Originally posted by packers stem
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Having checked my assumptions it turns out I had misunderstood some context around the letter from Sir Charle Warren to St George's Vestry clerk dated 31st of October (year given variously as 1887 and 1888 in the second-hand sources I've seen it), I had misread as the Vigilance committees complaining the police cautioned rather than prosecuted brothel keepers when evidence is handed over. When actually, the complaint is when police handed information to the local vestries, the vestries cautioned brothel keepers rather than prosecuted (Italics for emphasis of the key point). Context here: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=...page&q&f=false
If the 31st of October 1888 dating for this letter is correct, it would be very interesting dating (a St George's Vestry is where the inquest into Liz Stride was held at the beginning of October).
It relates to police policy of containment of prostitution and brothels when under Sir Charles Warren. It may be a slight paraphrase, but it seems Warren complains of 'vigilance committees' routing out brothels, which only pushes them into respectable neighbourhoods. It would be great to find the full text and exact date of this letter. Or perhaps even the full correspondence between Sir Charles and the St George Vestry clerk.
Seems surprising to me that Vestries were issuing cautions, which suggests there was some aspect of the policing and prosecution procedure for prostitution at the time which I have not fully understood.
Jumping back to the point of the thread it seems odd that Mrs McCarthy would be cautioned not to give away her half remembered detail of someone saying they saw someone funny in the Court. Doesn't seem like this was likely to crack the case. So, either she had more evidence to give, which is lost to us or the caution she received was for something else.
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