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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
    hi wick
    how old were the keylers?


    Im thinking wouldn't it be more natural for lewis to be friends with there daughter, who would be closer to her age, than an older couple? and therefor more reasonable she would go to a younger friends place after a spat with her man?
    how old were the keylers? anyone know?

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    But Kennedy was also placed in the room opposite Kelly's, and heard the fateful cry of "Murder" which might have indicated TOD, and which would have served to corroborat Lewis. Did Crawford flip a coin to decide between Kennedy and Lewis?

    For that matter, if all that was required by the inquest was to establish time and manner of death, and Crawford was such a stickler, why did he bother getting Prater to testify? She, too, heard the same cry as Lewis and Kennedy after all, but offered precious little else.

    At least Kennedy saw a potential Mary Kelly having an altercation with a creepy man that night, which is more than any other witness did, Lewis included.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    But the "Kennedy" story contains detail missing from Lewis's account:
    • Two women (not one) are seen outside the Britannia, only one of whom is talking to a man;
    • A woman (possibly Kelly) exchanges words with Britannia-Man;
    • Britannia-Man asks the woman "Are you coming?" (Lewis, by contrast, doesn't mention any specific utterances);
    • The woman turns 'obstinately' away from the man;
    • The Bethnal Green Botherer [BGB] reported by Kennedy is 5'7", contrasting with the "short" man seen by Lewis;
    • Kennedy gives a more detailed description of BGB's appearance and clothing than Lewis does;
    • Kennedy gives more details about BGB's behaviour (e.g. he appeared "agitated", he said "I only want one of you") than Lewis;
    • Kennedy and companion raise the alarm, calling "Jack the Ripper" as BGB escapes, whereupon he is apprehended by a passing gentleman.

    Given the above, why was it Lewis and not Kennedy who was selected to give evidence? That said, whilst there's a huge amount of overlap, there are differences in detail (e.g. Kennedy doesn't report Wideawake Man), so why weren't both women called? It's not as if Kennedy could have slipped away, because she says that she was kept in Miller's Court whilst the police conducted their enquiries...which also forms part of Lewis's narrative. Hardly surprising, if "Kennedy" was actually Lewis under a different name, or an impostor passing off Lewis's story as her own.
    Gareth, none of this is helpful to an inquest.

    The coroner was interested in the man outside the Britannia, and the loiterer outside Millers Court. We can determine this from the inquest record.
    There is nothing in Kennedy's story which substantially differs from what Lewis said concerning the Britannia-man (BGB).

    Trevor is perfectly correct, the coroner has a duty to pursue the evidence which identifies the victim, and serves to establish the where, when & how the victim met her death.
    The list you provide above is superfluous to that end.

    The only difference of note which we may hi-lite is that Kennedy said she saw Kelly about 3:00. Though this may not have been the issue that some here have tried to create if the cry of murder came sometime between 3:30 - 4:00, as was reported.
    The coroner would take it as a given that the victim was alive until that time. So calling Kennedy to state the obvious is unnecessary.

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    you can only say the same things over and over again for so long before it gets boring, and to me its now getting to that stage now I have to say.
    You shouldn't be so hard on yourself, Trev.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    Quite, but that shouldn't stop us from critically evaluating the plausibility and trustworthiness of their stories.
    What is the point? All we see are the same old issues in ripperology cropping up every so often, with the same handful of resident researchers going over it all again putting forward their same thoughts, and assessment and evaluation of the issues over and over again and getting no where.

    Di Reid

    “I challenge anyone to produce a tittle of evidence of any kind against anyone. The earth has been raked over, and the seas have been swept, to find this criminal 'Jack the Ripper’, always without success"

    They couldn't identify him there and then, in no way he is going to be identified 130 years later, in fact in reality there is not even a prime suspect

    When will it all end ? you can only say the same things over and over again for so long before it gets boring, and to me its now getting to that stage now I have to say.

    Last edited by Trevor Marriott; 12-18-2018, 06:44 AM.

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon View Post
    With a woman, not with my sister which is very likely what she would have said if Mrs Kennedy was such.
    Good call.

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  • Darryl Kenyon
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    If she only corroborated evidence given by another, the police/coroner probably thought there was no point in calling her to say something another witness had already said previous.

    www.trevormarriott.co.uk
    Or alternatively the Police thought the evidence was so close to Sarah Lewis's that she had heard it second hand.
    Being cooped up in Millers Court all morning Sarah's evidence could have spread like wildfire especially if she had a loose tongue.
    Sarah said On Wednesday night I was going along the Bethnal-green-road, with a woman.
    With a woman, not with my sister which is very likely what she would have said if Mrs Kennedy was such.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    It is almost impossible 130 years later to try to establish fully the truthfulness of much of the witness testimony.
    Quite, but that shouldn't stop us from critically evaluating the plausibility and trustworthiness of their stories.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    But the "Kennedy" story contains detail missing from Lewis's account:
    • Two women (not one) are seen outside the Britannia, only one of whom is talking to a man;
    • A woman (possibly Kelly) exchanges words with Britannia-Man;
    • Britannia-Man asks the woman "Are you coming?" (Lewis, by contrast, doesn't mention any specific utterances);
    • The woman turns 'obstinately' away from the man;
    • The Bethnal Green Botherer [BGB] reported by Kennedy is 5'7", contrasting with the "short" man seen by Lewis;
    • Kennedy gives a more detailed description of BGB's appearance and clothing than Lewis does;
    • Kennedy gives more details about BGB's behaviour (e.g. he appeared "agitated", he said "I only want one of you") than Lewis;
    • Kennedy and companion raise the alarm, calling "Jack the Ripper" as BGB escapes, whereupon he is apprehended by a passing gentleman.

