Originally posted by Pierre
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostSo when she testifies at the murder inquest, she is not a tape recorder from 9 November. She is a processor, processing knowledge, trying to remember what happened and trying to protect herself. Therefore, the court does not press a button and out comes a recording.
The same goes for the testimony of Lewis. On 9 November she did not know Kelly. But on 12 November she told the court that the sound of the cry seemed to come from the direction of the deceaseds room. If she was a tape recorder, when do you think the last sentence was recorded?
Both women were human beings. Neither of them took any notice of the cry of murder. Prater was so untroubled by the cry that she went back to sleep then went to the pub for a few drinks then went back to sleep again. Neither of them appear to have had any intention of reporting to the police what they heard.
When they learnt that there had been a murder in 9 Millers Court, however, suddenly that cry of murder took on a new meaning for both women and indicated that perhaps they heard an actual murder in process. But there is a danger of them making a false assumption based on what they had discovered isn't there? In fact, the cry might have had nothing to do with Kelly's murder.
As for Lewis saying that the sound seemed to come from deceased's room, I've already pointed out that she was a human not a bat and did not have the power of echo location detection. How could she possibly have known where a single cry of murder came from? After she learns that someone has been murdered, then she says "oh yes I think it came from where that person was murdered". How reliable is THAT?
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostHi Caligo,
Well, they did find people murdered. And they found people kicked or beaten half to death.
They might also have found people spilling a cup of milk on the floor. The problem with the cup-of-milk-example is that such examples wasnīt recorded, as you say.
So in the first type of case, there is:
A: Murder!
B: Murder
and in the second type of case, there is:
A: Murder!
B: Maltreatment/Assault/Battery
And in the third type of case there is:
A: Murder!
B: No report of murder.
Which type of case was it 9 November 1888 in Millerīs Court?
Regards, Pierre
The manner in which your question has been phrased appears to offer only three options or 'types of cases' to those interested in answering it.
That a murder took place sometime that morning is not in question.
That there was a cry of 'Murder!' does not seem to be in dispute, although whether it was one cry or more is a matter of contention.
However, it is in the matter of linking the cry 'Murder!' to the time of the murder that there is an issue. The manner in which you have set out the 'types of cases' seems to indicate that one event is necessarily followed by the other. I think it is unsafe to assume such.
Simply because a cry of 'Murder!' was heard and then later a body was discovered, does not positively indicate that the two occurrences are linked. If we hear an aircraft fly overhead and find out later that one has crashed, it need not be the same ‘plane.
On the evidence regarding the time of death, there is a lack of certainty.
The time of the cry or cries can be better discerned. The testimonies and statements indicate a half hour window, between 3:30 and 4:00 A.M. and seemingly closer to 4:00 A.M.
Based upon all the available evidence, I should be reluctant to assert that the cry of 'Oh,Murder!' was positively related to the actual murder that took place.
May I ask, are you suggesting in your narrative, that Prater was reluctant to investigate the cause behind the cry that she heard because of a general fear or are you suggesting that she was aware of a more specific threat towards herself?
Yours, Caligo.https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/flag_uk.gif "I know why the sun never sets on the British Empire: God wouldn't trust an Englishman in the dark."
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostThe problem, Pierre, is that Cox said that she would have heard a cry had there been one. That was her evidence. She told the coroner "I should have heard any cry of murder I heard nothing".
Cox does insists that she laid on the bed but did not fall asleep, and also that she had not slept all day.
Now, how feasible is that, stay awake all day and at night lay on a bed but not drift off at all through the night?
I think it is very possible that Cox did not hear a scream because she kept nodding off while laid on the bed at least periodically. She did after all live in the last house at the top end of the court, furthest away from the action.
It is possible, so here should be an element of doubt.Regards, Jon S.
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It is doubtful a cry of murder made in Dorset Street would be heard in the court.It is doubtful a cry made in Kelly's room would have the same effect,to Cox,as a cry made in the court itself.I believe a cry of murder was heard by Prater.The question to her should have been how often had she heard the cry made,in the court in the early hours of the morning,and when had been the last occasion prior to the Kelly killing.
It is another occasion where belief seems a more productive method of achieving a starting point.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostLewis said: "I heard a female voice shout loudly one Murder!"
Prater said: "I heard a cry of oh! Murder!...the voice was in a faint voice."
Would you say they are describing the same thing or different things?
Originally posted by Pierre View PostIn the case of the murder on Kelly, Prater lived upstairs and therefore she was one of the neighbours living closest to Kelly.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostBut isn't that speculation Dave, a witness is only supposed to state facts.
To avoid any prolonged discussion on this point, I provide two examples.
The first is from an 1815 trial at the Old Bailey of two men accused of burglary who were convicted and sentenced to death.
See the evidence here of Samuel Mitchell:
"I staid besides the stable; if any one had gone into the stable while I was there I would have seen them".
Then at a 1908 trial at the Old Bailey of attempted murder against Adolph Jacobs.
See the evidence here of Mary Warner:
"I did not know of any quarrel between my father and Emily. There were no rows that night at all. I would have heard them if there had been."
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostCox does insists that she laid on the bed but did not fall asleep, and also that she had not slept all day.
Now, how feasible is that, stay awake all day and at night lay on a bed but not drift off at all through the night?
I think it is very possible that Cox did not hear a scream because she kept nodding off while laid on the bed at least periodically. She did after all live in the last house at the top end of the court, furthest away from the action.
It is possible, so here should be an element of doubt.
When you say "there should be an element of doubt" I must point out that I have been accepting all along that there was some kind of cry of murder but I have been pointing people's attention to the evidence of Prater that such a cry was a common occurrence, therefore I have actually been disregarding the evidence of Cox.
