Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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I clearly answered "Who was the man pursued" in Post #1324.
I clearly answered "Who was the man pursued" again in Post #1359.
I clearly answered "Who was the man pursued" again in Post #1499.
According to the October 1, 1888 Echo, the man pursued was "man whom the public prefer to regard as the murderer"
According to the October 1, 1888 Star, the man pursued was a Hungarian who was not the killer.
My point is that the club secretary did not implicate Schwartz. At the time the club secretary gave his interview to the Echo, Schwartz' account had not been been published in the Star. The Star account also did not name the Hungarian. You can't deliberately implicate someone when you don't know who they are, let alone that after you give your interview Schwartz would give an account of being pursued.
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