Disproving a Berner Street plot is hardly difficult (it’s already been done) but I thought that I’d put the case against it all into one thread as there are already threads focused on proving all manner of strange things. In a series of minor events in Berner Street involving fallible human beings relying on memory and clocks and watches (that we have no way of checking) it would be more surprising if errors hadn’t occurred but some seem to be of the opinion that we should have been left with a perfectly coherent, precise timetable of events. Life just isn’t like that and if we start out thinking like that then we will be overrun with plots and mysteries. If someone estimates a time certain people on here believe that we should work with that time just because it’s the one quoted. A recent poll on here showed that no one agrees with this approach. I prefer to ask - how did the witness come by that time? - if he saw a clock then when did they last see if? How long was it between him seeing the clock and being asked to recall the time? How did the time by that clock compare with the times by other clocks? - What were the conditions under which he was operating (stressful, not stressful, drunk, sober, preoccupied or not?) These questions can’t usually be answered but they can all contribute in some ways to the times and periods of time that were given. Every single time or estimation of a period of time has to be allowed a margin for error; a potential for inaccuracy. No investigation can proceed honestly without this. I also think that it should be remembered that the majority of witnesses tell the truth as they saw it.
And yet we do have a ‘plot’ to deal with. Roughly it’s this…
That Louis Diemschitz discovered the body earlier than he claimed (sometime around 12.30) and he and the other members feared that the police might hold them responsible for playing host to a ripper murder and close down the club, so they decided over a very few minutes in that yard that they could find a false witness who would claim that he’d seen the woman being attacked and that the killer had called out an anti-Semitic insult (Lipski) proving that the killer wasn’t Jewish and therefore he wasn’t a club member. (Still on their premises though)
Where to start?
The ‘suspicion’ that feeds the plot is based mainly around 6 witnesses. Louis Diemschitz, Abraham Heschberg, Isaac Kozebrodski, Edward Spooner, Israel Schwartz and Fanny Mortimer.
“It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think, when I heard a policeman's whistle blown.”
“About” and “I should think.” Not exactly Mr Confident is he? So we can say with certainty that this man was estimating (what clock did he see last, when did he see it, how accurate was it, how was it compared to other clocks and how good was Heschberg at estimating periods of time?) So we have no way of knowing when he last saw a clock but it certainly wasn’t immediately prior to finding out about the murder or he’d have been confident of the time. He also supposedly heard a policeman’s whistle blown a full 20 minutes before the police actually became aware of the murder; it’s one thing to claim that witnesses were aware of the murder before 1.00 but it’s a whole different issue to suggest that the police did too? Does that seem likely? Or was he simply and honestly mistaken; arriving after the police had been made aware of the murder and after a whistle had been blown…after 1.00 when the body was undoubtedly discovered. I’d suggest that Heschberg shouldn’t rate very highly on anyone’s reliability scale when it comes to timing.
- Isaac Kozebrodski like Heschberg also estimated his time so we know that he hadn’t seen a clock immediately prior to Diemschitz entering the club, so he had to think back to whenever he’d last seen a clock and then estimated a period of time (and as Jeff has explained, this is something that human beings are notoriously bad at - we’ve all at times been shockingly far out when estimating a previous of time). We also know that Isaac had been in that club for 6 hours by the time that the body had been found so it’s worth wondering if he’d been drinking and how heavily (and no, before comments are made I’m not trying to imagine that he was drunk, he may not have touched a drop)? Whatever was the case he was simply wrong. There’s no point in someone saying “there was probably a clock in the club” either. I’ve no doubt that there was but when did Koz last see it…that’s the point? We can’t assume that wherever he was sitting in the club the clock in his view. We know roughly what time Diemschitz and he ran shouting murder thanks to Brown (around 1.00). If we could ask Koz do we think that he’d have said “yeah, after Louis found the body we stood around chatting for 15 minutes before someone came up with the idea of going for a Constable?” After the finding of the body, with all of the ensuing excitement, I’d suggest that finding out and logging an accurate time would have been the last thing on witnesses minds leaving them to rely on fallible memory and fallible judgment of periods of time.
