So the general theory is that Diemschitz returned earlier than he claimed and found the body and then, with other members of the club, decided that the police might decide to close the club down because of the murder. They decided to get someone to claim to have seen the victim engaged in a struggle with a man who used an anti-Semitic slur. Thus showing the police that the murderer wasn’t a Jewish club member which would have left them with no reason for closing down the club.
Obvious points showing the ‘plot’ to be nonsense.
And that’s without looking at the rest of the details. Six obvious points which show how absolutely unbelievable the very idea of this ‘plot’ is. And when you start from a theory that’s not remotely likely then you are forced to clutch at straws to maintain it. Which is what we’ve seen for years on this subject.
Obvious points showing the ‘plot’ to be nonsense.
- As far as everyone was concerned Stride’s murder was the fifth in a series (and of course a sixth would occur less than an hour later) No one could have been unaware of this which makes it simply unbelievable that those club members might have considered for a second that the police might have blamed them. Especially at a time of anti-Jewish feeling. If the police merely rubbed out the grafitto to prevent a riot by Jews what kind of reaction might the police have envisioned if they had closed down a Jewish club?
- As another murder had taken place that night (and there had been four others) how could they have been confident that the police wouldn’t have caught the killer before Schwartz appearance at the police station. And that the killer didn’t turn out to have been Jewish. What if ge’d confessed?
- As Lipski was a murderer how can we be anything like certain that, on occasion, a Jew might not have insulted another Jew by calling him Lipski? Yes of course we know that it was used as an anti-Semitic slur but Lipski was still a murderer and therefore a hate figure (including within the Jewish community) So why would our conspirators have used the convoluted and non-conclusive method of showing the killer to have been a gentile. So much could have gone wrong with this plan. All that Diemschitz needed to have done was to say that the killer pushed passed him and said something that proved that he wasn’t a Jew. We should be wary when assessing a theory when it requires acts of stupidity to bolster it.
- Why would Diemschitz have taken the huge risk of lying about what time he got back? He’d have known that the police would be interviewing neighbours as well as club members. Just one neighbour who says “I looked out of my window and saw Mr Diemschitz return on his cart. I checked my clock and it was 12.40!” Game over for Louis. Another act of stupidity that we are being asked to swallow. Alternatively a neighbour could have been looking out of his/her window at 12.55 to 1.00 and then told the police that they hadn’t seen Diemschitz return.
- Why when coming up with this plan didn’t Diemschitz even bother to spread the word? He knew that the police would be interviewing club members and we are being asked to believe that he came up with this plan (involving lying to the police over a murder - a man allegedly scared of having his club closed down) and yet he didn’t tell everyone else? Come on! He doesn’t bother to tell Hoschberg or Kosebrodski the script leaving them free to make him look like a liar to the police? No sensible person could believe this.
- Why use the Schwartz method which was open to have been disproven by any number of neighbours who might have been around? How could any adult not realise the massive risk involved and the ensuing consequences?
And that’s without looking at the rest of the details. Six obvious points which show how absolutely unbelievable the very idea of this ‘plot’ is. And when you start from a theory that’s not remotely likely then you are forced to clutch at straws to maintain it. Which is what we’ve seen for years on this subject.
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