>>Wess wears some different clothing and voila, Smith wouldn't likely have picked him out of a lineup.<<
Sadly, I'm old enough to remember beat Bobbies. They knew the locals. But, more than knowing the locals, the club was not just another house. It was a place police on the beat would have been told to specifically observe. Apart from the radical anarchists, there were regular political rallies and religious disturbances. On top of that, it had been a centre for the Match Girls strike earlier the year. Wess would have been well-known to local police. Had it have been Wess, Smith would almost certainly have known. If the paper parcel he observed had been a bundle of subversive newspapers he would have noted that too, I'm sure.
But, however implausible, let's look at the ramifications of your theory.
If Wess knew he had been seen with Mrs Stride by a policeman, would he be likely to increase his profile as he did? He went to Leman Street police station, voluntarily, to translate for Goldstein, he would have no idea how well Smith might have seen him when he did that. He then went to the newspapers to tell the story, insuring his raised public profile. He invited the press into the club and let them interview him the day after the murder. He attended the inquest. He stayed in the area that was Smith's beat.
Are these the actions of a man in fear of being recognised?
Hardly!
Never say never, but the idea of Wess being the man Smith saw is incredibly unlikely.
Sadly, I'm old enough to remember beat Bobbies. They knew the locals. But, more than knowing the locals, the club was not just another house. It was a place police on the beat would have been told to specifically observe. Apart from the radical anarchists, there were regular political rallies and religious disturbances. On top of that, it had been a centre for the Match Girls strike earlier the year. Wess would have been well-known to local police. Had it have been Wess, Smith would almost certainly have known. If the paper parcel he observed had been a bundle of subversive newspapers he would have noted that too, I'm sure.
But, however implausible, let's look at the ramifications of your theory.
If Wess knew he had been seen with Mrs Stride by a policeman, would he be likely to increase his profile as he did? He went to Leman Street police station, voluntarily, to translate for Goldstein, he would have no idea how well Smith might have seen him when he did that. He then went to the newspapers to tell the story, insuring his raised public profile. He invited the press into the club and let them interview him the day after the murder. He attended the inquest. He stayed in the area that was Smith's beat.
Are these the actions of a man in fear of being recognised?
Hardly!
Never say never, but the idea of Wess being the man Smith saw is incredibly unlikely.
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