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The Schwartz/BS Man situation - My opinion only

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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    Just tell me this; do you suppose both Eagle and Lave had returned to the building before Smith passed?
    If it was soon before...



    ...then one or both would probably have seen Liz Stride and Mr Parcel, and if it were between Smith passing and Fanny going to her door, then they surely would have seen them, and possibly even seen them in the yard.
    So to avoid this possibility, you would probably want both men back inside by about 12:30. Yet this causes some friction...

    Lave: I came out first at half-past twelve to get a breath of fresh air. I passed out into the street, but did not see anything unusual. The district appeared to me to be quiet. I remained out until twenty minutes to one, and during that time no one came into the yard.

    Apparently 12:20 to 12:30 would be a better fit to your theory, and so Lave is 10 minutes 'ahead of time'. Same as Fanny Mortimer?
    As I copied early from Frank, there are around 5 different versions of what Lave said and did. One of them has him in place until 1.10 and seeing nothing which is obvious nonsense.

    It’s all maybe’s. No one can know exactly when each person did what.

    So it could have been, for example, Eagle at 12.33, Smith at 12.34, Mortimer on her doorstep at 12.35. Who knows with Lave?

    Or Smith at 12.34, Eagle at 12.35, Mortimer at 12.36.

    Or Smith at 12.33, Eagle at 12.34, Lave goes into the just after Eagle returned and stands on the pavement looking around for a minute, the goes back into the gates at 12.36 then Mortimer emerges.

    We know that there was no cover up going on so no one needed to lie. Errors yes of course. With these timings you could imagine any number of scenarios involving plots but there would be no evidence for any of them except times. And again, these discrepancies are entirely to be expected. You need a good reason for a plot and not just the ability to weave one into the narrative. A cover up isn’t realistic. It just isn’t.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    The issue is not the time, but who found the body. You are obsessed with times.
    Furthermore, no one has to agree to the 1am arrival time, when that is pretty much when Diemschitz arrived anyway...



    Kozebrodsky told the press...

    About twenty minutes to one this morning Mr. Diemschitz called me out to the yard. He told me there was something in the yard, and told me to come and see what it was.

    Yet in Der Arberter Fraint, the story is quite different...

    From excitement he jumped off the cart, ran through the back door into the club and raised an alarm. Immediately Comrade Gilyarovsky ran into the printing shop and editor’s office that are located in the same building as the club, but separated in the back by the yard.
    There was no one in the printing shop. Comrades Krants and Yaffa were busy in the editor’s office.
    “Don’t you know that a murdered woman is lying in the yard?” Gilyarovsky breathlessly called out. At first the two comrades did not want to believe him. “What, don’t you believe me?” Gilyarovsky quickly asked: “I saw blood.”


    This story contains a contradiction, which was noted long before I came to Casebook.

    Mrs. Deimschitz tells yet another story. There is definitely something we are missing. Either that or there is something that you lot are missing.
    I’m obsessed with times??

    Im the one saying that we should keep nitpicking over them. All of the disputed points are posters talking about times.

    We’re not missing anything of importance. The Arbeiter Fraint story reads like an excerpt from an early ripper book. Why would we take this seriously?

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

    Herlock, at last, you've budged a little from your 1am for Eagle. It's nearly Noon in Australia, but you must be burning the midnight oil? Buoyed up by England's comprehensive wacking of the colonials in the T20?

    Cheers, George
    George,

    I wouldn’t say that it’s a case of ‘budging’ George. I’ve always felt that the approx 20 minutes added to the 12.35 giving 12.55 is close enough especially when Michael suggests a discovery time of 12.45 or before.

    Good win for England but our one day team is as good as any. We can’t say that about our test side unfortunately. I think that our fragile batting line up could be found seriously wanting against the Aussies. We rely too heavily on one batsmen of course. I’m preparing for the worst.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Eagle said 12.35 in The Times version. 20 minutes takes him to 12.55.

    Its close enough when it comes to estimating.

