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  • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

    HI Michael
    don't worry I didn't report you. Ive never reportd anyone and never will. It was a joke/jibe at you and the way you like to couch your insults in just such a way to avoid having admin have to deal with it-which is why I said that they appreciate it also. lol

    But thanks again for another weasily crafted insult re the adolescent remark. Ill take it as a compliment coming from you. I am rather young at heart though, I will admit.
    BTW-do you have one iota of a sense of humor? one would think that it might go along with someone who has an over active imagination, but in your case I guess not.

    Like I said I didn't report you. However congratulations are in order-in my many years of being on Casebook ive never put anyone on ignore, but with your constant clogging up of every thread with your convoluted conspiracy nonsense, total lack of sense of humor or humanity and constant barrage of weasily insults-youre the first!

    Congrats! and good riddance

    If youll note there is humor in almost every post I make, but Ill admit that I don't suffer nonsensical rebuttal or just outright obstinance with much of that. In my life its a quality that is well known among my friends, but those are different conversations where opinions don't have to be supported or validated by facts. Here, they should. When you post assumptives all the time I respond, sorry if that landed hard, but this is a grown up board. Surely we all can take it.
    Michael Richards

    Comment


    • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
      >>Issac K however said... within an hour of the murder... that Louis sent him out alone at around 12:40-45. <<


      Dear Micheal,

      Whenever you read a report in the newspaper from a witness saying they went alone to fetch a policeman, always believe it.

      Yours truly,

      Robert Paul

      hahahaha! post of the year

      Comment


      • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
        >>Issac K however said... within an hour of the murder... that Louis sent him out alone at around 12:40-45. <<


        Dear Micheal,

        Whenever you read a report in the newspaper from a witness saying they went alone to fetch a policeman, always believe it.

        Yours truly,

        Robert Paul

        And this is productive because....?
        Michael Richards

        Comment


        • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
          >> Issac K however said... within an hour of the murder... that Louis sent him out alone ... <<

          Could you quote the exact sentence where you think Kozebrodski said he was "alone"?

          You also seem to never quote this part of the report,
          " Kozebrodsky was born in Warsaw, and can only speak English very imperfectly."

          (My emphasis)

          You've read the quote, do you feel he intended to suggest he was sent with someone, and then just neglected to mention it?
          Michael Richards

          Comment


          • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
            >> Heschberg didn't appear either...he said he was alerted at 12:40 ...<<

            And what was it Heschberg said "alerted him at 12:40?

            Answer:
            "It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think, when I heard a policeman's whistle blown, and came down to see what was the matter."

            P.C.'s 426H, Lamb plus Blackwell and Johnston perjured themselves to be part of some club conspiracy?



            >> and Spooner is told he is incorrect because his times don't match Louis's. <<

            Spooner gave two times, one that fits and one that doesn't, that's why he is told he's incorrect. Occams razor.
            "Edward Spooner, in reply to the coroner, said: I live at No. 26, Fairclough-street, and am a horse-keeper with Messrs. Meredith, biscuit bakers. On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the Beehive Public- house"

            That's from the Inquest, or do you prefer press interviews?

            As for Heschberg, Gillen and Kozebrodski, they all said they were in the passageway around 12:45, so with Spooner, that makes 4 witnesses with a time frame of 12:40-12:45. Find any other case here or anywhere where 4 witnesses corroborating times wouldn't be used to establish event timelines. The only time that might happen is if the physical evidence contradicts those accounts, in this case, we have an estimated cut time of around 12:46 to 12:56. And to top it off we have Fanny Mortimer at her door continuously from 12:50 until 1am...and she saw no cart, no pony, no Louis arrive at 1am.
            Michael Richards

            Comment


            • Im not surprised the posts have dried up here, its difficult to argue... using witnesses that have only themselves to back up their stories...and that 4 witnesses were all wrong, and Fanny Mortimer somehow went blind and deaf at 12:50 until 1am.
              Michael Richards

              Comment


              • >> And this is productive because....?<<

                Because, the intended humorous nature of it aside, it is a pertinent example of not treating newspaper quotes as gospel, but surely that is obvious?



                dustymiller
                aka drstrange

                Comment


                • >> You've read the quote, do you feel he intended to suggest he was sent with someone, and then just neglected to mention it?<<

                  Absolutely!

