Originally posted by Michael W Richards
View Post
What you haven't demonstrated is that the impression the authorities actually got was false, let alone that this was because certain club members had conspired to give it. It's circular reasoning. You can't use the fact that Stride's killer was not found, or even suspected, to be a club member, to argue that there was misdirection and it worked, despite the fact that the majority of those on the premises at the time could not have been party to any such conspiracy, making it difficult to see how the police could have been so easily hoodwinked.
IF they did hesitate to seek authorities might that be time for the senior men onsite to make some decisions based on that initial basic principle? Would those discussions be among all the men, or just the ones that have senior rank there. Like the Club Steward. Or maybe the speaker. Or the stewards wife?
Isnt there evidence that there was a delay in seeking help, if they knew Stride was there when a few members stated they saw her there. And Louis. Isnt there evidence that Louis and Eagles statements seem to support each others but contrast concerningly with these other lesser class members?
This is all conjured up by an imagination that needs it to be so, in order to reach a desired conclusion. If the police had done stuff like this, to try and fit up the club, they'd have been rightly pilloried. Nobody at that time expected witnesses to do more than give rough estimates of their timings, unless they specifically stated how they knew the right time, for instance if they passed a clock. The authorities at the time were able to put all the separate accounts together and reconcile them, using common sense and allowing for the estimated times given to be out by a reasonable margin. They saw nothing remotely sinister in what they were told, which is all the stranger if only two or three had conspired to give a considerably later discovery time, while several others ought to have been able to refute it with solid evidence [such as Fanny hearing/seeing Louis D arriving around 12.40]. Had that happened, the club would have been landed in far more hot water than if everyone had simply told the truth from the outset.
How many club affiliated men did not see another living soul around 12:40-12:45 in that passageway? How many men of lesser stature in the club ranks there saw a few men there at that same time? How many men say they saw Louis Diemshitz there at around 12:45? Seems like Lave and Eagle missed seeing all this, and each other. Could someone be in that passageway between the entrance and the side door at the same time and not see each other?
Surely people can see that what I suggest is already on paper if you follow it logically.
Surely people can see that what I suggest is already on paper if you follow it logically.
Or perhaps we are all just aware that following logically what you suggest 'on paper' is not how human behaviour and perception works. Nothing is ever that black and white, and if twelve people, all with smart phones, witnessed an incident outside their local pub or club today, the police would still be hard pressed to get them all to give the same details and the same time for what they saw.
But the post you were responding to was all about one witness, Schwartz, and how impossible it is, without complicating things to the nth degree, to conclude from his own evidence that he was part of a wider plan to protect the club's future. It just doesn't work, on any level.
You'd be better off arguing that Schwartz saw Stride, standing alone by the club, and when he learned about the murder decided independently to make up the rest of it for his fifteen minutes of fame. That doesn't really work either, but at least your club conspirators wouldn't have relied on possibly the worst choice of fake witness in criminal history.
Comment