    Where’s the issue?
    Just tell me this; do you suppose both Eagle and Lave had returned to the building before Smith passed?
    If it was soon before...

    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Eagle returns at 12.35. Smith passes at 12.36 and Fanny comes onto her doorstep immediately after him
    ...then one or both would probably have seen Liz Stride and Mr Parcel, and if it were between Smith passing and Fanny going to her door, then they surely would have seen them, and possibly even seen them in the yard.
    So to avoid this possibility, you would probably want both men back inside by about 12:30. Yet this causes some friction...

    Lave: I came out first at half-past twelve to get a breath of fresh air. I passed out into the street, but did not see anything unusual. The district appeared to me to be quiet. I remained out until twenty minutes to one, and during that time no one came into the yard.

    Apparently 12:20 to 12:30 would be a better fit to your theory, and so Lave is 10 minutes 'ahead of time'. Same as Fanny Mortimer?

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Picture the scene….

    Louis Diemschutz: Don’t worry Koz old pal we’ve got this covered. All you have to do when the police talk to you is say that I found the body at 1.00. Ok?

    Isaac Kozebrodski: I just say that you found the body at 1.00

    Luois Diemschutz: That’s it. You’ve got it.

    Isaac Kozebrodski: Ok mate. Thanks.

    10 minutes later…..

    Police Officer: Ok Mr Kozebrodski, when did you first see the body?

    Isaac Kozebrodski: Around 12.45………damn!!!

    Louis Diemschutz looks at the camera and lifts his arms and drops them to his side like Oliver Hardy.
    The issue is not the time, but who found the body. You are obsessed with times.
    Furthermore, no one has to agree to the 1am arrival time, when that is pretty much when Diemschitz arrived anyway...

    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    As for Diemschitz, I don't believe he arrived well before 1am. Perhaps 5 minutes or so, but no more that that.
    Kozebrodsky told the press...

    About twenty minutes to one this morning Mr. Diemschitz called me out to the yard. He told me there was something in the yard, and told me to come and see what it was.

    Yet in Der Arberter Fraint, the story is quite different...

    From excitement he jumped off the cart, ran through the back door into the club and raised an alarm. Immediately Comrade Gilyarovsky ran into the printing shop and editor’s office that are located in the same building as the club, but separated in the back by the yard.
    There was no one in the printing shop. Comrades Krants and Yaffa were busy in the editor’s office.
    “Don’t you know that a murdered woman is lying in the yard?” Gilyarovsky breathlessly called out. At first the two comrades did not want to believe him. “What, don’t you believe me?” Gilyarovsky quickly asked: “I saw blood.”


    This story contains a contradiction, which was noted long before I came to Casebook.

    Mrs. Deimschitz tells yet another story. There is definitely something we are missing. Either that or there is something that you lot are missing.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

    No, to calibrate Mortimer's time intervals with the more reliable police time given by Smith.
    Yet you still accept the 4 minute thing. This leads to supposing that the steward arrived about 12:50. So that carries significant implications, which you have already posted on. Yet those posts raise important questions, some of which I have asked. So far, not many answers.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

    From the Evening News 1 Oct 1888:-
    Kozebrodsky was born in Warsaw, and can only speak English very imperfectly. His information, which we are obliged to give very shortly, is this: "I came into the club about which you are asking me at half-past twelve o'clock.

    More contradictions in press reports - the bane of ripperology.
    Other than the time, that quote contains a very interesting phrase - "His information, which we are obliged to give very shortly..."

    Obliged to give? Was there an insistence that at least one reporter take Kozebrodsky's statement, regardless of his poor English? Why bother though? Is it just a coincidence that IK alone, speaks of a significantly earlier discovery time?

    Poster comment seems to be gratuitous unkindness.
    I'm sorry George, I didn't realize JR had already posted on this. Sometimes I start writing a post and leave it unfinished, while I do other things.