Could there be weaker witnesses to build a plot around than these two? Actually yes there could…step forward Edward Spooner. How can anyone take seriously a witness that gave 2 different times that he supposedly arrived at the yard in the same piece of testimony is beyond comprehension? Yet he’s used as one of Michael’s foundation stones of this ‘plot’. And I really do have to stress this point - Spooner gives two different estimations of the time that he arrived at the yard but Michael turns a repeated blind eye to one to focus every single time on the one that he feels supports his plot.
Spooner said:
“On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the Beehive Public- house, at the corner of Christian-street, with my young woman. We had left a public- house in Commercial-road at closing time, midnight, and walked quietly to the point named. We stood outside the Beehive about twenty-five minutes, when two Jews came running along, calling out "Murder" and "Police." They ran as far as Grove- street, and then turned back. I stopped them and asked what was the matter, and they replied that a woman had been murdered. I thereupon proceeded down Berner-street and into Dutfield's-yard, adjoining the International Workmen's Club-house, and there saw a woman lying just inside the gate.”
And..
“I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard.”
And..
“I stood by the side of the body for four or five minutes, until the last witness (PC Lamb) arrived.”
So where to start with Spooner’s waffle? If he estimated that he arrived at the yard at 12.35 then he must have first seen Diemschitz and Kozebrodski pass between 12.30 and 12.35. A screamingly obvious question then has to be - how many people, when saying that x occurred at location y at say 12.32, would have claimed to have been at y between 12.30 and 1.00? It’s bizarre to give such a pointlessly wide range of times when the event occurred so closely to the first time mentioned. This hardly hints at reliability does it?
Secondly, if the two men passed him at just after 12.30 how come Koz didn’t get to PC Lamb with Eagle until sometime around 1.00? Did they stop off for a bag of chips and a chat on the way? It’s abject nonsense.
Then, the point that Michael avoids, Spooner even contradicts his own claim of arriving at the yard at 12.35 by claiming to have arrived at the yard 5 minutes before Lamb got there. Will any plot supporter stand up and suggest therefore that PC Lamb arrived at the yard at 12.40 or anywhere remotely near to it? Even I doubt that anyone would go that far and little surprises me these days. But this estimation at least has a solid basis (unlike the 12.35) in that he actually saw PC Lamb arrive and we know that Lamb arrived sometime around 1.00 (probably around 5 minutes after Diemschitz got back) - so Spooner arrived around 5 minutes before him and nowhere near to 12.35 (at which time Liz Stride was very much alive)
Then we have the highly inconvenient James Brown who heard men shouting murder at around 1.00 and certainly nowhere near to 12.35 because he gives a reasonably detailed description of what he’d done that night. He’d been to fetch his supper, returned home and had almost finished eating it when he heard the men shouting ‘murder!’ Which means that he heard the men sometime close to 1.00. Spooner’s 12.35 estimate is drivel. A blatant error that shouldn’t be given a second thought.
So Spooner can safely be put alongside…
Louis Diemschitz who said that he arrived at the yard at 1.00.
Mrs. Diemschitz who said that he entered the club at around 1.00.
Mila, the club servant who confirmed the time at 1.00.
Julius Minsky, club member who confirmed Diemschitz’ entry at just after 1.00.
Morris Eagle who confirmed that he was informed about the body at around 1.00.
Gilleman informed Eagle so he could have confirmed the time as around 1.00.
Lamb who said that he saw Eagle at around 1.00.
Brown’s statement points to him hearing the men shouting ‘murder’ at around 1.00.
Spooner who arrived 5 minutes before Lamb arrived, so sometime fairly close to 1.00.
Edward Johnson who received the PC’s call a few minutes after 1.00 (sent by Lamb)
Dr. Blackwell who followed on and arrived at 1.16.
That’s 11 witnesses who all support that Louis Diemschitz found the body at around 1.00 versus the clearly mistaken Heschberg and Kozebrodski plus Spooner who gave a clearly incorrect estimation of 12.35 but a correct ‘5 minutes before Lamb - so just around 1.00). Guess which ones the plot supporters opt to believe? You guessed it. Michael loves to point out that some of these were connected to the club - but it’s just the old ‘well they would say that wouldn’t they’ chestnut. Desperate stuff I’m afraid.
