Hi Stan,
I think it's because the 1891 case wasn't classed as a murder, but thought to be a suicide.
At the inquest, the jury returned an open verdict. The coroner told them it was their duty to assign probabilities and give a probable cause of death. The jury then gave the opinion that the body was found in the water , and there was no evidence to show how she came there.
The coroner said that sometimes the Home Secretary wanted statistics, so the jury might want to say she was probably drowned, and this was added to the verdict.
A woman who viewed the body at the mortuary thought it might be that of her sister who had been missing for a while and had threatened to drown herself, and this evidence was given by police at the inquest.
I think it's because the 1891 case wasn't classed as a murder, but thought to be a suicide.
At the inquest, the jury returned an open verdict. The coroner told them it was their duty to assign probabilities and give a probable cause of death. The jury then gave the opinion that the body was found in the water , and there was no evidence to show how she came there.
The coroner said that sometimes the Home Secretary wanted statistics, so the jury might want to say she was probably drowned, and this was added to the verdict.
A woman who viewed the body at the mortuary thought it might be that of her sister who had been missing for a while and had threatened to drown herself, and this evidence was given by police at the inquest.
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