    Nice try Andrew. You left a little bit off that quote:-
    Locking the door, she prepared to retire to bed, in the front room on the ground floor, and it so happened that in about four minutes' time she heard Diemschitz's pony cart pass the house, and remarked upon the circumstance to her husband.
    I don't think that changes anything, George. The reporter is doing a sum. Yet if FM really did speak of '4 minutes', then she either has a super fine-tuned sense of time, or she keeps a fairly constant eye on a clock. If the later, do you suppose the accuracy of that clock would be important to her?

    Keep in mind that there is some pre-inquest nonsense in that report, such as...

    Thus, presuming that the body did not lay in the yard when the policeman passed-and it could hardly, it is thought, have escaped his notice...

    The reporter doesn't even know that the policeman witnessed the soon to be victim - upright and breathing.

    I don't think that I am missing the point Andrew. The 20 minute estimate was being added to a time derived from another estimate that was derived from a guessed starting time. My point is that Eagle's times should be ignored.
    Okay fine. Then we can ignore Eagle as having got the time close to right, as a fluke, or he just overheard something first or second-hand, from the steward.

    Leave a comment:


  • GBinOz
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
    Why is this adjustment of Mortimer's times actually necessary? It is of course, to save Israel Schwartz.
    No, to calibrate Mortimer's time intervals with the more reliable police time given by Smith.

    Leave a comment:


  • GBinOz
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Eagle said 12.35 in The Times version. 20 minutes takes him to 12.55.

    Its close enough when it comes to estimating.

    Where’s the issue?
    Herlock, at last, you've budged a little from your 1am for Eagle. It's nearly Noon in Australia, but you must be burning the midnight oil? Buoyed up by England's comprehensive wacking of the colonials in the T20?

    Cheers, George

    Leave a comment:


  • GBinOz
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    DN, Oct 1: A young Russian Pole named Isaac M. Kozebrodski, born in Warsaw, who speaks the English language imperfectly, gave the following information:-I was in this club last night. I came in about half-past six in the evening.
    The only person who might have been turning up for work after midnight, was Liz Stride.


    No she didn't say that. That was the reporter doing sums...
    ... and it so happened that in about four minutes' time she heard the pony cart pass the house ...

    You're missing my point, George. I'm saying that Eagle estimated he had been back at the club for 20 minutes when the alarm went off.
    From the Evening News 1 Oct 1888:-
    Kozebrodsky was born in Warsaw, and can only speak English very imperfectly. His information, which we are obliged to give very shortly, is this: "I came into the club about which you are asking me at half-past twelve o'clock.

    More contradictions in press reports - the bane of ripperology. Poster comment seems to be gratuitous unkindness.


    Nice try Andrew. You left a little bit off that quote:-
    Locking the door, she prepared to retire to bed, in the front room on the ground floor, and it so happened that in about four minutes' time she heard Diemschitz's pony cart pass the house, and remarked upon the circumstance to her husband.

    I don't think that I am missing the point Andrew. The 20 minute estimate was being added to a time derived from another estimate that was derived from a guessed starting time. My point is that Eagle's times should be ignored.

    Cheers, George

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    No one lied. They had no reason to lie. Errors were made. Rumours occur. Things get exaggerated by ‘Chinese whispers.’
    No one lied, although...

    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    No it doesn’t. The ‘incident’ is purely what occurred in Berner Street. We can’t stretch it out just to make it more unlikely to have been missed. After Schwartz turned out of Berner Street no one saw him or took notice of him.

    Interesting you say that it begins from the point that Stride stands in the gateway because Fanny didn’t see her arrive there. And if Fanny went onto her doorstep at 12.45 this gives the lie to her statement of being on her doorstep for nearly the whole of the 30 minutes between 12.30 and 1.00. It’s half of that time wiped away straight away.

    Again, if she went onto her doorstep at 12.45 for 10 minutes (so until 12.55) why didn’t she see Stride. If the murder took place earlier Stride must have been there.

