And you are quite free to do so! What I am doing is going by the book; she changed her testimony, and that is it. After that, you are done for as a witness, technically speaking.
added were hardly details at all. Anybody at all making something up would have been a bit more creative, surely? The whole of Lewis's way of describing things ring true and are logical in the context. I'm certain that any unbiased Policeman, or honest Jury and Judge would recognise the fact.
I am not slagging off the other witnesses -they may have been honest but mistaken.
Perhaps Lewis was simply a person with a whole lot less artistic imagination, but an (animal -again, not mean't as an insult) instinct for body language ?
I think that as a witness, she just said what she saw very simply. It's very slender, and as such, it's the most interesting to me.
"( Oh yes, and Paul in Buck's Row )."
Thatīs about the worst guy you could pick for the witnessesīrole, Iīm afraid! The discrepancies inbetween what he and Lechmere and Mizen says sinks Paul to the bottom.
Thatīs about the worst guy you could pick for the witnessesīrole, Iīm afraid! The discrepancies inbetween what he and Lechmere and Mizen says sinks Paul to the bottom.
If you think that Lechmere/Cross was the culprit, then if there are discrepancies between Paul's testimonies and Lechmere/Cross's -then it is not Paul who is at fault.
I should think that Paul might have a fairly similar reaction to Mrs Lewis in that he might study a loitering stranger from afar for a threat of danger -only he didn't have the added fear of having someone with superior strength 'come on to him', or of being possibly raped- but I think that he was aware of being perhaps robbed or gratuitously aggressed.
Didn't Paul actually say that he felt threatened by Cross ?
What is the discrepancy between Paul & Mizen ? (I can't remember).
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