Sugden's "Complete History of Jack the Ripper" concludes that it must have been Lawende who was used to try to identify Kosminski at the Seaside Home, but...why him?
Lawende himself noted that he didn't think he could ever recognize the man he glimpsed for a moment, and this would have been years later. Hutchinson, on the other hand, supposedly got a close-up look at the killer and gave a (perhaps too?) thorough description.
Why would Lawende's tenuous eyewitness account be favored? Was he the only witness that was believed? Was Lawende just the best they had? This would suggest several other key witnesses must have been ruled out (such as Schwartz), but I'm not sure how the landed on Lawende as their only hope.
Lawende himself noted that he didn't think he could ever recognize the man he glimpsed for a moment, and this would have been years later. Hutchinson, on the other hand, supposedly got a close-up look at the killer and gave a (perhaps too?) thorough description.
Why would Lawende's tenuous eyewitness account be favored? Was he the only witness that was believed? Was Lawende just the best they had? This would suggest several other key witnesses must have been ruled out (such as Schwartz), but I'm not sure how the landed on Lawende as their only hope.
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