And let’s remember. The police would have interviewed all the club members plus the staff plus the locals and not just the few that I’ve mentioned above. So how many would that have been, 40, 50, more, who knows? They had far more information than we are left with and therefore a bigger, clearer picture to make an assessment from and they very obviously accepted the 1.00 discovery time without question and could see that it made no sense to dismiss a whole raft of witnesses in favour of two whose estimated times didn’t fit. That would be silly wouldn’t it? The police would never solve anything if they adopted that approach. So why does that approach get adopted by some on here? Yes, that was a rhetorical question.
Remember Halse and Long? Both said that they’d passed along Goulston Street at 2.20 and yet they didn’t see each other. If we use the plot supporters Schwartz/ Mortimer logic then either Long or Halse was lying. In the real world we accept that Long and Halse simply missed each other…like Schwartz and Mortimer. It’s very simple.
If we took snapshots of life anywhere in the world and at any time we would see millions of occasions where, in small areas, several people passed but they all managed, purely by chance, not to see or hear each other. It’s happens all of the time, every minute of the day everywhere; it’s just that it doesn’t get noticed, recorded or reported. It’s only when this happens at a location where a murder occurred and we look back on it that chins gets scratched and people say with incredulity “how could this happen?” Or, “it’s a bit of an amazing coincidence isn’t it?” Actually no, there’s nothing remotely remarkable about it. It happens all the time. Nothing that happened in Bucks Row was mysterious with the exception of the killers identity and whether or not he was the ripper?
These witnesses don’t prove or support a plot. We have no evidence of dishonesty but we certainly have evidence of entirely understandable error; the kind that occur in most criminal cases. Why do some believe that errors can’t occur though? Only that they must point to some dark undercurrent. At least ELEVEN witnesses support a 1.00 discovery time whilst TWO don’t. The police accepted a 1.00 discovery time and they interviewed everyone. Simple. Game over.
So how is the plot so far? Well the witnesses are feeble at best and in a very tiny minority and everything points to Stride’s body being found when Diemschitz said that he found it. Around 1.00. On we go…
When the body is found, and in very a short space of time, all members/plotters are of one mind with no dissenters. Getting the killer off the streets is unimportant to them no matter what risks their wives, mothers, daughters and girlfriends might have faced by having a homicidal maniac on the streets. Forget them, the club came first. Later that night the police erased a cryptic piece of graffito hidden away in a doorway because they feared a Jewish backlash. Would they have thought that the Jews would have reacted with more calm if they had decided to close down their club for such a ridiculous reason? Who could believe that?
And that must have been some super-efficient brainstorming session by the way…30 or so members standing in a yard next to a woman with her throat cut, all put on the spot and not one of them refused to cooperate. Every single member and member of staff stood together and agreed 100% on the course of action, with no dissenters. Not one said that they want no part in this insanely risky idea. Not one said that it’s more important that a madman is taken off the streets. Not one suggested any one of the childishly obvious and better alternative plans. And remember, they must have discussed what to do after someone had the bright spark about the club being closed, then someone comes up with this weird planted witness plot, then everyone present has to agree and either play their part or keep silent…all in the space of what, 20 minutes or so?! How can anyone believe that for a single second? Ok. So how do they point the police away from a Jewish killer and away from the club. I can think of a few very easy, very obvious ways… no doubt we could all come up with more:
No, apparently they decided to get someone to lie about being in Berner Street and who would say they they’d seen the woman being attacked. This person would claim that the killer used an anti-Semitic insult which would prove that he was a Gentile (despite the fact that we have evidence that Jews also used this insult to fellow Jews too of course and that more reliable insults could have been employed) So on the spot they were totally confident that they could find a willing dupe? How they alighted on the non-English speaking Schwartz as the ‘perfect’ choice is anyone’s guess?
The first slip up was that they clearly neglected to inform Heschberg and Kozebrodski of the amended discovery time. Louis actually went for a Constable with Koz and so spent extra time with him but the fool still forgot to say:
“Now don’t forget Isaac, I found the body at 1.00 ok, and not at 12.40…so make sure that’s what you tell the police or we’ll all be in deep s***t.”
Doh!
And how careless were these plotters of the risks of lying to the police? The potential problems would have been apparent to anyone:
What if no one was willing to be the false witness? Would you have said yes?
What if someone had seen Diemschitz return on his cart earlier than he’d claimed?