                  It's backed by the independent testimony of Brown and Spooner. Diemshitz send him of and followed after him.
                  dustymiller
                  aka drstrange

                  Comment


                  • >> "Edward Spooner, in reply to the coroner, said: I live at No. 26, Fairclough-street, and am a horse-keeper with Messrs. Meredith, biscuit bakers. On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the Beehive Public- house"<<


                    And he said, he'd been "25 minutes outside the publichouse", ergo, he couldn't have arrived at the yard as he later claimed at "25 minutes to one".

                    So which is correct?

                    We know because other witnesses tell us. Brown for one and Spooner's own estimation of when Lamb arrived for another.

                    "I stood there (in the yard) about five minutes before a constable came".

                    This confirms Diemshitz, Brown, the police, the medical men's timings and Spooner's own earlier claims about stand outside the pub till one o'clock.



                    >>That's from the Inquest, or do you prefer press interviews?<<

                    Um ... and where did you get the inquest quotes from if not a newspaper reporters notes?



                    >>As for Heschberg, Gillen and Kozebrodski, they all said they were in the passageway around 12:45, <<

                    As you are ignoring my post #135, I'll repeat:

                    "
                    And what was it Heschberg said "alerted him at 12:40?
                    Answer:
                    "It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think, when I heard a policeman's whistle blown, and came down to see what was the matter."
                    P.C.'s 426H, Lamb plus Blackwell and Johnston perjured themselves to be part of some club conspiracy?

                    Taking the word of people we know to be wrong doesn't help.
                    Last edited by drstrange169; 11-06-2019, 01:51 AM.
                    dustymiller
                    aka drstrange

                    Comment


                    • >> Im not surprised the posts have dried up here ...<<

                      Nor am I, there's nothing left to debate as far as discredited timings go.
                      dustymiller
                      aka drstrange

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
                        >> You've read the quote, do you feel he intended to suggest he was sent with someone, and then just neglected to mention it?<<

                        Absolutely!

                        It's backed by the independent testimony of Brown and Spooner. Diemshitz send him of and followed after him.
                        Brown? Backed by Spooners account..the one where he is in the passageway at around 12:40-45? Didn't think someone would try and use something that directly disagrees with Louis statement as a way to bolster Louis's statement...but hey, its a brave new world.
                        Michael Richards

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
                          >> "Edward Spooner, in reply to the coroner, said: I live at No. 26, Fairclough-street, and am a horse-keeper with Messrs. Meredith, biscuit bakers. On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the Beehive Public- house"<<


                          And he said, he'd been "25 minutes outside the publichouse", ergo, he couldn't have arrived at the yard as he later claimed at "25 minutes to one".

                          So which is correct?

                          We know because other witnesses tell us. Brown for one and Spooner's own estimation of when Lamb arrived for another.

                          "I stood there (in the yard) about five minutes before a constable came".

                          This confirms Diemshitz, Brown, the police, the medical men's timings and Spooner's own earlier claims about stand outside the pub till one o'clock.



                          >>That's from the Inquest, or do you prefer press interviews?<<

                          Um ... and where did you get the inquest quotes from if not a newspaper reporters notes?



                          >>As for Heschberg, Gillen and Kozebrodski, they all said they were in the passageway around 12:45, <<

                          As you are ignoring my post #135, I'll repeat:

                          "
                          And what was it Heschberg said "alerted him at 12:40?
                          Answer:
                          "It was about a quarter to one o'clock, I should think, when I heard a policeman's whistle blown, and came down to see what was the matter."
                          P.C.'s 426H, Lamb plus Blackwell and Johnston perjured themselves to be part of some club conspiracy?

                          Taking the word of people we know to be wrong doesn't help.
                          Spooner said..."I live at No. 26, Fairclough-street, and am a horse-keeper with Messrs. Meredith, biscuit bakers. On Sunday morning, between half-past twelve and one o'clock, I was standing outside the Beehive Public- house, at the corner of Christian-street, with my young woman. We had left a public- house in Commercial-road at closing time, midnight, and walked quietly to the point named. We stood outside the Beehive about twenty-five minutes, when two Jews came running along, calling out "Murder" and "Police." They ran as far as Grove- street, and then turned back. I stopped them and asked what was the matter, and they replied that a woman had been murdered. I thereupon proceeded down Berner-street and into Dutfield's-yard, adjoining the International Workmen's Club-house, and there saw a woman lying just inside the gate."He also says..."There were about fifteen people in the yard....when he arrived there. He also said …"Could any one have left without your observing it? - I cannot say, but I think there were too many people about. I believe it was twenty-five minutes to one o'clock when I arrived in the yard."

