>>She did see the young couple, which she later talked to, and thats the couple Brown likely saw...<<
Show everybody the evidence that Mortimer "saw" the couple from her door at the time in question as opposed to merely relating to the reporter a story they told her and we might believe you.
Show everybody the evidence that Mortimer "saw" the couple from her door at the time in question as opposed to merely relating to the reporter a story they told her and we might believe you.
We can all read where Mortimer said the couple told her they heard nothing, that is obvious to everybody. but where does Mortimer say this couple told her anything else?
I've already been over this interview with Mortimer several times, and you still get it wrong!
This, is the tail end of her interview, where we still see she is talking in the first person, singular, indicated by the use of "me" twice.
Then, underlined by me, is the only part where the couple told Mortimer something.
".....It was almost incredible to me that the thing could have been done without the steward's wife hearing a noise, for she was sitting in the kitchen, from which a window opens four yards from the spot where the woman was found. The body was lying slightly on one side, with the legs a little drawn up as if in pain, the clothes being slightly disarranged, so that the legs were partly visible. The woman appeared to me to be respectable, judging by her clothes, and in her hand were found a bunch of grapes and some sweets. A young man and his sweetheart were standing at the corner of the street, about twenty yards away, before and after the time the woman must have been murdered, but they told me they did not hear a sound.
London Evening News, 1st Oct. 1888.
Are we good?
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