On another thread the subject of Annie Chapman's murder was touched on,
and specifically the 'No!' heard by Cadoche, followed by a thud against the fence as opposed to the TOD according to the police pathologists, which put the murder at about an hour earlier.
There was of course two other witnesses, Mrs Long who claimed to have seen the victim alive and with a man outside number 29, which despite a minor discrepancy over the time would tend to support Cadoche, and Richardson who came into the yard of 29 slightly earlier and did not see a body.
Wolf Vanderlinden wrote a beautiful dissertation ('Considerable Doubt and the Death of Annie Chapman') which showed how the Coroner prefered to take
the three witnesses accounts above that of the doctors. I was much taken with his account, and it sucessfully showed how Mrs Long and Mr Richardson
could have easily have been mistaken. Even Cadoche wasn't certain that the voice that he heard came from the yard next door. However, that thud on the fence was ultimately too big a 'fly in the ointment' for me in the end, to discount Cadoche's testimony (how could he have been wrong about that ?), and taken together with Mrs Long's couple and the 'No !' there seemed too many coincidences to just sweep under the carpet, and so
finally I came down on the side of the coroner.
And now, I have switched right back to Wolf's side of the argument.
It was Phil H. who suggested that the thud on the fence could have been caused by the back door of 29 banging against it. He is right, because we can watch the clip of James Mason actually in the yard and the space is so tight, that the door could effectively touch the fence. This puts a different complexion on the things, because of course it logically explains the thud, and it need not be either Annie nor her killer who banged the door.
Phil suggested that it was Mr Richardson who lied about not seeing the body.
I had trouble with this, because I find that his statement does not sound
rehearsed (and if he had been sitting on the top step looking down at his boot, and glacing down to the cellar door, then the body would have been masked by the door), and it still left the 'coincidences' of the 'No!' and the couple in the street. And too many coincidences are problematic for me, as
is just throwing out witnesses because they don't fit our favourite scenarios.
But what if all the witnesses were right ? -and the police pathologists , too ?
What if Mrs Long's prostitute and client were about to go into the yard of 29
-but they weren't Annie and Jack (Mrs Long said she didn't pay attention to the couple, as she often saw such couples at that time in the morning).
This explains why the description of 'Jack' is at odds with Lawende's description (I don't buy Jack-of-many-hats).
The prostitute led her client to the yard, and it was they who saw the body
and this unknown woman who Cadoche heard exclaiming 'No!' It may even have been this woman who took Annie's rings -because although I think that Jack stole his victim's money, the rings could have been incriminating. It is one of these people who lean't against the door and made it bang the fence.
I think that it would make perfect sense why a prostitute would not come forward to the police to admit that she had taken a customer to the yard
-it was illegal, and why a man would not come forward to have his name linked to using a prostitute (particularly if he had a wife and family).
In this way the 'coincidences' between Cadoche's statement and Mrs Longs disappear, but Wolf Vanderlinden is still right in his assessment of the murder.
and specifically the 'No!' heard by Cadoche, followed by a thud against the fence as opposed to the TOD according to the police pathologists, which put the murder at about an hour earlier.
There was of course two other witnesses, Mrs Long who claimed to have seen the victim alive and with a man outside number 29, which despite a minor discrepancy over the time would tend to support Cadoche, and Richardson who came into the yard of 29 slightly earlier and did not see a body.
Wolf Vanderlinden wrote a beautiful dissertation ('Considerable Doubt and the Death of Annie Chapman') which showed how the Coroner prefered to take
the three witnesses accounts above that of the doctors. I was much taken with his account, and it sucessfully showed how Mrs Long and Mr Richardson
could have easily have been mistaken. Even Cadoche wasn't certain that the voice that he heard came from the yard next door. However, that thud on the fence was ultimately too big a 'fly in the ointment' for me in the end, to discount Cadoche's testimony (how could he have been wrong about that ?), and taken together with Mrs Long's couple and the 'No !' there seemed too many coincidences to just sweep under the carpet, and so
finally I came down on the side of the coroner.
And now, I have switched right back to Wolf's side of the argument.
It was Phil H. who suggested that the thud on the fence could have been caused by the back door of 29 banging against it. He is right, because we can watch the clip of James Mason actually in the yard and the space is so tight, that the door could effectively touch the fence. This puts a different complexion on the things, because of course it logically explains the thud, and it need not be either Annie nor her killer who banged the door.
Phil suggested that it was Mr Richardson who lied about not seeing the body.
I had trouble with this, because I find that his statement does not sound
rehearsed (and if he had been sitting on the top step looking down at his boot, and glacing down to the cellar door, then the body would have been masked by the door), and it still left the 'coincidences' of the 'No!' and the couple in the street. And too many coincidences are problematic for me, as
is just throwing out witnesses because they don't fit our favourite scenarios.
But what if all the witnesses were right ? -and the police pathologists , too ?
What if Mrs Long's prostitute and client were about to go into the yard of 29
-but they weren't Annie and Jack (Mrs Long said she didn't pay attention to the couple, as she often saw such couples at that time in the morning).
This explains why the description of 'Jack' is at odds with Lawende's description (I don't buy Jack-of-many-hats).
The prostitute led her client to the yard, and it was they who saw the body
and this unknown woman who Cadoche heard exclaiming 'No!' It may even have been this woman who took Annie's rings -because although I think that Jack stole his victim's money, the rings could have been incriminating. It is one of these people who lean't against the door and made it bang the fence.
I think that it would make perfect sense why a prostitute would not come forward to the police to admit that she had taken a customer to the yard
-it was illegal, and why a man would not come forward to have his name linked to using a prostitute (particularly if he had a wife and family).
In this way the 'coincidences' between Cadoche's statement and Mrs Longs disappear, but Wolf Vanderlinden is still right in his assessment of the murder.
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