Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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It should be noted that Chandler didn't seek out Richardson to interview him that morning. Richardson felt compelled to talk to Chandler while the latter was busy with his duties immediately after the discovery of the body and the arrival of the doctor. Here is what Richardson considered that Chandler should know.
[Coroner] Did you see John Richardson? - I saw him about a quarter to seven o'clock. He told me he had been to the house that morning about a quarter to five. He said he came to the back door and looked down to the cellar, to see if all was right, and then went away to his work.
[Coroner] Did he say anything about cutting his boot? - No.
[Coroner] Did he say that he was sure the woman was not there at that time? - Yes.
By the Jury: The back door opens outwards into the yard, and swung on the left hand to the palings where the body was. If Richardson were on the top of the steps he might not have seen the body. He told me he did not go down the steps.
Richardson was anxious that Chandler should know that
. he was there that morning
. he had a reason for being there
. he was only there long enough to check the lock from the stairs, and that he did not enter into the yard
. the body wasn't there when he was there.
You previously insinuated that Amelia had supported the contention that the lock could be seen from the steps only because she had spoken to her son. I am imagining the conversation:
Hey Mum, if the police question you, tell them that we had a break-in in the cellar a while back and that I have been checking the lock on the door on market day ever since. And be sure to tell them that I don't have to go into the yard to check, that I can see the lock from the steps.
Unfortunately Amelia, being old and forgetful tells the coroner:
Have you ever had anything stolen?-No, although I have sometimes left my room doors unfastened at night.
John Richardson testimony:
A Juror-His mother said there had been no robberies.
The Witness-She forgot. If you will ask her, you see that it is right.
Mrs. Richardson, recalled in her son's absence, said she had never had anything stolen from her house.
The Coroner-Have you ever lost anything from the cellar?
The Witness-Oh, yes; I have missed a saw and a hammer, but that is a long time ago. They broke the padlock of the cellar door at the time. My son now comes to see whether it is all right almost every morning before he goes to market.
Do you understand that he goes down to the cellar door?-No, he can see from the steps.
So Amelia forgot about the robbery until prompted by the coroner? - Thinks - Ahh yes, now I remember what Johnny told me to say.
So we are asked: why would Richardson invent the boot repair story when he could have used a simpler explanation? Because he had corroboration for the necessity of a boot repair story from the man at the markets from whom he borrowed the knife to actually do the boot repair. But why place yourself at the scene of a murder with a knife. Because the knife he produced was so blatantly inadequate for the purpose of cutting throats, stomachs or particularly leather, or any purpose other than perhaps cutting carrots, that it could barely be regarded as a knife.
"He does certainly seem to go from one story of very little import to another where he becomes "the crucial witness."" - Wolf Vanderlinden
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