Originally posted by JeffHamm
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I don't think that I am making this mistake (you may disagree), as I am not saying that Cadosch is lying or mistaken, or dismissing his testimony. I'm just saying he has not heard anything out of the ordinary, and Cadosch agreed as he testified, (in effect) that the sounds were so within the ordinary that he didn't consider even a brief glance over the fence.
It has been argued that the configuration of Buck's Row would have made it an echo chamber, and I think the same can be said of the backyards in Hanbury St. In the latter case the observer (Cadosch) is in a doorway, has his back turned to the yard with a door (presumably closing behind him), not an optimum position for the determination of the source of a voice amongst a host of possible sources for the utterance of a "no".
With regard to the noise at the fence, as I was waking up this morning around 5:45am I heard a very loud noise from just outside. There was no serial killer there, it was just the sound of the movement in materials such as timber and a tin roof. At my first home there was a paling fence that frequently creaked loudly in this manner. Perhaps it was this phenomena to which Cadosch was referring in his comment about packing cases against the fence?
I just don't find Cadosch's evidence to be as persuasive for a presence behind the fence as do many.
Best regards, George
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