What if someone had been looking out of their window or indeed standing on their doorstep for the whole time between 12.30 and 1.00 and saw nothing?
What if someone had come forward and said that they’d seen Schwartz elsewhere at 12.45?
What if someone had actually seen Stride being attacked but by a man that looked nothing like BS man?
What if someone broke ranks and blabbed to the police? (Perhaps even hoping for financial gain?)
And they don’t even remember to tell their false witness/ tame interpreter that it was the attacker who needed a knife in his hand and not some unconnected bystander.
Doh!
And all of this because someone wishes to keep Jacob Isenschmidt in the game as a killer. It’s surprisingly easy it is to ‘find’ a plot when you really need one and look hard enough. How could anyone have decided to proceed with such a needless, useless, risky plot simply to prevent some entirely unlikely consequence and then forget to tell everyone about it? Whichever way we look at it this plot has more holes than our Swiss butcher’s favourite cheese. There was categorically no plot. How has this gone on so long? The subject as a whole suffers for it.
And yet we do have a ‘plot’ to deal with. Roughly it’s this…
That Louis Diemschitz discovered the body earlier than he claimed (sometime around 12.30) and he and the other members feared that the police might hold them responsible for playing host to a ripper murder and close down the club, so they decided over a very few minutes in that yard that they could find a false witness who would claim that he’d seen the woman being attacked and that the killer had called out an anti-Semitic insult (Lipski) proving that the killer wasn’t Jewish and therefore he wasn’t a club member. (Still on their premises though)
Where to start?
- The whole plot revolves around the use of the word ‘Lipski’ which could only have been used by a Gentile as an insult to a Jew (proving the killer a Gentile)…couldn’t it?
The ‘suspicion’ that feeds the plot is based mainly around 6 witnesses. Louis Diemschitz, Abraham Heschberg, Isaac Kozebrodski, Edward Spooner, Israel Schwartz and Fanny Mortimer.
- Let’s begin with Diemschitz shall we? For some bizarre reason it’s somehow been considered a sign of guilt or suspicion by some that he used the word ‘exactly 1.00’ when describing the time that he got back in his cart. Yes, hard to believe isn’t it? He was quite clear in what he meant…that he took the time 1.00 from the Bakers Clock and then drove his cart from there to the yard (a journey of less than a minute btw) So did he use it or did it come from the reporter? We have no way of knowing but we do know that English wasn’t his first language. What we do know is that to question Diemschitz honesty on this point is pedantry of the worst kind; the kind that’s done deliberately to create a point. Everything that Diemschitz said was perfectly reasonable and not even remotely suspect.
- Now let’s remind ourselves what one of Michael’s ‘star witnesses’ Abraham Heschberg said and we can assess how confident he sounded and how reliable he might have been.
“It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think, when I heard a policeman's whistle blown.”
“About” and “I should think.” Not exactly Mr Confident is he? So we can say with certainty that this man was estimating (what clock did he see last, when did he see it, how accurate was it, how was it compared to other clocks and how good was Heschberg at estimating periods of time?) So we have no way of knowing when he last saw a clock but it certainly wasn’t immediately prior to finding out about the murder or he’d have been confident of the time. He also supposedly heard a policeman’s whistle blown a full 20 minutes before the police actually became aware of the murder; it’s one thing to claim that witnesses were aware of the murder before 1.00 but it’s a whole different issue to suggest that the police did too? Does that seem likely? Or was he simply and honestly mistaken; arriving after the police had been made aware of the murder and after a whistle had been blown…after 1.00 when the body was undoubtedly discovered. I’d suggest that Heschberg shouldn’t rate very highly on anyone’s reliability scale when it comes to timing.
