Hi,
If one reads between the lines from an article in The Daily Mail April 30th 1930, one can get a distinct impression that Millers Court was being watched on the night of the 8th November 1888.
According to the paper, a plain clothes detective was positioned close by to the entrance to a court[ which the police believed was a possible location] on the night of the murder .
It states there was only one entrance, and it was a court, which eliminates all of the others, also states that months passed between that occasion and Castle Alley which again gives us a major clue that Millers court was the location being staked out..
The plain clothes officer that was in attendance claimed to have seen nothing, or heard nothing , which suggests that either.
The Officer was lying , possibly because he was concerned for his safety , on tackling a knife welding maniac.
Or we have the distinct possibility that the reason he never saw, or heard nothing unusual , was because Mary Kelly was alive and well throughout the time he was on duty, making it more likely she met her death in the daylight hours.
This surely is another notch for those believers[ I included] who maintain that she was killed around 9,am .
It surely would also please many members of Casebook who believe George Hutchinson was either mistaken on day , or telling lies, for if a officer was on duty , he could not have failed to have seen Mary, and Mr A, enter the court or for that matter Hutchinson loitering close by...
I may have to denounce many years of a solid belief in that guy, but If it gives more credence to a morning murder then so be it.
Regards Richard.
If one reads between the lines from an article in The Daily Mail April 30th 1930, one can get a distinct impression that Millers Court was being watched on the night of the 8th November 1888.
According to the paper, a plain clothes detective was positioned close by to the entrance to a court[ which the police believed was a possible location] on the night of the murder .
It states there was only one entrance, and it was a court, which eliminates all of the others, also states that months passed between that occasion and Castle Alley which again gives us a major clue that Millers court was the location being staked out..
The plain clothes officer that was in attendance claimed to have seen nothing, or heard nothing , which suggests that either.
The Officer was lying , possibly because he was concerned for his safety , on tackling a knife welding maniac.
Or we have the distinct possibility that the reason he never saw, or heard nothing unusual , was because Mary Kelly was alive and well throughout the time he was on duty, making it more likely she met her death in the daylight hours.
This surely is another notch for those believers[ I included] who maintain that she was killed around 9,am .
It surely would also please many members of Casebook who believe George Hutchinson was either mistaken on day , or telling lies, for if a officer was on duty , he could not have failed to have seen Mary, and Mr A, enter the court or for that matter Hutchinson loitering close by...
I may have to denounce many years of a solid belief in that guy, but If it gives more credence to a morning murder then so be it.
Regards Richard.
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