Hi Dave. Schwartz, walking a distance behind BS Man, would not have been able to witness anything occurring in the passageway of the yard, such as the chatting and tossing down, so it must have been the pavement. I also suspect Stride was not thrown down but fell down. What Swanson and Schwartz didn't know is that Stride had a deformed leg, so her balance would have been compromised. Essentially, what Schwartz saw was a man move a woman out of the way of the gate. He did not witness an "assault" and certainly didn't see Stride murdered as I often see mentioned. BS Man was either Stride's killer, the accomplice to Stride's killer (Pipeman), or he was Morris Eagle returning to the club after walking his girlfriend home and not happy to find an old (to him) gentile prostitute blocking his way.
Wick,
That's what my post said. They were recent, meaning within roughly 15 minutes prior to or after death. As for shoulders, I was paraphrasing, not quoting. Bottom line is Schwartz noticed connection between the man and Stride's shoulder and this was prior to any knowledge of shoulder bruising. Might be a coincidence, might not. Stride's body laid in the yard for many hours before being moved, so the bruising could hot have occurred by the men moving her body. The bruising would not have been caused by sexual intercourse from behind as Stride's dresses would have prevented this possibility. She would have had to bend far over beyond his arm reach, which she would have done if servicing a man, but it would have made his squeezing her shoulders impossible. To be honest, the bruising is the only element of the case that remains a mystery to me, unless we suppose there were two men present.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Wick,
That's what my post said. They were recent, meaning within roughly 15 minutes prior to or after death. As for shoulders, I was paraphrasing, not quoting. Bottom line is Schwartz noticed connection between the man and Stride's shoulder and this was prior to any knowledge of shoulder bruising. Might be a coincidence, might not. Stride's body laid in the yard for many hours before being moved, so the bruising could hot have occurred by the men moving her body. The bruising would not have been caused by sexual intercourse from behind as Stride's dresses would have prevented this possibility. She would have had to bend far over beyond his arm reach, which she would have done if servicing a man, but it would have made his squeezing her shoulders impossible. To be honest, the bruising is the only element of the case that remains a mystery to me, unless we suppose there were two men present.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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