Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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Clearly the murderer disturbed in his work theory, suits Wess down to the ground, and both the timing and description of the man pursued story are so uncannily similar to Schwartz' story of having been pursued by a man who does not follow him as far as the railway arch, that it cannot be explained away as easily as you would like it be.
So the question that begs, is; why would Wess scapegoat a fellow a Jew, if he did not believe that man to have been the murderer?
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