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Would It Be The Job of the Police Or the Grand Jury to Discredit Schwartz's Testimony

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  • disparities

    Hello Garry.

    "I simply look at the evidence, CD, and in the case of Stride the evidence indicates a number of glaring disparities when compared to the behavioural consistencies relating to the deaths of Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly. It may well be that Stride was a Ripper victim, but we simply cannot arrive at such a conclusion based upon the available evidence."

    Precisely.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Comment


    • Hi Garry,

      By struggle, I was thinking more of her hand and/or arm in the way just as he went to cut. I doubt that would have produced any evidence that it occurred.

      c.d.

      Comment


      • limb

        Hello Pat. Thanks.

        "I think the flower could have been brought for her."

        Entirely consistent.

        "Boyfriends eager to impress are usually their customers."

        So, would I be going out on the proverbial limb were I to suggest that, IF a "boyfriend" had bought it for her, she was not likely soliciting?

        Cheers.
        LC

        Comment


        • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
          Hello Garry.

          "I simply look at the evidence, CD, and in the case of Stride the evidence indicates a number of glaring disparities when compared to the behavioural consistencies relating to the deaths of Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly. It may well be that Stride was a Ripper victim, but we simply cannot arrive at such a conclusion based upon the available evidence."

          Precisely.

          Cheers.
          LC
          Disparities? Yes. Glaring? That seems to be what we constantly argue about.

          c.d.

          Comment


          • Och, lassie, do ye nae prefer asparagus?

            Hello Dave.

            "rose over maidenhair fern"

            There has been a suggestion it was asparagus fern. It's cheaper. (Hmm, must have been a Scots bloke. heh-heh)

            Cheers.
            LC

            Comment


            • Hello Pat

              I think along these lines too but one thing is different with Liz. The Jack we know appeared to be a blitz killer not an arguer? It seems to make it more personal.
              You may well be right...

              However it does seem to me that, if Schwartz is to be believed, whether or not BS is the killer, the initial approach to Liz, the temper loss and the assault are very rapid indeed...it's almost as if there is some kind of predetermined internal agenda there...remember that - from a standing start, it all happens very fast...

              So how much of that brief outburst was a perhaps refused approach, and how much was argument?

              JtR presumably approached the two prior victims before his blitz attack (the principle of which incidentally I support rather than deny) and presumably devoted a little time in so doing...so why shouldn't he with Liz?

              All the best

              Dave

              Comment


              • Alice

                Hello CD. Thanks.

                Well, you recall the official reasoning as to why Alice was discounted? The neck wounds. Yet Alice is a MUCH better fit with Polly and Annie.

                Cheers.
                LC

                Comment


                • Hi Dave,

                  With the other attacks no one heard a peep even though really near.

                  Pat......................

                  Comment


                  • The chap that gave me the corsage stole my mums engagement ring that night, never saw him again !
                    George is really not a flowers person Dave.
                    Hi Pat

                    In which case I definitely stand corrected...and George clearly has much to commend himself for...good for George!

                    In hindsight, the chap who gave you the corsage sounds (in character) rather like some of the young "ladies" I, as a callow youth, had the dubious pleasure of dating back in those late 60's/early 70s - as a relative pauper I was fortunate enough to escape the worst of their depredations, but get where you're coming from....

                    All the best

                    Dave

                    Comment


                    • Hi Lynn

                      So, would I be going out on the proverbial limb were I to suggest that, IF a "boyfriend" had bought it for her, she was not likely soliciting?

                      As she had had long term relationships before, I would have thought more like looking for a relationship. (long term soliciting so to speak)
                      The only odd thing was why wasn't she a bit sozzled that night?

                      I often wondered if she was talking about her bible being left at the lodging house when the chap said "you would say anything but your prayers"

                      Pat.........................................

                      Comment


                      • Alice

                        Hi Lynn

                        "Yet Alice is a MUCH better fit with Polly and Annie"

                        If you mean Alice Mckenzie, witnesses thought she was rushing possibly to work (at that late at night) and explained that she sometimes worked for the Jewish people.
                        Sounds like Liz too?

                        Pat..................................

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
                          By struggle, I was thinking more of her hand and/or arm in the way just as he went to cut. I doubt that would have produced any evidence that it occurred.
                          It would probably have resulted in a cut to her hand, arm or clothing, CD, to say nothing of bloodstaining as the knife penetrated the throat tissue. But then we know that the Ripper subdued his known victims by way of manual strangulation before inflicting the sharp force wounds, meaning that none of them fought back to any appreciable extent. If Stride really did put up some resistance there is even more reason to question the notion of her having been killed by Jack the Ripper.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
                            Posted by Hunter - "Well, the obvious answer would be that Swanson didn't consider Brown's statement useful enough to include in his report to the HO-- maybe even confusing."


                            Thats so illogical it hurts Hunter......
                            Sorry Mike... The last thing I want to do is hurt anyone... especially people I like.

                            How would that be the obvious answer when Brown does appear at the Inquest and Schwartz does not?
                            Well, despite what took place at the inquest (and Baxter was prone to come up with his own ideas no matter what the police might have thought) I was suggesting a possible reason why Chief Inspector Swanson would include Schwartz's police testimony in his summary report on the police investigation into the death of Elizabeth Stride, and not the testimony of James Brown. It would be confusing, to say the least, to the people at the Home Office. Enough ended up being confusing to them anyway, apparently.

                            Swanson knew who he was dealing with. That's one reason why this experienced detective got this job. Warren didn't just pull his name out of a hat. Swanson was representing the police and their investigation, not the coroner. Schwartz's testimony looked like a possible lead, where Brown's offered nothing of the sort. So why add a conflicting testimony into the mix who may have seen someone else anyway?... You know, no flowers seen on the woman's lapel when PC Smith (a policeman) had seen such on the identified victim before Brown stated he saw the couple.

                            Browns woman did not have a flower pinned to her....did the killer do that, or did PC Smith see someone else with a flower at 12:35am?... Follow the evidence amigo...not your beliefs
                            You're telling me to follow the evidence, my good friend? Smith identified the victim at the scene as the woman he saw, and in his statement. And... the victim was found with the floral arraignment on her in death.

                            Sc[h]wartz...not at Inquest...Brown, at Inquest.....so...what did they believe about the events of 12:45 as described by Israel, if they were not presented, noted, referenced or even mentioned?
                            I've already answered that and I believe it is a sound and reasonable explanation, based upon what the police and the coroner were faced with at the time.

                            Of course, Mike, I'm always interested in your take on why Swanson included Israel Schwartz's evidence and not James Brown's in his report to the Home Office. He certainly was aware of both.
                            Best Wishes,
                            Hunter
                            ____________________________________________

                            When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888

                            Comment


                            • C.D

                              By struggle, I was thinking more of her hand and/or arm in the way just as he went to cut. I doubt that would have produced any evidence that it occurred.

                              Wasn't there mention of unexplained blood on the back of her hand? Anyone know what that was all about?

                              Pat............................................... ......

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
                                I strongly suspect you're right...A corsage (how else to describe a rose over maidenhair fern) doesn't somehow seem the sort of thing a woman would've bought for herself...
                                Hello Dave.
                                But where does one get a Rose from in October?, from what I understand Roses were not in season, in October, in those days.
                                The other description suggested by Gardner was, Dahlias, at least they were in season.
                                Regardless, it is more likely that the man bought her this, than herself.
                                Regards, Jon S.

                                Comment

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