Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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As an example of sensationalism, when was the last time you walked down the street and thought: "he has strange eyes" or "he has a strange walk"? It's ridiculous, 'just doesn't happen, they were imagining some sort of strangeness in appearance because they didn't know what we know, which is that serial killers look just like the rest of us.
As a result, the really important information such as medical observation and record, and statements by police witnesses, the people paid to pay attention; are often lost in a deluge of information.
Strip away all of the flight of fancy and the rest of it and the result is that nobody saw a woman with a flower after PC Smith. That must count for something. I'd say Liz was in that yard with Parcel Man more or less as soon as PC Smith turned the corner.
It's probably worth remembering that the poor in East London were unlikely to buy newspapers unless having a regular wage. Many couldn't read, many had bigger things on their plate than the news, many will have spent any spare pennies on booze.
It follows again, it could well be an indication that Parcel Man wasn't your regular Whitechapel punter spending his spare money on booze.
During the Victorian era, coffee shops supplied 'free' newspapers as a way of attracting custom, and so Leon Goldstein, with his social activities; was able to acquire newspapers no problem and for no fee.
The problem is that PC Smith did not mention a bag, and so you'd have to say that the parcel didn't come out of a bag. Given PC Smith's measurements, was the parcel big enough to be a bag?
Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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