Originally posted by JeffHamm
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Im not going to respond to all of the post because frankly much of it is too self serving, just wanted to point out to you that even if the timings are as you suggest above, Spooner then saw men seeking help before Louis says he even arrived. Remember, the established premise is that Louis discovers the victim.
Moving events around a few minutes isnt too problematic in the main, but creating gaps of 20 minutes or so isnt so great. The statements do speak for themselves and the beliefs of the men and women who gave them, when conflicts arise within the time/action reconstructions based on those times we have to assess who to lean towards. I lean towards the men who were each validated by other statements which matched their own in almost every detail and within minutes of each others. Multiple, corroborating statements. The ones that do not record the events and times as those multiple witnesses did, yet have times and events happening within site of and at around the same times, all belong to people directly linked with the club operations economically. To accept their individual non-validated statements as the accurate ones means that all of the multiple corroborating accounts were wrong by roughly the same amount of time,..20 minutes or so.
Surely Im not the only one who sees that as an unsustainable argument. You dont base your premise on singular events in unsubstantiated stories, you look for those that are in agreement in content and actions, and when they are there, thats where any reconstruction has some hope.
The events as recorded by all the witness accounts cumulatively cannot take place. Not at the times given, and in some cases, not with the activities cited. So people are either off accidentally or intentionally. But I doubt multiple accounts were all wrong when they gave the same content and times.
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