29 Hanbury Street is on the north side of the street.
The sun rises in the east.
It was just around Dawn when he entered the yard and the eastern sky would had been marginally brighter than "pitch dark." Which is all you need to be able to see shapes.
The body was against the fence on the WESTERN side of the yard. So neither the building nor fence would have cast shadow, and there was a yard to the east exposing the body to more "Sky Light".
The body would have simply been in the very dim light of the very early dawn. We're not talking about direct sunlight. We are talking amount the small amount of ambiant light from the sky.
Sitting on the steps, standing on the steps, his peripheral vision would have been able to see a human body lying against the fence. No head turning required.
If it was too dark in the yard at dawn to see a body exposed to the eastern skyline, I'd need some really compelling additional information to convince me he could see a padlock on a north facing cellar door down a flight of steps, from the door step well enough to know if it was locked or not... in less favouriable light (and yet not see a body at his feet).
Show me some evidence of him suffering from Tunnel Vision... and OK we're off to a good start... but make it better than "He MIGHT have..."
I can buy that he might have been able to see the door well enough to determine whether it was locked or not, without having to walk to a better position to see it clearly. but to say that if he could see that padlock, that he wouldn't be able to ALSO see the body under the conditions at the scene at the time, that just doesn't work.
And remember he sat on the middle stair, removed his boot, and put it back on AFTER the leather cutting (by which time it would be even lighter).
That means he leant forward and downward so that his head would have been just above his knee and about 2 feet or so from the body. No way in hell that door was blocking his view.
He would have SMELLED her at that point.
So IF he's lying and has killed her, he's a bigger bloody idiot than we are suppposed to take Lechmere for... All he needs to say is, "I quickly leaned out and looked down the right, and could make out that the padlock was fine. It was very dark and I barely would have seen anything against that other side of the yard because the door blocked my view and I was looking the other way."
It wouldn take Moriarty or Lecter levels of villainous intellect to come up with THAT story.
The sun rises in the east.
It was just around Dawn when he entered the yard and the eastern sky would had been marginally brighter than "pitch dark." Which is all you need to be able to see shapes.
The body was against the fence on the WESTERN side of the yard. So neither the building nor fence would have cast shadow, and there was a yard to the east exposing the body to more "Sky Light".
The body would have simply been in the very dim light of the very early dawn. We're not talking about direct sunlight. We are talking amount the small amount of ambiant light from the sky.
Sitting on the steps, standing on the steps, his peripheral vision would have been able to see a human body lying against the fence. No head turning required.
If it was too dark in the yard at dawn to see a body exposed to the eastern skyline, I'd need some really compelling additional information to convince me he could see a padlock on a north facing cellar door down a flight of steps, from the door step well enough to know if it was locked or not... in less favouriable light (and yet not see a body at his feet).
Show me some evidence of him suffering from Tunnel Vision... and OK we're off to a good start... but make it better than "He MIGHT have..."
I can buy that he might have been able to see the door well enough to determine whether it was locked or not, without having to walk to a better position to see it clearly. but to say that if he could see that padlock, that he wouldn't be able to ALSO see the body under the conditions at the scene at the time, that just doesn't work.
And remember he sat on the middle stair, removed his boot, and put it back on AFTER the leather cutting (by which time it would be even lighter).
That means he leant forward and downward so that his head would have been just above his knee and about 2 feet or so from the body. No way in hell that door was blocking his view.
He would have SMELLED her at that point.
So IF he's lying and has killed her, he's a bigger bloody idiot than we are suppposed to take Lechmere for... All he needs to say is, "I quickly leaned out and looked down the right, and could make out that the padlock was fine. It was very dark and I barely would have seen anything against that other side of the yard because the door blocked my view and I was looking the other way."
It wouldn take Moriarty or Lecter levels of villainous intellect to come up with THAT story.
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