Bridewell:
"In your argument you tie Cross's route to work to various murder sites, with an assumption that he varied his route to take in these locations. It is a little 'inconsistent', is it not, to take a swipe at Ben for what you call an assumption that he may well not have varied his route at all? You are the one making an assumption here, not Ben."
I donīt HAVE to make an assumption. I KNOW that Lechmere - if he was not into twenty-mile treks of the wide variety - DID pass through the approximate territory where the murders occurred. Buckīs Row is a given. Hanbury Street too. George Yard was a VERY short distance from Old Montague Street. Millerīs Court was a totally feasible address to pass by or close to - and Kelly would not have solicited only outside her door, would she?
So no assumption, Bridewell. I instead find it much more of an assumption to suggest that Lechmere may not have used the closest route to his work.
"The actions taken by Cross, after discovering a body, (as confirmed by Paul) are exactly those I would have taken in the same circumstances."
Including leaving a possibly dying woman in the street? Okay.
"Yes, they might also be the actions that an audacious killer would take, but that is a matter of pure speculation."
BOTH things are. If he did not kill, then the killing suggestion is speculation. If he DID kill, then the samaritan suggestion is speculation.
"There is nothing inherently suspicious in what Cross did, much as you may wish it were otherwise."
... and there we are again with two different interpretations. But each to his own!
"How do you read "the likely time of Chapman's murder" as a claim of knowledge? Ben is making an honest statement which, in the heat of an argument, you are seeking to twist into a dishonest one. "
Please donīt accuse me of dishonesty, Bridewell. It could get ugly. What I do is to point to the fact that the possible time-frame for Chapmans demise is a VERY broad one, allowing very much for Lechmere being the killer, either on his way to work or after having started that work. He WAS a carman, and may well have returned eastwards via a common thoroughfare like Hanbury street.
So, no dishonesty intended, and no dishonesty involved, which I kindly ask you to accept.
The best,
Fisherman
"In your argument you tie Cross's route to work to various murder sites, with an assumption that he varied his route to take in these locations. It is a little 'inconsistent', is it not, to take a swipe at Ben for what you call an assumption that he may well not have varied his route at all? You are the one making an assumption here, not Ben."
I donīt HAVE to make an assumption. I KNOW that Lechmere - if he was not into twenty-mile treks of the wide variety - DID pass through the approximate territory where the murders occurred. Buckīs Row is a given. Hanbury Street too. George Yard was a VERY short distance from Old Montague Street. Millerīs Court was a totally feasible address to pass by or close to - and Kelly would not have solicited only outside her door, would she?
So no assumption, Bridewell. I instead find it much more of an assumption to suggest that Lechmere may not have used the closest route to his work.
"The actions taken by Cross, after discovering a body, (as confirmed by Paul) are exactly those I would have taken in the same circumstances."
Including leaving a possibly dying woman in the street? Okay.
"Yes, they might also be the actions that an audacious killer would take, but that is a matter of pure speculation."
BOTH things are. If he did not kill, then the killing suggestion is speculation. If he DID kill, then the samaritan suggestion is speculation.
"There is nothing inherently suspicious in what Cross did, much as you may wish it were otherwise."
... and there we are again with two different interpretations. But each to his own!
"How do you read "the likely time of Chapman's murder" as a claim of knowledge? Ben is making an honest statement which, in the heat of an argument, you are seeking to twist into a dishonest one. "
Please donīt accuse me of dishonesty, Bridewell. It could get ugly. What I do is to point to the fact that the possible time-frame for Chapmans demise is a VERY broad one, allowing very much for Lechmere being the killer, either on his way to work or after having started that work. He WAS a carman, and may well have returned eastwards via a common thoroughfare like Hanbury street.
So, no dishonesty intended, and no dishonesty involved, which I kindly ask you to accept.
The best,
Fisherman
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