Tom Wescott writes:
" she wasn't dragged into the yard that way. There would have been signs and she was carefully studied for signs of a struggle or what went on. Also, the scarf was pulled to the side, and if she were dragged, it would have instead been pulled tight under her chin and left a mark there. And of course she would have been dragged on either her front or back, not her side."
This is exactly how I see it too; she probably walked into that yard of her own free will, together with her killer. And he did not make his lethal move until they were well inside the gates, in the dark yard.
...meaning that we have a witness testimony from 12.45, or thereabouts, where she is manhandled by BS man. In the next ten minutes or so, she is killed inside the gates, after Schwartz and Pipeman had left the scene.
This means that there is precious little time to get rid of BS and bring Jack on the stage. If Jack was the perpetrator, we have to accept that Liz somehow rid herself of BS (who showed no signs whatsoever of any wish to get lost), who subsequently left the scene.
After that scare, Jack enters the scene - noticed by nobody - and smooth-talks her into a deal, suggesting to use the yard, where people were coming and going, managing all of this in VERY short time.
After this, he cuts her comparatively shallow, sets his pet interest aside by leaving her uneviscerated, and scampers off towards Mitre Square, leaving Stride in a fetal position that has nothing to do with the positioning of the other victims.
And for some unthinkable reason Stride judges the moment she enters the yard the correct time to bring out her cachous...?
Sorry, but it is NOT a credible scenario, and it is an even less credible outcome if you need to believe in Jack as her killer!
If she entered the yard willingly after the scare with BS man - and everything points to her doing so - she would do that only with somebody she felt at ease with, so much at ease, in fact, that she pulled out her cachous in his company.
If we accept that she knew BS man, we get our explanation to why he tried to drag her away from soliciting, we understand why she agreed to enter the yard with him, we have a plausible condition under which she took out her cachous, plus (and it is a HUUUUGE plus!) we gain the immense advantage of not having to bring a sadistic killer on stage who omitts to do his "thing" though he has the chance to - for we in fact have a witness sighting of a man with whom she had a row a mere minutes before she was found dead. It is the kind of sighting that belongs to every righteous policemans evening prayer. How lucky can you get?
More, much more, complicated cases than this one have been called clear cut, and for very good reasons too. It really is quite simple, once you allow yourself to let go of Jackīs grasp.
The best,
Fisherman
" she wasn't dragged into the yard that way. There would have been signs and she was carefully studied for signs of a struggle or what went on. Also, the scarf was pulled to the side, and if she were dragged, it would have instead been pulled tight under her chin and left a mark there. And of course she would have been dragged on either her front or back, not her side."
This is exactly how I see it too; she probably walked into that yard of her own free will, together with her killer. And he did not make his lethal move until they were well inside the gates, in the dark yard.
...meaning that we have a witness testimony from 12.45, or thereabouts, where she is manhandled by BS man. In the next ten minutes or so, she is killed inside the gates, after Schwartz and Pipeman had left the scene.
This means that there is precious little time to get rid of BS and bring Jack on the stage. If Jack was the perpetrator, we have to accept that Liz somehow rid herself of BS (who showed no signs whatsoever of any wish to get lost), who subsequently left the scene.
After that scare, Jack enters the scene - noticed by nobody - and smooth-talks her into a deal, suggesting to use the yard, where people were coming and going, managing all of this in VERY short time.
After this, he cuts her comparatively shallow, sets his pet interest aside by leaving her uneviscerated, and scampers off towards Mitre Square, leaving Stride in a fetal position that has nothing to do with the positioning of the other victims.
And for some unthinkable reason Stride judges the moment she enters the yard the correct time to bring out her cachous...?
Sorry, but it is NOT a credible scenario, and it is an even less credible outcome if you need to believe in Jack as her killer!
If she entered the yard willingly after the scare with BS man - and everything points to her doing so - she would do that only with somebody she felt at ease with, so much at ease, in fact, that she pulled out her cachous in his company.
If we accept that she knew BS man, we get our explanation to why he tried to drag her away from soliciting, we understand why she agreed to enter the yard with him, we have a plausible condition under which she took out her cachous, plus (and it is a HUUUUGE plus!) we gain the immense advantage of not having to bring a sadistic killer on stage who omitts to do his "thing" though he has the chance to - for we in fact have a witness sighting of a man with whom she had a row a mere minutes before she was found dead. It is the kind of sighting that belongs to every righteous policemans evening prayer. How lucky can you get?
More, much more, complicated cases than this one have been called clear cut, and for very good reasons too. It really is quite simple, once you allow yourself to let go of Jackīs grasp.
The best,
Fisherman
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