I would like to get the different views on two of the Chapman witnesses - Cadosh and Long.
I am interested in the difference between what these witnesses said, as opposed to Phillipsītime of death for Chapman. Clearly, either the two or Phillips got it wrong. And of course, when there are two people on one side of the fence and just the one on the other, a majority decision often seems wise.
But the fact of the matter is that Cadosh and Long do not corroborate each other - they gainsay each other instead. To get them to work together, the timelines have to be fixed first.
We know that there were people who came forward out of curiosity, trying to get themselves their fifteen minutes of fame. Did Long and Cadosh belong to this category?
What I find interesting is how they manage to tell the whole story in just four words. Long offers three of them:
-Will you?
-Yes.
Cadosh fills in word number four:
-No!
People who want a little limelight in connection with cases like these donīt normally enter conversations that make no sense in relation to the known outcome.
If Long had said that the couple had said:
-What direction?
-Up Banbury.
... we would be left with something that had no connection at all to the murder. But luckily, Long manages to catch the exact three words that tell the whole story:
-Will you? (Go into the yard with me and do your prostitute thing?)
-Yes. (I will accompany you into the yard and do my prostitute thing.)
Very lucky, one must say - the whole story is told by the very few words that Long heard. The rest would possibly have been mere mumbo-jumbo.
However, is the wording not a tad strange? Do punters ask "Will you?" instead of ""How about it?"
And do prostitutes answer "Yes", instead of "Sure, Love, come along"?
Anyhow, we are truly lucky to have the scenario clad in as few words as possible, still effectively clinching the deal!
Over to Cadosch now. He had just the one word to offer:
-No!
And THAT told the rest of the story:
-No! (No, Mr Ripper, I do not want to be subjected to this!)
Once again we are lucky enough to have the whole scenario inside the yard handed down to us. In one word only!
The rest of the Cadosch contribution is a sound. And - believe it or not - that sound is the exact sound that confirms what was going on - something (somebody, that is) falls against the very fence where we know Chapman was found dead.
Can you believe it? Four words and a thud, and we get the whole story!
Myself, I canīt bring myself to believe it. I think they were both grabbing the opportunity to get on stage.
A further point - knowing the Ripper and the speed at which he worked in Buckīs Row and Mitre Square - would he linger on three or four minutes (the time space inbetween when Cadosh claimed to have heard the "No!" and the thud (he went into the back yard twice, the two incidents overheard on separate occasions), before killing Chapman?
Or did he engage in a conversation with Chapman on worldly matters, getting a "No!" as an answer to a question he posed, a suggestion he made - and then he waited four minutes before he slew her?
Just to add: My infatuation with Lechmere can be upheld regardless of whether Long/Cadosh or Phillips were right.
I just think that the testimony is too good to be true.
If we can keep Richardson out of the discussion for now, it would be good, I believe. Try and assess Cadosh and Long on their own merits only!
The best,
Fisherman
I am interested in the difference between what these witnesses said, as opposed to Phillipsītime of death for Chapman. Clearly, either the two or Phillips got it wrong. And of course, when there are two people on one side of the fence and just the one on the other, a majority decision often seems wise.
But the fact of the matter is that Cadosh and Long do not corroborate each other - they gainsay each other instead. To get them to work together, the timelines have to be fixed first.
We know that there were people who came forward out of curiosity, trying to get themselves their fifteen minutes of fame. Did Long and Cadosh belong to this category?
What I find interesting is how they manage to tell the whole story in just four words. Long offers three of them:
-Will you?
-Yes.
Cadosh fills in word number four:
-No!
People who want a little limelight in connection with cases like these donīt normally enter conversations that make no sense in relation to the known outcome.
If Long had said that the couple had said:
-What direction?
-Up Banbury.
... we would be left with something that had no connection at all to the murder. But luckily, Long manages to catch the exact three words that tell the whole story:
-Will you? (Go into the yard with me and do your prostitute thing?)
-Yes. (I will accompany you into the yard and do my prostitute thing.)
Very lucky, one must say - the whole story is told by the very few words that Long heard. The rest would possibly have been mere mumbo-jumbo.
However, is the wording not a tad strange? Do punters ask "Will you?" instead of ""How about it?"
And do prostitutes answer "Yes", instead of "Sure, Love, come along"?
Anyhow, we are truly lucky to have the scenario clad in as few words as possible, still effectively clinching the deal!
Over to Cadosch now. He had just the one word to offer:
-No!
And THAT told the rest of the story:
-No! (No, Mr Ripper, I do not want to be subjected to this!)
Once again we are lucky enough to have the whole scenario inside the yard handed down to us. In one word only!
The rest of the Cadosch contribution is a sound. And - believe it or not - that sound is the exact sound that confirms what was going on - something (somebody, that is) falls against the very fence where we know Chapman was found dead.
Can you believe it? Four words and a thud, and we get the whole story!
Myself, I canīt bring myself to believe it. I think they were both grabbing the opportunity to get on stage.
A further point - knowing the Ripper and the speed at which he worked in Buckīs Row and Mitre Square - would he linger on three or four minutes (the time space inbetween when Cadosh claimed to have heard the "No!" and the thud (he went into the back yard twice, the two incidents overheard on separate occasions), before killing Chapman?
Or did he engage in a conversation with Chapman on worldly matters, getting a "No!" as an answer to a question he posed, a suggestion he made - and then he waited four minutes before he slew her?
Just to add: My infatuation with Lechmere can be upheld regardless of whether Long/Cadosh or Phillips were right.
I just think that the testimony is too good to be true.
If we can keep Richardson out of the discussion for now, it would be good, I believe. Try and assess Cadosh and Long on their own merits only!
The best,
Fisherman
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