Sally:
"Exactly so Fisherman. And what does that tell us? That it was unremarkable."
It was, yes - but that has no bearing on the question whether the police invested faith in it or not. Please read my answer to Ben, and you will see why.
"You appear to place considerable importance on Lewis 'changing' her testimony ..."
Yes. If you know of any judicial area where it is considered of no interest that a witness alters his or her testimony, I would be interested to share in that knowledge.
" ... as if this makes her an unreliable witness."
Well, believe it or not, Sally, but that is exactly how these things work. Changing your testimony is normally the exact same thing as opening it up to suspicion. But the term "suspicion" does not necessarily reflect poorly on the witness, it is meant in a wider sense: a suspicion that the testimony may be incorrect, if you will.
There will be degrees in this, of course. First saying "Yes, I saw mr Bellybottom strangle the woman", and then saying "What? Mr Bellybottom? No, no, I cannot possibly have said such a thing. I saw nothing", is a bit more damning than first saying "I cannot describe him" and then suddenly describe the make of hat, the colour of it, bodily stature and length and give a rather detailed version of what the man did, deducting that he was waiting for somebody to come out of Millers Court. Admittedly so! But it alters not that the police must have asked themselves WHY and HOW this change came about, and it will undoubtedly have entered their minds that it could have been a fabrication, conscious or not. Just like WE can see the discrepancy, so THEY would have. And no matter if the Victorian police thought such a thing unremarkable - the standards by which they worked would have been different from todays standards - WE both know, Sally, you and I, what todays policing has to say about changed testimonies. And that´s what applies here.
"In reality, though, you'd be hard pressed to find a witness who didn't expand on an initial police statement at the Kelly inquest - most, if not all of the inquest testimony contains detail not present in the initial police statement.Does this mean that all the witnesses giving police statements on 9th November can be deemed unreliable, do you think?"
Not at all - but that does not have anything to do with the issue at hand. The issue at hand is that Ben claims that it was clear that nobody had anything to object about Lewis and her testimony, and that is something we cannot know. She may have been correct and honest. And so may the other witnesses have been. I cannot see why I, by pointing out that we have nothing at all to tell us that the police believed in Lewis, should in any way be inferring that all the other witnesses must have been wrong ...? You are going to have to help me out on that one, Sally.
"Sarah Lewis was obviously unsure about what she'd seen when she gave her initial police statement..."
Yes, she was - and therefore that uncertainty is what applies.
"subsequently, further details emerged..."
But this is exactly what we cannot know, Sally. Subsequently she CLAIMED something else than she did initially, and neither you nor I can tell why. There are numerous possibilities:
1. She actually had a correct reminiscence and was able to give a correct picture, much more detailed than the first one,
or
2. She tried very hard to please the inqusitive police, and subconsciously formed a picture of the person she had seen,
or
3. She wanted to be the star of the day at the inquest, and cooked up a description,
or
4. She disliked the police, perhaps being a prostitute herself and thus harassed by them, and decided to lead them wrong,
or
5. Any other perspective that may apply here.
These are all potential truths. One of them probably applies. We cannot weigh them against each other with any certainty at all. All we can tell is that we simply don´t know. Plus we can tell that the fact that Lewis was called to the inquest has no bearing on what choice we should make here.
"Tempting as it may be to tar Lewis with a Hutchinson-exonerating 'dodgy-witness' brush, I'm afraid I think you're overstating the case somewhat."
Not at all. I am not even making a case. Ben is, though, for HE makes the case that nobody had anything to remark about Lewis. THAT - and that only - is the case made here. What I do is to prove him wrong, without attaching any label at all to Lewis, and thus not making any case at all about her. She may have been right, she may have been wrong. The problem arises when a case IS made to tell us that she MUST have been right and that the police MUST have believed in her. That, and nothing else, is the problem.
The best,
Fisherman
"Exactly so Fisherman. And what does that tell us? That it was unremarkable."
It was, yes - but that has no bearing on the question whether the police invested faith in it or not. Please read my answer to Ben, and you will see why.
"You appear to place considerable importance on Lewis 'changing' her testimony ..."
Yes. If you know of any judicial area where it is considered of no interest that a witness alters his or her testimony, I would be interested to share in that knowledge.
" ... as if this makes her an unreliable witness."
Well, believe it or not, Sally, but that is exactly how these things work. Changing your testimony is normally the exact same thing as opening it up to suspicion. But the term "suspicion" does not necessarily reflect poorly on the witness, it is meant in a wider sense: a suspicion that the testimony may be incorrect, if you will.
There will be degrees in this, of course. First saying "Yes, I saw mr Bellybottom strangle the woman", and then saying "What? Mr Bellybottom? No, no, I cannot possibly have said such a thing. I saw nothing", is a bit more damning than first saying "I cannot describe him" and then suddenly describe the make of hat, the colour of it, bodily stature and length and give a rather detailed version of what the man did, deducting that he was waiting for somebody to come out of Millers Court. Admittedly so! But it alters not that the police must have asked themselves WHY and HOW this change came about, and it will undoubtedly have entered their minds that it could have been a fabrication, conscious or not. Just like WE can see the discrepancy, so THEY would have. And no matter if the Victorian police thought such a thing unremarkable - the standards by which they worked would have been different from todays standards - WE both know, Sally, you and I, what todays policing has to say about changed testimonies. And that´s what applies here.
"In reality, though, you'd be hard pressed to find a witness who didn't expand on an initial police statement at the Kelly inquest - most, if not all of the inquest testimony contains detail not present in the initial police statement.Does this mean that all the witnesses giving police statements on 9th November can be deemed unreliable, do you think?"
Not at all - but that does not have anything to do with the issue at hand. The issue at hand is that Ben claims that it was clear that nobody had anything to object about Lewis and her testimony, and that is something we cannot know. She may have been correct and honest. And so may the other witnesses have been. I cannot see why I, by pointing out that we have nothing at all to tell us that the police believed in Lewis, should in any way be inferring that all the other witnesses must have been wrong ...? You are going to have to help me out on that one, Sally.
"Sarah Lewis was obviously unsure about what she'd seen when she gave her initial police statement..."
Yes, she was - and therefore that uncertainty is what applies.
"subsequently, further details emerged..."
But this is exactly what we cannot know, Sally. Subsequently she CLAIMED something else than she did initially, and neither you nor I can tell why. There are numerous possibilities:
1. She actually had a correct reminiscence and was able to give a correct picture, much more detailed than the first one,
or
2. She tried very hard to please the inqusitive police, and subconsciously formed a picture of the person she had seen,
or
3. She wanted to be the star of the day at the inquest, and cooked up a description,
or
4. She disliked the police, perhaps being a prostitute herself and thus harassed by them, and decided to lead them wrong,
or
5. Any other perspective that may apply here.
These are all potential truths. One of them probably applies. We cannot weigh them against each other with any certainty at all. All we can tell is that we simply don´t know. Plus we can tell that the fact that Lewis was called to the inquest has no bearing on what choice we should make here.
"Tempting as it may be to tar Lewis with a Hutchinson-exonerating 'dodgy-witness' brush, I'm afraid I think you're overstating the case somewhat."
Not at all. I am not even making a case. Ben is, though, for HE makes the case that nobody had anything to remark about Lewis. THAT - and that only - is the case made here. What I do is to prove him wrong, without attaching any label at all to Lewis, and thus not making any case at all about her. She may have been right, she may have been wrong. The problem arises when a case IS made to tell us that she MUST have been right and that the police MUST have believed in her. That, and nothing else, is the problem.
The best,
Fisherman
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