I have been wondering something recently regarding Mrs. Maxwell's testimony.
Does anyone know exactly how the police framed their questions when they talked to her, or what prompted her to come forward? I know a lot of people have speculated that the person Mrs. Maxwell actually spoke to was the woman who was sharing MJK's room, and Maxwell didn't really know who MJK was, but I have a question that frames the problem a little differently:
Did Caroline Maxwell know exactly who the victim was?
Let me explain a little what I'm getting at. No one has so far been able to come up with a photo of MJK, or even a very good description of her. Her corpse* was too mutilated to provide a photographic subject for identification.
For the other 4 canonical victims, we have reasonably good photographs; there seems to be general agreement among people who knew them in life that the person in the mortuary photograph was the person known by that name, so that later, when the police made inquiries, they could take the photograph, and when asking people who were unfamiliar with the victim as a living person, could show the photo, and say "Did you see a woman who looked like this?"
With MJK, they had no photo to show to witnesses, and we really don't know how they described her. If they said "The woman who lives at 13 Miller's Court," unaware at the time that another woman lived there sometimes, then a witness could actually picture Maria Harvey, and not be mistaken in any way that we are thinking, and say she talked to Maria Harvey, and not be mistaken, or lying, or wrong about the day.
It's even remotely possible that somehow, if a photograph existed of Maria Harvey, at one point it was mistaken for a photo of MJK, and shown to potential witnesses, although I think that would have come out, so I doubt it, but I'm suggesting it to underline my point that there may have been a lot of confusion about who was actually dead in Miller's Court.
A mistake on the part of witnesses is not the same thing as a miscommunication between the police and witnesses. If police were unable to make it clear exactly who the victim was, then they couldn't get good information from witnesses.
I recently read a book on memory by one of the foremost researchers on the subject, psychologist Elizabeth Loftus. It seems that people have poor recall for where they first saw or learned something. It's a big problem in witness identification, because people who have been brought in to look at a line-up (I think they are called "identity parades" in the UK) will identify the person who most resembles the person they remember, and then replace the sometimes vague or brief memory they have of the actual crime with the clearer memory of the person in the line-up, but not realize the first time they ever saw the person was in the line-up.
For this reason, some police departments in the US have started using officers who don't know anything about the particular case, or who is the "target" in the line-up, present it to witnesses.
Anyway, once witnesses make a statement to police, that usually becomes the version of events they remember best. I'm not really sure how putting a face to a person fits into this when the police don't have a photo, or even a very good description, but I am wondering if it is somehow possible that Mrs. Maxwell initially gave a statement that was entirely factual, but there was some kind of miscommunication over who exactly the victim was, and later the statement got molded into "Yes, I definitely saw MJK between 8 and 8:30."
*For the record, I think the woman generally known as Mary Jane Kelly, who was the actual tenant in the lower room of 13 Miller's Court, and Joseph Barnett's girlfriend for some time, was the actual victim, and that's who I am referring to as "MJK." Whatever else may have been true of this woman, I don't know, because she may have fabricated all her personal history.
Does anyone know exactly how the police framed their questions when they talked to her, or what prompted her to come forward? I know a lot of people have speculated that the person Mrs. Maxwell actually spoke to was the woman who was sharing MJK's room, and Maxwell didn't really know who MJK was, but I have a question that frames the problem a little differently:
Did Caroline Maxwell know exactly who the victim was?
Let me explain a little what I'm getting at. No one has so far been able to come up with a photo of MJK, or even a very good description of her. Her corpse* was too mutilated to provide a photographic subject for identification.
For the other 4 canonical victims, we have reasonably good photographs; there seems to be general agreement among people who knew them in life that the person in the mortuary photograph was the person known by that name, so that later, when the police made inquiries, they could take the photograph, and when asking people who were unfamiliar with the victim as a living person, could show the photo, and say "Did you see a woman who looked like this?"
With MJK, they had no photo to show to witnesses, and we really don't know how they described her. If they said "The woman who lives at 13 Miller's Court," unaware at the time that another woman lived there sometimes, then a witness could actually picture Maria Harvey, and not be mistaken in any way that we are thinking, and say she talked to Maria Harvey, and not be mistaken, or lying, or wrong about the day.
It's even remotely possible that somehow, if a photograph existed of Maria Harvey, at one point it was mistaken for a photo of MJK, and shown to potential witnesses, although I think that would have come out, so I doubt it, but I'm suggesting it to underline my point that there may have been a lot of confusion about who was actually dead in Miller's Court.
A mistake on the part of witnesses is not the same thing as a miscommunication between the police and witnesses. If police were unable to make it clear exactly who the victim was, then they couldn't get good information from witnesses.
I recently read a book on memory by one of the foremost researchers on the subject, psychologist Elizabeth Loftus. It seems that people have poor recall for where they first saw or learned something. It's a big problem in witness identification, because people who have been brought in to look at a line-up (I think they are called "identity parades" in the UK) will identify the person who most resembles the person they remember, and then replace the sometimes vague or brief memory they have of the actual crime with the clearer memory of the person in the line-up, but not realize the first time they ever saw the person was in the line-up.
For this reason, some police departments in the US have started using officers who don't know anything about the particular case, or who is the "target" in the line-up, present it to witnesses.
Anyway, once witnesses make a statement to police, that usually becomes the version of events they remember best. I'm not really sure how putting a face to a person fits into this when the police don't have a photo, or even a very good description, but I am wondering if it is somehow possible that Mrs. Maxwell initially gave a statement that was entirely factual, but there was some kind of miscommunication over who exactly the victim was, and later the statement got molded into "Yes, I definitely saw MJK between 8 and 8:30."
*For the record, I think the woman generally known as Mary Jane Kelly, who was the actual tenant in the lower room of 13 Miller's Court, and Joseph Barnett's girlfriend for some time, was the actual victim, and that's who I am referring to as "MJK." Whatever else may have been true of this woman, I don't know, because she may have fabricated all her personal history.
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