Every witness on the night has question marks in their story and as researchers we should be questioning them, but what is coming across, and perhaps it not meant, is that you're ignoring the questions marks in the stories you want to be true. You think Heshburg might have a clock in his house, fair assumption, but you won't credit Mortimer with the same assumption. You look for faults in stories that conflict with your theory but avoid anomalies in those whose tales you like.
Lets just look at the evidence we actually have, and when we do, two witnesses come out as the least credible, Heshburg and Kosebrodsky.
Heshburg bad mouths the club in the press, so we have to assume he doesn't like them, which isn't odd as many didn't. His evidence is at direct odds with the most credible witnesses on the night. He claims to have come out after hearing the police whistles at 12:45, but Lamb, is an independent witness and a trained one to boot, he says he walking towards Grove Street at 12:45, blissfully unaware of what the night would hold for him. That one witness is enough to discredit Heshburg, but he isn't the only one. Brown and the couple on the corner were within yards of the club when Heshburg claims to have heard whistles, crowds and confusion yet Brown was apparently oblivious to all the commotion.
No, Heshburg was wrong in his timing, pure and simple.
Kosebrodsky, spoke English poorly, so, as he wasn't at the inquest, we don't know if he actually said 20 to 1:00 or the reporter simply misunderstood him.
What we DO know is that timing was wrong. Brown once again proves him wrong. Acoording to Kosebrodsky, he was running down the road when Brown was walking down the same street. He also says he went alone, but Spooner, another truly independant witness, explictly states TWO jews came running down the road. Spooner also says he was outside the Beehive at 1:00 when it happened.
If the murder did happen earlier Heshburg certainly didn't know about it, unless of course he did it, but lets not go there;-)
Kosebrodsky's story is just too provably wrong to be taken seriously and that is probably due to bad translations by the press.
Lets just look at the evidence we actually have, and when we do, two witnesses come out as the least credible, Heshburg and Kosebrodsky.
Heshburg bad mouths the club in the press, so we have to assume he doesn't like them, which isn't odd as many didn't. His evidence is at direct odds with the most credible witnesses on the night. He claims to have come out after hearing the police whistles at 12:45, but Lamb, is an independent witness and a trained one to boot, he says he walking towards Grove Street at 12:45, blissfully unaware of what the night would hold for him. That one witness is enough to discredit Heshburg, but he isn't the only one. Brown and the couple on the corner were within yards of the club when Heshburg claims to have heard whistles, crowds and confusion yet Brown was apparently oblivious to all the commotion.
No, Heshburg was wrong in his timing, pure and simple.
Kosebrodsky, spoke English poorly, so, as he wasn't at the inquest, we don't know if he actually said 20 to 1:00 or the reporter simply misunderstood him.
What we DO know is that timing was wrong. Brown once again proves him wrong. Acoording to Kosebrodsky, he was running down the road when Brown was walking down the same street. He also says he went alone, but Spooner, another truly independant witness, explictly states TWO jews came running down the road. Spooner also says he was outside the Beehive at 1:00 when it happened.
If the murder did happen earlier Heshburg certainly didn't know about it, unless of course he did it, but lets not go there;-)
Kosebrodsky's story is just too provably wrong to be taken seriously and that is probably due to bad translations by the press.
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