                          None of that adds up tp Louis and Issac K being seen together, or that this was after 1am, when Louis says he arrived at 1...and Fanny Mortimer was at her door until 1am didn't see or hear him arrive.

                          Using uncorroborated statements, statements from club employees that include actions that no-one elses statements include, to discredit 4 corroborated timings and event descriptions that match,...including the crowd that had already gathered,..is of course completely your call. But please do presume that is the most probable interpretation. Its odd how few people learn anything about those few clubber statements, despite the fact that 1 of them isn't even a part of the Inquest, and 3 of them conflict with each other and 4 other witnesses. Eagle and Lave at the gate at the same time..neither sees the other. Louis arrives at the gates at "precisely 1am", he is sure of that, yet Fanny Mortimer is at her door at that same time and had seen nothing transpire other than Goldtsein pass by the club. he is the verification she was in fact there, and 4 statements say Louis was there when they were alerted to the woman,...around 12:45.

                          As I said, hard to argue with ...I perhaps should have added unless you prefer uncorroborated to corroborated accounts. Which of course would counter productive to finding answers here. But Ive found that many people just want to believe what they want despite the evidence to the contrary, like this mad killer of 5 specific women.
                          Michael Richards

                          Comment


                          • This policemans whistle people keep using to contradict the overwhelming majority of accounts that suggest they were by the dead/dying woman at 12:40-12:45....where does it say that this whistle absolutely belonged to a policeman, on or arriving on, that scene at 12:45? Assumptions again.

                            The facts are so simple, yet for some reason unaccepted by many....

                            Eagle and Lave both at the gates at 12:40....neither sees anyone or anything.
                            Israel says he saw Liz being assaulted in front of the gates at 12:45....no-one else sees or hears any of that event.
                            Spooner, Issac K, Heschberg and Gillen all say they were inside the passageway by the dead woman around 12:45..the only contradictions to that time are the singular account statements...which as indicated, do not even corroborate each other
                            Louis says he arrived precisely at 1am......yet Fanny is at her door at 1am and saw no-one approach the gates by cart and horse during her 10 minute continuous stay at the door.

                            To make the uncorroborated palatable you have to dispute the corroborated timing of 4 people, and the vision and hearing of another. Now perhaps you see what I meant about little opportunity there to make some other sequence of events based on 3 individuals whose accounts don't even match each others, and that discredited the majority of the statements of other witnesses, more probable.

                            Did Liz suddenly appear from nowhere outside the gates just after Lave and Eagle were there, just in time to have Israel see and hear what he says? Just before Louis arrives at 1am? Well, 5 people, who happen to agree with each others accounts.. independent accounts,... disagree.
                            Michael Richards

                            Comment


                            • >> Brown? Backed by Spooners account..<<

                              Correct.

                              Both talk of people not one person running for help.

                              Spooner tells us it was two "Jews" and Brown tells us it was "about a quarter of an hour after I got in", in other words after 1 o'clock.

                              You twist it anyway you want by isolating and taking individual pieces out of context, but the beauty of the evidence is that it stays consist when taken as a whole.
                              dustymiller
                              aka drstrange

                              Comment


                              • >> Louis says he arrived at 1...and Fanny Mortimer was at her door until 1am didn't see or hear him arrive.<<

                                She didn't see him because as she says, "I was standing at the door of my house NEARLY the whole time ...".
                                She also tells us after she left the door, " she heard the pony cart pass the house, and remarked upon the circumstance to her husband."

                                Given there was no such thing as universally coordinated time back then, we allow minutes either way when witnesses statements about the time unless they are using the same time source. So, once again taking the evidence as a whole instead of twisting it to suit, we get a picture that supports L.D.'s claims.
                                dustymiller
                                aka drstrange

                                Comment

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