Hi Debra,
You're right. As we comprehend it, the story of Le Grand's involvement in the aftermath of the Stride murder makes absolutely no sense.
I'm not convinced that the two men Stephen White encountered in Berner Street on 4th October were Le Grand and Batchelor. How did a wanted ticket-of-leave man have access to the upper echelons at Scotland Yard? Talk about walking into the lion's den.
During the same period Michael Ostrog was a wanted ticket-of-leave man whose details appeared in the Police Gazette. He was in a Paris prison at the time of the WM, but despite his iron-clad alibi managed to find his way into Macnaghten's Memorandum.
Why didn't Macnaghten suspect Le Grand?
Regards,
Simon
You're right. As we comprehend it, the story of Le Grand's involvement in the aftermath of the Stride murder makes absolutely no sense.
I'm not convinced that the two men Stephen White encountered in Berner Street on 4th October were Le Grand and Batchelor. How did a wanted ticket-of-leave man have access to the upper echelons at Scotland Yard? Talk about walking into the lion's den.
During the same period Michael Ostrog was a wanted ticket-of-leave man whose details appeared in the Police Gazette. He was in a Paris prison at the time of the WM, but despite his iron-clad alibi managed to find his way into Macnaghten's Memorandum.
Why didn't Macnaghten suspect Le Grand?
Regards,
Simon
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