Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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You have 3 witnesses to that street from 12:30 until 1am, one with sporadic views but for the last 10 minutes of the hour, on a vigil with a view, none of them saw anyone else or anything happen aside from Goldsteins pass. Ergo...Louis was not seen or heard coming down Berner in order for him to arrive "precisely at 1" as he claimed. I sais he was wrong or he lied, if he was wrong, then how wrong...and if he lied, what really was the timeline.
However, she may have mentioned it implicitly, rather than like this...
I was standing at the door of my house nearly the whole time between half-past twelve and when the steward of the club returned home in his pony cart. He told me he discovered the woman right on one o'clock.
That is, it felt to Fanny like half an hour, all up. Neither 'half-past twelve' or 'one o'clock' came from reading a clock. The later was based on simultaneous events (lockup and arrival) and a chat with the steward - the former by subtraction.
The 4 minute gap thing, breaks that simplicity, and demands that Fanny was constantly observing the time. Same with the 'shortly before a quarter to one' - it's pseudo-precision nonsense.
Again, 3 witnesses to the street between 12:30 and 1am, nothing seen or heard on the street aside from Goldstein. Might that be because the woman was cut shortly after 12:35 and that a hullabaloo was going on inside the gates, out of sight? Rhetorical of course, but Yes, it might be. Could all three street witnesses miss something, I suppose they could but it would seem unlikely. So how do members leave for help unseen before 1am...you ask. Perhaps for the young couple its the beginning of what transpires, something that blossoms into more activity at the club..might they associate the events closer together in recollections? Yes. We know many witnesses had access to timepieces...did they?
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