Hi CD,
Because that's the indication from Schwartz's account. We can't pin some aggressive behaviour onto Stride herself with no evidence. We do know that BS-man didn't shove him first becaue Schwartz witnessed the man stop and talk to her. He didn't observe any belligerance whatsoever on Stride's part.
I'm not sure what point you're trying to make. All serial killer murders start with an attack. If Kurten, Sutcliffe, Pitchfork or Napper were witnessed by a policeman in the earlier throes of an attack, the chances are strong that it would resemble the broad-shouldered attack in many respects. If the policeman knew that there was a serial killer active on the district, and found a knife on the attacker he caught, you can bet everything you hold dear that the policeman would not have released him on the spot with a simple "admonition", and the same is true of the broad-shouldered attack if that was witnessed by a policeman.
But a prostitute being attacked and manhandled assumes an obvious resonance in the context of the fact that a serial killer was active in the district, and the fact that the victim was murdered just moments after the attack. Without question, both crucial factors elevate the significance of the attack witnessed by Schwartz well above that of a casual street attack.
But if we remind ourselves that Stride was murdered just minutes after this attack, it's practically certain that he didn't just "walk away", but continued in the attack that resulted in her death.
Best regards,
Ben
You continue to insist that Liz being thrown to the ground constituted a vicious and unprovoked attack.
If the BS man could give a reasonable explanation for his actions, I would venture to say that based on the policeman's mood that evening and his feelings towards prostitutes that he might have let the BS man go with a simple admonition to go on home.
Would the newspaper headlines scream "prostitute thrown to the ground" "police vow full investigation?"
But if the BS man simply cussed her out afterwards and walked away it seems a lot less sinister and very far from vicious.
Best regards,
Ben
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