Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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Other that Mortimer's witnessing of Goldstein, the only real dispute regarding Berner St timelines, is the arrival of PC Smith versus the arrival of Diemschitz. Both are claiming to have been at the top of Berner St at 1am, and they can't both be right. If you go with Diemschitz, then Smith's 12:35 last time in Berner St would appear to be out, given his stated beat timespan (25-30 minutes), as that would have Smith arriving at the yard no later than 1:05, and as early as 1:00. Pushing Smith back in time several minutes, has the effect of aligning Smith with the heavy tramp of a policeman heard passing the Mortimer's house, shortly before 12:45. If not perfectly then quite closely. Fanny then sees nothing suspicious between about 12:45 and 12:55.
Alternatively, if you go with Smith's timing, then when is Fanny getting to her doorstep? 12:38 perhaps? Add 10 minutes to that and we're at 12:48. Remember she must see Goldstein toward the end of that period. In either scenario, where are you placing the Schwartz incident?
How can we know that her source was synchronised with Smith’s source?
How can we corroborate the accuracy of Schwartz time and how can we know that his source for his time was synchronised with FM’s source?
And this is without mentioning the variations in reports of what Lave said.
Or how Spooner thought that, on one hand, he got to the yard around 12.35, while on the other he claimed to have arrive 5 minutes before Lamb?
…..
So yet again I’ll bring up the perils of estimated times and estimated time periods and the need for applying a margin for error on all times (even for those who specifically claim to have looked at a clock or to have owned a watch….if a Doctor owned a good watch and says that it’s 3.00 do I take 3.00 as spot on? No I don’t. I’d consider a fairly high chance of accuracy but nothing set in stone).
So yet again I’ll bring up the perils of estimated times and estimated time periods and the need for applying a margin for error on all times (even for those who specifically claim to have looked at a clock or to have owned a watch….if a Doctor owned a good watch and says that it’s 3.00 do I take 3.00 as spot on? No I don’t. I’d consider a fairly high chance of accuracy but nothing set in stone).
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