However, Pierre wants to say that Prater was lying about such a cry being a common occurrence. My response is that if she was lying in her evidence then we can't be sure that she even heard a cry. This in turn means that the evidence of Lewis is uncorroborated and we have a situation of Lewis v Cox so that the very existence of the cry is thrown into doubt.
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostThe same thing. It seems likely that, contrary to common belief, Prater did not live in the room directly above Kelly's. From her various descriptions of the lodging house lamps and occurrences in Dorset Street it would appear that she occupied a room at the front of the property - in other words one that overlooked Dorset Street rather than Miller's Court. This would explain why she described the cry of 'Murder!' as not very loud. Sarah Lewis, on the other hand, heard the cry from a position which overlooked the court. Add to this the fact that one of Kelly's windows contained at least one broken pane (and was thereby less able to impede the transmission of sound from within the room) and it becomes obvious why the cry appeared louder to Sarah than it had to Mrs Prater.
Prater also said that the "faint voice" she heard sounded like it came from "close by" which does not make sense if it was the same sound which Lewis heard as a "loud shout".
There is also the fact that Prater said she heard two words "Oh!" and "Murder!" whereas Prater only heard "Murder!".
On the face of it, therefore, I suggest that the only sensible and credible answer to my question is that Prater and Lewis were describing two separate and distinct events.Last edited by David Orsam; 07-05-2016, 10:19 AM.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostOf course I don't just "believe the sources" but, at the same time, you can't just ignore the evidence. As far as I can see, if one is being critical, it's just as likely that there was no cry of murder at all as that Prater was lying about it being a common occurrence.
Anyway, it is not just as likely there was no cry of murder. Absolutely not, since we have two independent sources, and there is no reason to think that the statements were lies. There is no tendency in the sources making us think that. Prater had problems with explaining away the scream. If she had been silent about it, that would have been a different thing, since she lived above Kelly. Yes, I do assume that the scream came from the room of Kelly. So if you dismiss two independent sources, you do ignore the evidence.
Regards, Pierre
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut does Lewis really back Prater's statement?
Lewis said: "I heard a female voice shout loudly one Murder!"
Prater said: "I heard a cry of oh! Murder!...the voice was in a faint voice."
Would you say they are describing the same thing or different things?
And of course Prater said in her written statement:
"I heard screams of murder about two or three times in a female voice".
How can this be explained?
People are not tape recorders, David.
But the time of the experience was the same. The clock is an external device for measurement. That device united the two experiences.
Regards, Pierre
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostUp to a point Pierre. As at 12 November, Prater still did not know whether Kelly was alive or not when she heard the cry of murder on 9 November. This issue was not resolved at the inquest and remains unresolved to this day.
Interesting, isnīt it?
Regards, Pierre
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QUOTE=David Orsam;387005I don't understand all this stuff about tape recorders.
Both women were human beings.
Neither of them took any notice of the cry of murder.
Prater was so untroubled by the cry
that she went back to sleep
then went to the pub for a few drinks then went back to sleep again.
Neither of them appear to have had any intention of reporting to the police what they heard.
When they learnt that there had been a murder in 9 Millers Court, however, suddenly that cry of murder took on a new meaning for both women and indicated that perhaps they heard an actual murder in process.
But there is a danger of them making a false assumption based on what they had discovered isn't there? In fact, the cry might have had nothing to do with Kelly's murder.
As for Lewis saying that the sound seemed to come from deceased's room, I've already pointed out that she was a human not a bat and did not have the power of echo location detection.
How could she possibly have known where a single cry of murder came from? After she learns that someone has been murdered, then she says "oh yes I think it came from where that person was murdered". How reliable is THAT?
Yes, in the sources there is a "before" and an "after". People tell other people what happened before X but since they do tell it after X, we have reason to think they have processed the before after the after and that the processing might have influenced their narratives about before.
So how reliable is that?
And since the material we discuss here is not space, but sources from the past, we need a good historical method.
Regards, PierreLast edited by Pierre; 07-05-2016, 01:47 PM.
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Originally posted by Caligo Umbrator View PostHello, Pierre.
The manner in which your question has been phrased appears to offer only three options or 'types of cases' to those interested in answering it.
That a murder took place sometime that morning is not in question.
That there was a cry of 'Murder!' does not seem to be in dispute, although whether it was one cry or more is a matter of contention.
However, it is in the matter of linking the cry 'Murder!' to the time of the murder that there is an issue. The manner in which you have set out the 'types of cases' seems to indicate that one event is necessarily followed by the other. I think it is unsafe to assume such.
Simply because a cry of 'Murder!' was heard and then later a body was discovered, does not positively indicate that the two occurrences are linked. If we hear an aircraft fly overhead and find out later that one has crashed, it need not be the same ‘plane.
On the evidence regarding the time of death, there is a lack of certainty.
The time of the cry or cries can be better discerned. The testimonies and statements indicate a half hour window, between 3:30 and 4:00 A.M. and seemingly closer to 4:00 A.M.
Based upon all the available evidence, I should be reluctant to assert that the cry of 'Oh,Murder!' was positively related to the actual murder that took place.
May I ask, are you suggesting in your narrative, that Prater was reluctant to investigate the cause behind the cry that she heard because of a general fear or are you suggesting that she was aware of a more specific threat towards herself?
Yours, Caligo.
Of course, there is always the possibility of spurious correlations.
No, we donīt have any sources indicating any specific threat towards Prater. Only a general threat. She barricaded her door with two tables.
Or is it a general threat? Do we know anything about how Prater was thinking about that?
Regards, Pierre
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostNot ignoring the evidence includes doing source criticism. If you donīt do that, if you do no internal and external source criticism, you do ignore the evidence. That is the problem.
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