- Isaac Kozebrodski like Heschberg also estimated his time so we know that he hadn’t seen a clock immediately prior to Diemschitz entering the club, so he had to think back to whenever he’d last seen a clock and then estimated a period of time (and as Jeff has explained, this is something that human beings are notoriously bad at - we’ve all at times been shockingly far out when estimating a previous of time). We also know that Isaac had been in that club for 6 hours by the time that the body had been found so it’s worth wondering if he’d been drinking and how heavily (and no, before comments are made I’m not trying to imagine that he was drunk, he may not have touched a drop)? Whatever was the case he was simply wrong. There’s no point in someone saying “there was probably a clock in the club” either. I’ve no doubt that there was but when did Koz last see it…that’s the point? We can’t assume that wherever he was sitting in the club the clock in his view. We know roughly what time Diemschitz and he ran shouting murder thanks to Brown (around 1.00). If we could ask Koz do we think that he’d have said “yeah, after Louis found the body we stood around chatting for 15 minutes before someone came up with the idea of going for a Constable?” After the finding of the body, with all of the ensuing excitement, I’d suggest that finding out and logging an accurate time would have been the last thing on witnesses minds leaving them to rely on fallible memory and fallible judgment of periods of time.
Could there be weaker witnesses to build a plot around than these two? Actually yes there could…step forward Edward Spooner. How can anyone take seriously a witness that gave 2 different times that he supposedly arrived at the yard in the same piece of testimony is beyond comprehension? Yet he’s used as one of Michael’s foundation stones of this ‘plot’. And I really do have to stress this point - Spooner gives two different estimations of the time that he arrived at the yard but Michael turns a repeated blind eye to one to focus every single time on the one that he feels supports his plot.
Spooner said:
“On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the Beehive Public- house, at the corner of Christian-street, with my young woman. We had left a public- house in Commercial-road at closing time, midnight, and walked quietly to the point named. We stood outside the Beehive about twenty-five minutes, when two Jews came running along, calling out "Murder" and "Police." They ran as far as Grove- street, and then turned back. I stopped them and asked what was the matter, and they replied that a woman had been murdered. I thereupon proceeded down Berner-street and into Dutfield's-yard, adjoining the International Workmen's Club-house, and there saw a woman lying just inside the gate.”
And..
“I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard.”
And..
“I stood by the side of the body for four or five minutes, until the last witness (PC Lamb) arrived.”
So where to start with Spooner’s waffle? If he estimated that he arrived at the yard at 12.35 then he must have first seen Diemschitz and Kozebrodski pass between 12.30 and 12.35. A screamingly obvious question then has to be - how many people, when saying that x occurred at location y at say 12.32, would have claimed to have been at y between 12.30 and 1.00? It’s bizarre to give such a pointlessly wide range of times when the event occurred so closely to the first time mentioned. This hardly hints at reliability does it?
Secondly, if the two men passed him at just after 12.30 how come Koz didn’t get to PC Lamb with Eagle until sometime around 1.00? Did they stop off for a bag of chips and a chat on the way? It’s abject nonsense.
Then, the point that Michael avoids, Spooner even contradicts his own claim of arriving at the yard at 12.35 by claiming to have arrived at the yard 5 minutes before Lamb got there. Will any plot supporter stand up and suggest therefore that PC Lamb arrived at the yard at 12.40 or anywhere remotely near to it? Even I doubt that anyone would go that far and little surprises me these days. But this estimation at least has a solid basis (unlike the 12.35) in that he actually saw PC Lamb arrive and we know that Lamb arrived sometime around 1.00 (probably around 5 minutes after Diemschitz got back) - so Spooner arrived around 5 minutes before him and nowhere near to 12.35 (at which time Liz Stride was very much alive)
Then we have the highly inconvenient James Brown who heard men shouting murder at around 1.00 and certainly nowhere near to 12.35 because he gives a reasonably detailed description of what he’d done that night. He’d been to fetch his supper, returned home and had almost finished eating it when he heard the men shouting ‘murder!’ Which means that he heard the men sometime close to 1.00. Spooner’s 12.35 estimate is drivel. A blatant error that shouldn’t be given a second thought.
So Spooner can safely be put alongside…
Louis Diemschitz who said that he arrived at the yard at 1.00.
Mrs. Diemschitz who said that he entered the club at around 1.00.
Mila, the club servant who confirmed the time at 1.00.
Julius Minsky, club member who confirmed Diemschitz’ entry at just after 1.00.
Morris Eagle who confirmed that he was informed about the body at around 1.00.
Gilleman informed Eagle so he could have confirmed the time as around 1.00.
Lamb who said that he saw Eagle at around 1.00.
Brown’s statement points to him hearing the men shouting ‘murder’ at around 1.00.
Spooner who arrived 5 minutes before Lamb arrived, so sometime fairly close to 1.00.
