Wick's comments is spot on.
>>1. What Diemshutz says is unproven until such time as it could be substantiated. There are no corroborative accounts.<<
There IS corroborative, you, for some reason, despite being repeatedly told, choose to ignore it
Diemshitz is reported as saying,
" I ... returned home exactly at 1 a.m. Sunday morning. I noticed the time at Harris's tobacco shop at the corner of Commercial-road and Berner-street."
Mortimer claimed,
"Locking the door, she prepared to retire to bed ... in about four minutes' time she heard the pony cart pass the house, and remarked upon the circumstance to her husband."
So, indisputably, we have a pony and cart going down Berner Street very close, "about four minutes" to the time Diemshitz claimed to drive down the street. It has been pointed out to you, but, you've conveniently ignored, the indisputable fact there was no universally synced time in 1888, even more so in the poverty stricken East End where expensive (accurate) clocks did not exist in the houses of the poor.
The time difference is understandable and acceptable to any unbiased serious researcher.
>> Direct Inquest quote from Spooner.."I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard."<<
Note the words "I believe" in that sentence. He doesn't know, he's guessing.
But, yet again you ignore the actual evidence ... his other "direct inquest quotes",
"On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the "Beehive," at the corner of Christian-street and Fairclough-street, along with a young woman."
And very specifically on the subject of his accuracy in time keeping.
"The only means I had of fixing the time was by the closing of the public houses."
Indisputably, Spooner's evidence with regards to time is unreliable, so we have to cross reference what he said with other witnesses to see which time is the more likely.
Spooner claimed, on arriving,
"I put my hand under the chin and lifted it. The chin was slightly warm"
Mortimer said,
"A man touched her face, and said it was quite warm"
Since Mortimer didn't leave her house until some time past 1:am, her statement confirms Spooner's first claim about being outside the Beehive at 1:00 am.
Spooner went on to claim,
"I stood by the side of the body for four or five minutes, until the last witness arrived."
PC Lamb tells us,
"About one o'clock on Sunday morning last I was in Commercial-road, between Christian-street and Batty-street."
Lamb was with the PC who had just finished fixed point duty at 1:am, so we have another independent, reliable, corroboration of Spooner's first time estimate of 1:am.
Solid evidence.
Now let's look at Spooner's other time.
"I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard."
According to your version, Heshburg arrived after hearing the police whistles, Kozebrodski was running around the streets yelling and crowd had gathered, yet Mortimer said,
"I was standing at the door of my house nearly the whole time between half-past twelve and one o'clock this (Sunday) morning, and did not notice anything unusual."
And,
"The quiet and deserted character of the street appears even to have struck her at the time."
Her story of a quiet street, devoid of the things you claim were happening, is also corroborated by Goldstein, Charles Letchford's sister and James Brown.
This is all solid evidence.
Heshburg, who's admits he was guessing the time,
" It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think"
is provably wrong in his time estimate, as we know the police whistle he heard was blown
AFTER 1:00am. Heshburg's time is further disputed by Mortimer, Letchford, Goldstein and Brown who all saw and heard none of claimed noise and panic.
Since Issac uses only "I" when describing what happened when he went out for help..<<
Since you'd have us believe Issacs "I" inviable.
and in the next sentence claim Eagle's "I" is not, you'll understand why we use terms like cherrypicking.
>>1. What Diemshutz says is unproven until such time as it could be substantiated. There are no corroborative accounts.<<
There IS corroborative, you, for some reason, despite being repeatedly told, choose to ignore it
Diemshitz is reported as saying,
" I ... returned home exactly at 1 a.m. Sunday morning. I noticed the time at Harris's tobacco shop at the corner of Commercial-road and Berner-street."
Mortimer claimed,
"Locking the door, she prepared to retire to bed ... in about four minutes' time she heard the pony cart pass the house, and remarked upon the circumstance to her husband."
So, indisputably, we have a pony and cart going down Berner Street very close, "about four minutes" to the time Diemshitz claimed to drive down the street. It has been pointed out to you, but, you've conveniently ignored, the indisputable fact there was no universally synced time in 1888, even more so in the poverty stricken East End where expensive (accurate) clocks did not exist in the houses of the poor.
The time difference is understandable and acceptable to any unbiased serious researcher.
>> Direct Inquest quote from Spooner.."I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard."<<
Note the words "I believe" in that sentence. He doesn't know, he's guessing.
But, yet again you ignore the actual evidence ... his other "direct inquest quotes",
"On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the "Beehive," at the corner of Christian-street and Fairclough-street, along with a young woman."
And very specifically on the subject of his accuracy in time keeping.
"The only means I had of fixing the time was by the closing of the public houses."
Indisputably, Spooner's evidence with regards to time is unreliable, so we have to cross reference what he said with other witnesses to see which time is the more likely.
Spooner claimed, on arriving,
"I put my hand under the chin and lifted it. The chin was slightly warm"
Mortimer said,
"A man touched her face, and said it was quite warm"
Since Mortimer didn't leave her house until some time past 1:am, her statement confirms Spooner's first claim about being outside the Beehive at 1:00 am.
Spooner went on to claim,
"I stood by the side of the body for four or five minutes, until the last witness arrived."
PC Lamb tells us,
"About one o'clock on Sunday morning last I was in Commercial-road, between Christian-street and Batty-street."
Lamb was with the PC who had just finished fixed point duty at 1:am, so we have another independent, reliable, corroboration of Spooner's first time estimate of 1:am.
Solid evidence.
Now let's look at Spooner's other time.
"I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard."
According to your version, Heshburg arrived after hearing the police whistles, Kozebrodski was running around the streets yelling and crowd had gathered, yet Mortimer said,
"I was standing at the door of my house nearly the whole time between half-past twelve and one o'clock this (Sunday) morning, and did not notice anything unusual."
And,
"The quiet and deserted character of the street appears even to have struck her at the time."
Her story of a quiet street, devoid of the things you claim were happening, is also corroborated by Goldstein, Charles Letchford's sister and James Brown.
This is all solid evidence.
Heshburg, who's admits he was guessing the time,
" It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think"
is provably wrong in his time estimate, as we know the police whistle he heard was blown
AFTER 1:00am. Heshburg's time is further disputed by Mortimer, Letchford, Goldstein and Brown who all saw and heard none of claimed noise and panic.
Since Issac uses only "I" when describing what happened when he went out for help..<<
Since you'd have us believe Issacs "I" inviable.
and in the next sentence claim Eagle's "I" is not, you'll understand why we use terms like cherrypicking.
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