Could Mr Schwartz have simply made this story up?He would have known by giving a statement to the police he would come to the attention of journalists who could quite possibly offer some financial reward for his story.
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When was Elizabeth Stride actually killed?
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Originally posted by c.d. View PostI bet our good friend, Michael Richards is out buying a stopwatch and will be up all night compiling an Excel spreadsheet.
Just messin' with you, Michael.
c.d.
Old Mike has already employed the use of an atomic clock to determine the exact timings of all witnesses involved in the Liz Stride case. I believe he has the TOD as 12:44 and 800,176,752,715 nanoseconds a.m. I don't reckon he's far out, I'd plump for a couple of nanoseconds either way.
Regards
Observer
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Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostCould Mr Schwartz have simply made this story up?He would have known by giving a statement to the police he would come to the attention of journalists who could quite possibly offer some financial reward for his story.
On that note, I also entertain the possibility that Schwartz swopped Pipemanīs pipe for a knife when he spoke to the Star, thus providing himself with a good reason for having fled.
The best,
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Bridewell View PostT
Or both if Schwartz was the murderer? Given that his account is out of kilter with that of the other witnesses, and that he ran from the scene of one of the murders, I've often wondered why he seems never to have been under serious consideration as a suspect.
I was just thinking about that the other day. He didnt come forward voluntarily did he? Did the police ever check him out?
I guess the language thing could rule him out, unless he was lying about it."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Christer. If Israel fled from one, he may be a coward, but with PM? Two?
Cheers.
LC
Not that I am going to be able to prove it - itīs just how I read the whole thing.
The best,
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Observer View PostHi Pinkmoon.
If so, he would I am sure be right at home here in Casebook Forums.
ObserverThree things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostBecause this is obviously repeated second hand, it seems like a garbled account of someone watching Diemschitz & Kozebrodski run across Fairclough St. Whoever saw this must have assumed one was chasing the other, in actual fact they were together.
"I ran off at once for the police. I could not find a constable in the direction which I took, so I shouted out "Police!" as loudly as I could."
Diemschitz.
"I went to look for a policeman at the request of Diemschitz or some other member of the club, but I took the direction towards Grove-street and could not find one. I afterwards went into the Commercial-road along with Eagle, and found two officers."
Kozebrodski.
But it was also stated that the time was about quarter to one , well before Diemschitz got back ?
Also Diemschitz was a Member , we don't know about Kozebrodski , only that he was in the Club all evening , Although the fact he was arrested along wit Diemschitz during a disturbance at the club a few months later after a meeting would suggest he was also a member .
The chasing man however , was not a member of their body .
It does sound like ( as Fisherman alluded ) corroboration for Schwartz's story ..
Moonbegger .
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Originally posted by moonbegger View PostHello Wickerman ,
But it was also stated that the time was about quarter to one , well before Diemschitz got back ?
Also Diemschitz was a Member , we don't know about Kozebrodski , only that he was in the Club all evening , Although the fact he was arrested along wit Diemschitz during a disturbance at the club a few months later after a meeting would suggest he was also a member .
The chasing man however , was not a member of their body .
It does sound like ( as Fisherman alluded ) corroboration for Schwartz's story ..
Moonbegger .
The best,
Fisherman
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O tempora . . .
Hello Christer. Thanks.
"We are speaking of Victorian times here, Lynn. . ."
Ah, I was wondering about that.
"And I do think that suddenly appearing knife goes to show he knew."
Or that the Star bloke knew how to conduct a colourful interview.
"Not that I am going to be able to prove it - itīs just how I read the whole thing."
Line forms to the right. (heh-heh)
Cheers.
LC
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The problem here is that we are dealing with estimates both in terms of the witnesses and time of death. Therefore it is impossible to rule out a scenario that has Liz's killer arriving after the B.S. man left the scene which is what I think happened. Yes, it is cutting it close (no pun intended) but still within the realm of possibility.
c.d.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostBut the secretary of the club, remember, claimed that the chasing man was not a member of the club.
If you are correct, then botch the chaser and the chased man WERE club members. Why did the secretary fail to recognize one man and falsely claim that the other was not a club member?
And would he not hear Diemschitz yelling for the police?
It does not pan out, does it?
The best, Jon!
Fisherman
The Secretary is retelling a story he has received, not that he was a witness to this.
I believe he is saying that he cannot remember the name he was given, by whoever told him this. And, it was the opinion of whomever, that one of the men was not a club member, not the Secretaries opinion.
Maybe I'm reading it wrong...
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Edit:
My take here, the Secretary did not witness this, he is retelling a story given him by a Mr. X.
Are we to understand that after Mr X told him this, the Secretary (Wess?) then looked through his club members list (why?), and after not being able to find the mans name, he forgets the name?
Is that likely?
Conversely, Mr X tells the secretary the story and Mr X then says, "I think the chaser was xxxxx, but he is not a member of the club".
It isn't Wess who is saying the man was not a member of the club, it is Mr X.
For Mr X to know this, surely Mr X must be a club member?Last edited by Wickerman; 05-14-2014, 04:12 PM.Regards, Jon S.
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