    Fanny is a useless witness.
    LOL

    An error. A piece of careless recollection. It doesn’t have to be sinister every time we encounter an error. But if she went onto her doorstep just after Smith, so let’s say 12.35, and stayed there for around 10 minutes, so let’s give her 12.45, then it’s reasonable to suggest that the time before this period (12.30-12.35) and the time after (12.45-1.00) when she came back after hearing the disturbance, then she certainly wasn’t on her doorstep most of the time. More like 10 minutes out of 30. So yes, she was wrong.
    FM: I had just gone indoors, and was preparing to go to bed, when I heard a commotion outside, and immediately ran out...

    She had just gone indoors. It wasn't 20 minutes ago. Your theory is based on wishful thinking.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    You're missing my point, George. I'm saying that Eagle estimated he had been back at the club for 20 minutes when the alarm went off. By your own theory that takes us to about 12:50. So I'm pointing out that in Eagle saying that he first saw the body at ~1am, he is out by the same amount, and in the same direction as you suppose Fanny Mortimer was. Was that really the case or is your theory out by 10 minutes?

    In my opinion, this Fanny locked up before 12:45 theory is motivated by a desire to make sense of Schwartz. It is not a neutral theory.
    Eagle said 12.35 in The Times version. 20 minutes takes him to 12.55.

    Its close enough when it comes to estimating.

    Where’s the issue?

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    Forget times!!!!



    Was she telling the truth?



    So is the following a big lie...?

    I was standing at the door of my house nearly the whole time between half-past twelve and one o'clock this morning, and did not notice anything unusual.



    Forget times!!!!



    Who lied? Was it the neighbour on her doorstep, or the man who ran from a murder scene?

    No one lied. They had no reason to lie. Errors were made. Rumours occur. Things get exaggerated by ‘Chinese whispers.’

    So is the following a big lie...?

    I was standing at the door of my house nearly the whole time between half-past twelve and one o'clock this morning, and did not notice anything unusual
    An error. A piece of careless recollection. It doesn’t have to be sinister every time we encounter an error. But if she went onto her doorstep just after Smith, so let’s say 12.35, and stayed there for around 10 minutes, so let’s give her 12.45, then it’s reasonable to suggest that the time before this period (12.30-12.35) and the time after (12.45-1.00) when she came back after hearing the disturbance, then she certainly wasn’t on her doorstep most of the time. More like 10 minutes out of 30. So yes, she was wrong.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

    Andrew, "was the 20 minutes really 30 minutes". It doesn't matter. The twenty minute estimate was being added to the estimate for the round trip to the girlfriend's which on 1 Oct he said started at 12 midnight and at the inquest he said started between 11:30 and 11:45, so by his own admissions he could be +/- 15 minutes out plus any estimating errors. Why do people keep quoting Eagle? His times are rubbish and his perceptions questionable:-
    From the Daily Telegraph account of Eagle's testimony at the inquest:
    [Coroner] Did you see anyone about in Berner-street? - I dare say I did, but I do not remember them.
    [Coroner]
    Did you observe any one in the yard? - I do not remember that I did.

    Eagle is being offered up as a timescale benchmark but no one even knows how long before his starting point guesses that it was that he had actually sighted a clock. The same can be said of Brown and Spooner and Lave. If the times of the police are adopted and other's time interval estimates are applied to police times we will derive a far more accurate picture.

    Cheers, George
    You're missing my point, George. I'm saying that Eagle estimated he had been back at the club for 20 minutes when the alarm went off. By your own theory that takes us to about 12:50. So I'm pointing out that in Eagle saying that he first saw the body at ~1am, he is out by the same amount, and in the same direction as you suppose Fanny Mortimer was. Was that really the case or is your theory out by 10 minutes?

    In my opinion, this Fanny locked up before 12:45 theory is motivated by a desire to make sense of Schwartz. It is not a neutral theory.

    Leave a comment:


  • GBinOz
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    No it’s because we can ask what is likelier. That Fanny missed things because she’d gone indoors (the very thought!) or that Israel Schwartz lied to place himself at the scene of a murder for absolutely no reason.
    The former, I should think!

    Cheers, George

    Leave a comment:

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