Edward Johnson who received the PC’s call a few minutes after 1.00 (sent by Lamb)
Dr. Blackwell who followed on and arrived at 1.16.
That’s 11 witnesses who all support that Louis Diemschitz found the body at around 1.00 versus the clearly mistaken Heschberg and Kozebrodski plus Spooner who gave a clearly incorrect estimation of 12.35 but a correct ‘5 minutes before Lamb - so just around 1.00). Guess which ones the plot supporters opt to believe? You guessed it. Michael loves to point out that some of these were connected to the club - but it’s just the old ‘well they would say that wouldn’t they’ chestnut. Desperate stuff I’m afraid.
And let’s remember. The police would have interviewed all the club members plus the staff plus the locals and not just the few that I’ve mentioned above. So how many would that have been, 40, 50, more, who knows? They had far more information than we are left with and therefore a bigger, clearer picture to make an assessment from and they very obviously accepted the 1.00 discovery time without question and could see that it made no sense to dismiss a whole raft of witnesses in favour of two whose estimated times didn’t fit. That would be silly wouldn’t it? The police would never solve anything if they adopted that approach. So why does that approach get adopted by some on here? Yes, that was a rhetorical question.
- Then of course we get the Schwartz/ Mortimer nonsense. Of course Mortimer is selected as the paragon of truth but with absolutely no support for it. She said that she was on her doorstep nearly the whole time between 12.30 and 1.00. So not all of the time. She also reckoned that she went onto her doorstep at around 12.45 immediately after hearing a Constable pass. The obvious problem of course is that PC Smith said that he passed 10 minutes or more before that so we have no way of knowing exactly when she was or wasn’t on her doorstep. So what possible use is Fanny? Her testimony is close to useless but she is used to try and dismiss Schwartz, yet equal weight should be given to the suggestion that Schwartz points to her not being on her doorstep at 12.45 because he couldn’t have failed to have seen her had she been there (and certainly not at the time of the incident) The Schwartz incident could only have taken a few seconds to play out so how can it be considered somehow ‘not believable’ that she couldn’t have seen it too or even heard it? Could it get sillier? We can’t even be sure how accurate Schwartz timing was. Perhaps he got it wrong and he’d passed at 12.30 or before? Perhaps she went onto her doorstep at 12.45 but the incident had occurred at 12.43? If she went onto her doorstep just after Smith passed then we would have to assume that she’d gone back inside by 12.40 when Eagle returned as she hadn’t seen him and he hadn’t seen her? Nothing can be inferred from these two statements but of course a plot can easily be woven. You can’t dismiss an events that took a very few seconds by using two estimations who accuracy we are in no position to judge.
Remember Halse and Long? Both said that they’d passed along Goulston Street at 2.20 and yet they didn’t see each other. If we use the plot supporters Schwartz/ Mortimer logic then either Long or Halse was lying. In the real world we accept that Long and Halse simply missed each other…like Schwartz and Mortimer. It’s very simple.
If we took snapshots of life anywhere in the world and at any time we would see millions of occasions where, in small areas, several people passed but they all managed, purely by chance, not to see or hear each other. It’s happens all of the time, every minute of the day everywhere; it’s just that it doesn’t get noticed, recorded or reported. It’s only when this happens at a location where a murder occurred and we look back on it that chins gets scratched and people say with incredulity “how could this happen?” Or, “it’s a bit of an amazing coincidence isn’t it?” Actually no, there’s nothing remotely remarkable about it. It happens all the time. Nothing that happened in Bucks Row was mysterious with the exception of the killers identity and whether or not he was the ripper?
These witnesses don’t prove or support a plot. We have no evidence of dishonesty but we certainly have evidence of entirely understandable error; the kind that occur in most criminal cases. Why do some believe that errors can’t occur though? Only that they must point to some dark undercurrent. At least ELEVEN witnesses support a 1.00 discovery time whilst TWO don’t. The police accepted a 1.00 discovery time and they interviewed everyone. Simple. Game over.
