If Richardson was in the habit of regularly checking the cellar door lock, which we know he was, he would have had a simple routine way of doing it. He probably every time did something like, went down one step, took hold of the canopy for support, and bent down a little, glanced across, and then satisfied, he would leave. It would have been a simple routine taking a few seconds.
I agree with the view that if he sat on the steps he must have seen the body, and that if he didn't sit on the steps, why in heaven's name would he say that he did? This was a murder scene, why would he tell an unnecessary lie which could put him "in the frame" for the murder? It makes no sense to me!
However, I don't therefore say that the murder was definitely committed as late as 5. 20 - 5. 30 am, and that Cadosch was necessarily correct. It could have been done just after Richardson left.
On the question of how much daylight there was, JtR would probably have been reluctant to commit a murder in good light, but he needed some light to be able to disembowel a victim. For what it is worth, I would propose that the available evidence suggests that Dutfield's Yard might well have been the darkest of the canonical five sites, and Stride was not mutilated at all, and that Buck's Row was so dark that it was accepted that Paul and Cross could not see the gaping neck wound, and possibly also that Polly's eyes were wide open, and though she was mutilated, it was more of an untidy job, and not a disembowelment. After Polly, did JtR decide he needed more light next time?
I agree with the view that if he sat on the steps he must have seen the body, and that if he didn't sit on the steps, why in heaven's name would he say that he did? This was a murder scene, why would he tell an unnecessary lie which could put him "in the frame" for the murder? It makes no sense to me!
However, I don't therefore say that the murder was definitely committed as late as 5. 20 - 5. 30 am, and that Cadosch was necessarily correct. It could have been done just after Richardson left.
On the question of how much daylight there was, JtR would probably have been reluctant to commit a murder in good light, but he needed some light to be able to disembowel a victim. For what it is worth, I would propose that the available evidence suggests that Dutfield's Yard might well have been the darkest of the canonical five sites, and Stride was not mutilated at all, and that Buck's Row was so dark that it was accepted that Paul and Cross could not see the gaping neck wound, and possibly also that Polly's eyes were wide open, and though she was mutilated, it was more of an untidy job, and not a disembowelment. After Polly, did JtR decide he needed more light next time?
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