Originally posted by Varqm
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Yes, the explanation is vague, but that's because we don't know why he didn't appear. It's not recorded after all. I'm only willing to speculate so far, and I'm speculating that Schwartz was the one who made the decision not to go to the inquest, but have nothing upon which to even base a speculation as to what his reason might be. I can offer examples of the types of explanations, illness, work, fear, etc, but there's nothing recorded upon which to justify choosing any one of those, hence I acknowlege that by saying "for reasons unknown".
We have nothing to indicate that the Coroner did ask the police to go get Schwartz. We also have nothing that indicates the Coroner summoned Schwartz. A conflicting account in a newspaper would not result in the Coroner tossing a witness, at most it might prompt the Coroner to enquire about the discrepancy but in all likelihood the Coroner would be well aware that such stories in the paper are often exaggerated. The Star article is, after all, a secondary account of what Schwartz said to the reporter, it's not a verbatim account, so neither we, nor the coroner, would know if the conflicting stories came from Schwartz, or came from a less than accurate summarization by the reporter.
We're left with either Schwartz not appearing for some reason personal to him or his situation, or with the possibility the coroner did not have his statement in the first place. If the former, those reasons are unknown, if the latter we have two options on the table, a clerical error that resulted in his statement not getting sent by accident, or a deliberate removal of his statement by a lower ranking police member who for their own reasons decided Schwartz's testimony would not be made available to the coroner. Of those two, I suggest the clerical error is the least complex.
But you're correct, I think we have to agree to disagree.
- Jeff
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