Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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"
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The first murder occurred on Saturday night about a quarter to one. That evening there was a discussion in the club: “Should a Jew be a Socialist?” The hall was packed and the discussion was very lively. The debate went on until approximately eleven o’clock. At about 12 o’clock all the non-members scattered, and about twenty of the members remained in the club. These same [members] created a choir and sang various songs, for the most part, Russian.
[P. 3, col. 1 cont’d]
At about one o’clock the steward of the club, Comrade Louis Dimshits, came with his cart from the market. He was the first to notice the dead body.
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These statements would be entirely consistent, both with each other, and with the Schwartz incident, often thought to have occurred around, 12:45. The first bolded sentence is about the time at which Stride was killed. The bold/underlined sentence is about when Deimshutz arrived at the club (1 o'clock according to the AF). And the bolded/italic statement confirms he was the first to find the body.
While the first of the last two sentences, concerning Deimshutz, would be an objective fact, in the sense it is something directly observable. While, obviously, one could question the accuracy of the time, there is no reason to suggest that Deimshutz's arrival is only being theorized (he was obviously there, at the club, so had to arrive, and did so when others were present, etc), and the time of his arrival he states he obtained from a clock, and there is no direct evidence to refute his statement. Also, there was apparently a clock in the club, and given the excitement of the event, it is not a huge stretch to suggest that someone (maybe someone we no longer have the statement of) had checked the time and was able to confirm Deimshutz's arrival time. I don't know that, but given the number of people who where there, and the fact we know those people were eventually questioned, if anyone in the club, known to us or not, checked the club clock, there is no indication that the time Deimshutz gave for his discovery was considered suspect.
The last statement, that Deimshutz was the first to notice the dead body, is an interpretation of course. I could make up a story where someone else found Stride, or noticed her, but never reported it, or didn't realise she was dead (i.e. think Nichols, even after a brief examination of her Cross and Paul both were not sure if she was dead or drunk). Regardless, we can at least draw the inference that Deimshutz was the first to notice the body and raise the alarm, which I believe is the intent and I'm just risking being called pedantic. Challenge accepted.
The first bolded sentence, also has to be viewed as an interpretation. Unless the author of the AF's story murdered Stride, and took note of the time when they did so, they are reporting on what appears to be the time it was believed she was killed. The time she was killed, however, is not the time she was discovered and the general alarm was raised.
In short, the AF's article, as it reports the events and times, does not correspond with the "cover up" theory, which places the time of her discovery at 12:45 ish. AF clearly reports her discovery to have been at 1 o'clock.
- Jeff
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