted to the murder.
To say he would "have had to have seen Schwartz " fleeing across Fairclough Street in the distance, for a split second, at night in the lighting conditions available is ludicrous.
How can we know if Spooner, and girl, were pointed in the right direction to observe Schwartz? Even if they were, they would in all probability have been too engrossed in each other to take any notice.
Even if they were for some strange reason staring along Fairclough Street at the correct moment in time, considering the lighting conditions, and the distance, and the fact that it would have took Schwartz less than a second to clear Fairclough Street I doubt they would have made him out.
To include him as a witness who discredits Schwartz because he did not see him flee across Fairclough Street is grasping at straws, to say the least. You only deal in facts Mike is that right? Well you needs to get your facts right in this instance.
Regards
Observer
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