    Given the above, why was it Lewis and not Kennedy who was selected to give evidence? That said, whilst there's a huge amount of overlap, there are differences in detail (e.g. Kennedy doesn't report Wideawake Man), so why weren't both women called? It's not as if Kennedy could have slipped away, because she says that she was kept in Miller's Court whilst the police conducted their enquiries...which also forms part of Lewis's narrative. Hardly surprising, if "Kennedy" was actually Lewis under a different name, or an impostor passing off Lewis's story as her own.
    As you know coroners court are there to establish a cause of death and if anyone was responsible. As I have pointed out many times, all throughout the various inquests on the victims we see many ambiguities, which arose, and many witness conflicts which were never explored at the time, and maybe should have been.It is almost impossible 130 years later to try to establish fully the truthfulness of much of the witness testimony.

    All I now see is a plethora from researchers of "what if`s" "perhaps" "maybe" and "I think" 130 years later we are not ever going to get to the real truth.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    If she only corroborated evidence given by another, the police/coroner probably thought there was no point in calling her to say something another witness had already said previous.
    But the "Kennedy" story contains detail missing from Lewis's account:
    • Two women (not one) are seen outside the Britannia, only one of whom is talking to a man;
    • A woman (possibly Kelly) exchanges words with Britannia-Man;
    • Britannia-Man asks the woman "Are you coming?" (Lewis, by contrast, doesn't mention any specific utterances);
    • The woman turns 'obstinately' away from the man;
    • The Bethnal Green Botherer [BGB] reported by Kennedy is 5'7", contrasting with the "short" man seen by Lewis;
    • Kennedy gives a more detailed description of BGB's appearance and clothing than Lewis does;
    • Kennedy gives more details about BGB's behaviour (e.g. he appeared "agitated", he said "I only want one of you") than Lewis;
    • Kennedy and companion raise the alarm, calling "Jack the Ripper" as BGB escapes, whereupon he is apprehended by a passing gentleman.

    Given the above, why was it Lewis and not Kennedy who was selected to give evidence? That said, whilst there's a huge amount of overlap, there are differences in detail (e.g. Kennedy doesn't report Wideawake Man), so why weren't both women called? It's not as if Kennedy could have slipped away, because she says that she was kept in Miller's Court whilst the police conducted their enquiries...which also forms part of Lewis's narrative. Hardly surprising, if "Kennedy" was actually Lewis under a different name, or an impostor passing off Lewis's story as her own.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon View Post
    Mrs Kennedy's statement is of the upmost importance least of all because it corroborates a lot of what Sarah Lewis said.
    And since her statement was taken on the ninth the police would be fully aware of this very important witness, yet she was not called to the inquest we have to ask our selfs why? A woman selling a story she had heard second hand to a newspaper reporter only too willing to pay a shilling or even just for a hot cup of tea and a roll looking for a scoop.
    If she only corroborated evidence given by another, the police/coroner probably thought there was no point in calling her to say something another witness had already said previous.

    Leave a comment:


  • Darryl Kenyon
    replied
    Mrs Kennedy's statement is of the upmost importance least of all because it corroborates a lot of what Sarah Lewis said.
    And since her statement was taken on the ninth the police would be fully aware of this very important witness, yet she was not called to the inquest we have to ask our selfs why? A woman selling a story she had heard second hand to a newspaper reporter only too willing to pay a shilling or even just for a hot cup of tea and a roll looking for a scoop.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Searching residences, taking statements from everyone in Millers Court, Dorset St. & connecting thoroughfares will amount to many hundreds if not well over a thousand statements taken over the weekend.
    And all we have to show for this is nine statements held in the inquest records?

    Inspector Abberline, Inspector Beck, Detective-sergeants, Thicke and White, together with other officers sent specially over from Scotland - yard, are now searching all the houses within a stone's throw of No. 25, Dorset-street. At every street corner excited groups of people are conversing about this, the latest East-end mystery.
    Echo, 9 Nov.

    During the whole of yesterday Sergeant Thicke, with other officers, was busily engaged in writing down the names, statements, and full particulars of persons staying at the various lodging-houses in Dorset-street. That this was no easy task will be imagined when it is known that in one house alone there are upwards of 260 persons, and that several houses accommodate over 200.
    Times, 12 Nov.
    It might have been the case that in 1888 the police only took down written statements from those who could offer any relevant information to the case.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Searching residences, taking statements from everyone in Millers Court, Dorset St. & connecting thoroughfares will amount to many hundreds if not well over a thousand statements taken over the weekend.
    And all we have to show for this is nine statements held in the inquest records?

    Inspector Abberline, Inspector Beck, Detective-sergeants, Thicke and White, together with other officers sent specially over from Scotland - yard, are now searching all the houses within a stone's throw of No. 25, Dorset-street. At every street corner excited groups of people are conversing about this, the latest East-end mystery.
    Echo, 9 Nov.

    During the whole of yesterday Sergeant Thicke, with other officers, was busily engaged in writing down the names, statements, and full particulars of persons staying at the various lodging-houses in Dorset-street. That this was no easy task will be imagined when it is known that in one house alone there are upwards of 260 persons, and that several houses accommodate over 200.
    Times, 12 Nov.

    Leave a comment:


  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi, Jon,

    Oh Boy! Why didn't I think of that?

    I'm glad you have laid this particular mystery to rest.

    Regards,

    Simon

    Leave a comment:

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