So how is the plot so far? Well the witnesses are feeble at best and in a very tiny minority and everything points to Stride’s body being found when Diemschitz said that he found it. Around 1.00. On we go…
When the body is found, and in very a short space of time, all members/plotters are of one mind with no dissenters. Getting the killer off the streets is unimportant to them no matter what risks their wives, mothers, daughters and girlfriends might have faced by having a homicidal maniac on the streets. Forget them, the club came first. Later that night the police erased a cryptic piece of graffito hidden away in a doorway because they feared a Jewish backlash. Would they have thought that the Jews would have reacted with more calm if they had decided to close down their club for such a ridiculous reason? Who could believe that?
And that must have been some super-efficient brainstorming session by the way…30 or so members standing in a yard next to a woman with her throat cut, all put on the spot and not one of them refused to cooperate. Every single member and member of staff stood together and agreed 100% on the course of action, with no dissenters. Not one said that they want no part in this insanely risky idea. Not one said that it’s more important that a madman is taken off the streets. Not one suggested any one of the childishly obvious and better alternative plans. And remember, they must have discussed what to do after someone had the bright spark about the club being closed, then someone comes up with this weird planted witness plot, then everyone present has to agree and either play their part or keep silent…all in the space of what, 20 minutes or so?! How can anyone believe that for a single second? Ok. So how do they point the police away from a Jewish killer and away from the club. I can think of a few very easy, very obvious ways… no doubt we could all come up with more:
- They move the body a few doors away and then wash away the blood. The police would have seen that the body had been moved of course but they couldn’t have connected it to the club. No need to point to the killer as a gentile. Job done? Nope….too simple.
- Diemschitz could have said that when he arrived a man ran out of the gates carrying a knife. He was blond and with a light moustache so clearly European. He shouted at Diemschitz in a local accent before running away. Job done? Nope….too simple.
- They wrap the body and chuck it onto Diemschitz cart and dump it somewhere while Mrs D and Mila washed away the blood. No need to point to the killer as a gentile. Job done? Nope….too simple.
- They could have got Eagle (someone else who was ‘in on it’) to say that as he arrived back he disturbed a guy standing over the body with a knife. He tackled him with the man saying “get out of my way you Jewish b*****d!” before fleeing. Killer a non-Jew. Job done? Nope…too simple.
- They could have had any member exiting the club to use the outside loo ‘seeing’ a man standing over the body. Blonde, light moustache etc. Job done. Nope…too simple.
No, apparently they decided to get someone to lie about being in Berner Street and who would say they they’d seen the woman being attacked. This person would claim that the killer used an anti-Semitic insult which would prove that he was a Gentile (despite the fact that we have evidence that Jews also used this insult to fellow Jews too of course and that more reliable insults could have been employed) So on the spot they were totally confident that they could find a willing dupe? How they alighted on the non-English speaking Schwartz as the ‘perfect’ choice is anyone’s guess?
The first slip up was that they clearly neglected to inform Heschberg and Kozebrodski of the amended discovery time. Louis actually went for a Constable with Koz and so spent extra time with him but the fool still forgot to say:
“Now don’t forget Isaac, I found the body at 1.00 ok, and not at 12.40…so make sure that’s what you tell the police or we’ll all be in deep s***t.”
Doh!
And how careless were these plotters of the risks of lying to the police? The potential problems would have been apparent to anyone:
What if no one was willing to be the false witness? Would you have said yes?
What if someone had seen Diemschitz return on his cart earlier than he’d claimed?
What if someone had been looking out of their window or indeed standing on their doorstep for the whole time between 12.30 and 1.00 and saw nothing?
What if someone had come forward and said that they’d seen Schwartz elsewhere at 12.45?
What if someone had actually seen Stride being attacked but by a man that looked nothing like BS man?
What if someone broke ranks and blabbed to the police? (Perhaps even hoping for financial gain?)
And they don’t even remember to tell their false witness/ tame interpreter that it was the attacker who needed a knife in his hand and not some unconnected bystander.
Doh!
And all of this because someone wishes to keep Jacob Isenschmidt in the game as a killer. It’s surprisingly easy it is to ‘find’ a plot when you really need one and look hard enough. How could anyone have decided to proceed with such a needless, useless, risky plot simply to prevent some entirely unlikely consequence and then forget to tell everyone about it? Whichever way we look at it this plot has more holes than our Swiss butcher’s favourite cheese. There was categorically no plot. How has this gone on so long? The subject as a whole suffers for it.
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