Been a little busy the past few days, so I havent had time to address why we should believe Mr Orsams insistence that Liz Prater intended to suggest she heard the cry after 4am;
"The partition was so thin I could have heard Kelly walk about in the room. I went to bed at half-past one and barricaded the door with two tables. I fell asleep directly and slept soundly. A kitten disturbed me about half-past three o'clock or a quarter to four. As I was turning round I heard a suppressed cry of "Oh - murder!" in a faint voice. It seemed to proceed from the court.
[Coroner] Do you often hear cries of "Murder?" - It is nothing unusual in the street. I did not take particular notice.
[Coroner] Did you hear it a second time? - No.
[Coroner] Did you hear beds or tables being pulled about? - None whatever. I went asleep, and was awake again at five a.m. I passed down the stairs, and saw some men harnessing horses. At a quarter to six I was in the Ten Bells.
[Coroner] Could the witness, Mary Ann Cox, have come down the entry between one and half-past one o'clock without your knowledge ? - Yes, she could have done so.
[Coroner] Did you see any strangers at the Ten Bells ? - No. I went back to bed and slept until eleven.
[Coroner] You heard no singing downstairs ? - None whatever. I should have heard the singing distinctly. It was quite quiet at half-past one o'clock. "
I dont see any suggestion she heard it later than approx 3:45, I also note how she addresses her ability to hear things move about in the room, and that after the singing stopped she noted the room was dark.
Im sure some of you learn-ed book writers see some cryptic message from Jack in all that or something equally melodramatic, but all I see is a woman who gives us important data, in quite clear English.. The fact that a second witness heard what she describes as the same type of call out ALSO at 3:45 should cinch the matter, but....
The witness that lived in the same structure as Mary says her room was dark and quiet before 1:30, and she heard a cry out which seemed to "proceed" from the court at approx 3:45. She heard such cries often in the past and paid little attention to them as a serious call for help, yet listened for further noise. That call was all she heard before falling back asleep, ergo, no physical altercation took place in a room below her immediately after the call, and why would there be any need for an immediate one, if Mary willingly let the person in herself. Which again, the evidence strongly indicates.
"The partition was so thin I could have heard Kelly walk about in the room. I went to bed at half-past one and barricaded the door with two tables. I fell asleep directly and slept soundly. A kitten disturbed me about half-past three o'clock or a quarter to four. As I was turning round I heard a suppressed cry of "Oh - murder!" in a faint voice. It seemed to proceed from the court.
[Coroner] Do you often hear cries of "Murder?" - It is nothing unusual in the street. I did not take particular notice.
[Coroner] Did you hear it a second time? - No.
[Coroner] Did you hear beds or tables being pulled about? - None whatever. I went asleep, and was awake again at five a.m. I passed down the stairs, and saw some men harnessing horses. At a quarter to six I was in the Ten Bells.
[Coroner] Could the witness, Mary Ann Cox, have come down the entry between one and half-past one o'clock without your knowledge ? - Yes, she could have done so.
[Coroner] Did you see any strangers at the Ten Bells ? - No. I went back to bed and slept until eleven.
[Coroner] You heard no singing downstairs ? - None whatever. I should have heard the singing distinctly. It was quite quiet at half-past one o'clock. "
I dont see any suggestion she heard it later than approx 3:45, I also note how she addresses her ability to hear things move about in the room, and that after the singing stopped she noted the room was dark.
Im sure some of you learn-ed book writers see some cryptic message from Jack in all that or something equally melodramatic, but all I see is a woman who gives us important data, in quite clear English.. The fact that a second witness heard what she describes as the same type of call out ALSO at 3:45 should cinch the matter, but....
The witness that lived in the same structure as Mary says her room was dark and quiet before 1:30, and she heard a cry out which seemed to "proceed" from the court at approx 3:45. She heard such cries often in the past and paid little attention to them as a serious call for help, yet listened for further noise. That call was all she heard before falling back asleep, ergo, no physical altercation took place in a room below her immediately after the call, and why would there be any need for an immediate one, if Mary willingly let the person in herself. Which again, the evidence strongly indicates.
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