This is not a new topic - but still I struggle to move past Maxwell's statement about seeing MJK at 8.00am and again at 8.45am on the day she was murdered. The possibilities are:
a) her statement is true and accurate
b) she lied
c) she confused the day she saw MJK (contemporary police position)
d) she confused MJK with someone else.
I discount option c) - there is no way someone is going to confuse seeing someone on the day they were murdered where a great fuss is unfolding with seeing them on a different day.
I discount option d) - not only was MJK someone Maxwell knew but she also described her clothes - probably the reasonthe police did not opt for this explanation.
I don't believe it is likely she lied given the caution from the coroner and Abberline's evaluation of her as a good and reliable witness.
That leaves her telling the truth - which again is problematic given the medical evidence (however unreliable) and the Ripper's usual murder timings.
Trying to apply Occam's razor here doesn't help - you just end up with either the medical evidence was subject to mistake or the witness testimony was subject to mistake - I don't find either one a more simple solution than the other.
So, another option, the consideration of which cannot be ignored given the above, is that both the medical evidence and Maxwell were correct. But that way conspiracy theories lie.
It's all a quandary - how on earth do we resolve it - it is clear the police opted for an unlikely explanation to dismiss the witness claims - do we do the same with this inconvenient testimony?
a) her statement is true and accurate
b) she lied
c) she confused the day she saw MJK (contemporary police position)
d) she confused MJK with someone else.
I discount option c) - there is no way someone is going to confuse seeing someone on the day they were murdered where a great fuss is unfolding with seeing them on a different day.
I discount option d) - not only was MJK someone Maxwell knew but she also described her clothes - probably the reasonthe police did not opt for this explanation.
I don't believe it is likely she lied given the caution from the coroner and Abberline's evaluation of her as a good and reliable witness.
That leaves her telling the truth - which again is problematic given the medical evidence (however unreliable) and the Ripper's usual murder timings.
Trying to apply Occam's razor here doesn't help - you just end up with either the medical evidence was subject to mistake or the witness testimony was subject to mistake - I don't find either one a more simple solution than the other.
So, another option, the consideration of which cannot be ignored given the above, is that both the medical evidence and Maxwell were correct. But that way conspiracy theories lie.
It's all a quandary - how on earth do we resolve it - it is clear the police opted for an unlikely explanation to dismiss the witness claims - do we do the same with this inconvenient testimony?
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