Originally posted by Wickerman
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Why did you not quote from the court record?
I'll do it for you, and I will emphasize the important passage:
Sarah Lewis having been sworn deposed as follows:
I live at 24 Great Powell Street Spitalfields,
I am a laundress,
I knew Mrs Keyler in Millers Court.
I was at her house at half past 2 on Friday morning.
She lives at No.2 in the Court on the left on the first floor.
I know the time by having looked at Spitalfields Church clock as I passed it.
A number of press copies do phrase it differently, but then they were not being asked to make the distinction that 'you' have created.
'You' are choosing to dismiss an incident where two witness accounts mutually support each other, simply because 'you' are unable to account for roughly 15 minutes that 'you' claim must separate what they both saw, even if what they saw was identical.
Do you grasp how ridiculous that sounds?
Despite your protests, we do not know the precise time Hutchinson took up his vigil.
Also, we do not know the precise time Lewis arrived at Millers court.
You have not explained how any of those points can only be evidence of Kennedy & Lewis being the same person.
It's kind of obvious two women experiencing the same incident will tell the same story.
It is not obvious that the same woman would give two different names & two different addresses, and experience two different incidents on Friday morning.
You failed my dear.
Here we find another point of trivia. Specifically, that in the late 19th century it was more common for a girl to refer to her best friend as her sister.
This as a term of endearment has fallen out of fashion in our modern world. Who knows, maybe Lewis & Kennedy grew up together, maybe sharing the same household?, we simply do not know. Yet, if you take the time to look in a 19th century dictionary, which lists words currently in use, you will find the 19th century meaning of "sister".

"Close female friend"
We don't know if Kennedy was expected to give evidence, the inquest was cut short, terminated on the first day.
Are you suggesting the Evening News were attempting to frame the B.G.Botherer?, especially after this very newspaper had narrowly escaped being sued by John Pizer for libel?
You are really stretching things here.
But this is another example of you inventing anything to support a flawed theory.
So, you are saying the articles posted from 19th century newspapers are fake?
Or, the people who published those articles didn't know what they were talking about?
You know best of course, like many modern theorists, the actual people who lived through the time are all wrong?
It isn't clear what your point is.
Did you read PC Robinson's testimony at the Eddowes inquest:
"...At half-past eight, on the night of Saturday, Sept. 29, while on duty in High-street, Aldgate, I saw a crowd of persons outside No. 29, surrounding a woman whom I have since recognised as the deceased."
We all know Eddowes was arrested while being drunk, impersonating a fire engine.
Testimony by John Kelly.
"I heard she had been locked up at Bishopsgate-street on Saturday afternoon."
"Afternoon" ran from noon until midnight in the late 19th century, the fact people also use "evening" for the latter half of the afternoon is an established fact.
You can argue, or you can learn.
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