Originally posted by Graham
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Dr. Bond would need to ask the police that question, so the very fact he was able to use digestion as an estimate means the police had provided him (and Phillips) with an answer.
Whether the answer was correct or not we cannot know.
I do not know if the measurement of rectal temperature was, in 1888, an established procedure to assist in the estimation of t.o.d., but from what I understand of Dr Bond's reporting, he did not carry out this procedure.
From what I understand (don't recall the source this minute), but where a body is mutilated to the degree that the body temperature is compromised, it is the brain that they take the temperature from.
Bill Beadle suggested that in those days it was difficult for t.o.d. to be even approximated,
He also says that Morris Lewis and an unidentified woman claimed to have seen Kelly early on the Saturday morning, but how seriously the police followed up these claims I simply don't know.
Mrs Maxwell said that she had got the date right because it was the day she returned some china borrowed by her husband to a house over the road, but it seems that the police never followed this up, doubtless because they didn't believe her. By her own admission Mrs Maxwell had spoken only twice to Kelly prior to the murder, so it seems she didn't know her very well but probably enough to have recognised her at a short distance.
I really can't see why Mrs Maxwell should have lied. It seems to me that she was confused about the date, maybe even confusing that Saturday morning with the day before. Maybe she'd had a few bevvies herself, and was a bit fluttery as a consequence. Walter Dew said he discounted her evidence, and apparently he knew her quite well.
Graham
Mrs Maxwell said that she had got the date right because it was the day she returned some china borrowed by her husband to a house over the road, but it seems that the police never followed this up, doubtless because they didn't believe her. By her own admission Mrs Maxwell had spoken only twice to Kelly prior to the murder, so it seems she didn't know her very well but probably enough to have recognised her at a short distance.
I really can't see why Mrs Maxwell should have lied. It seems to me that she was confused about the date, maybe even confusing that Saturday morning with the day before. Maybe she'd had a few bevvies herself, and was a bit fluttery as a consequence. Walter Dew said he discounted her evidence, and apparently he knew her quite well.
Graham
The day was Friday, not Saturday, and Maxwell saw Kelly Friday morning, the same day she told police her story.
She saw Kelly and told the police on the same day - so how could 'she' confuse the day?
More likely the woman she saw was not Kelly, IMO.
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