Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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Who's going to do the scrutiny?
1. If he saw what he says he saw he could identify the victim. Not by name, but by overall appearance.
The coroner's duty is not to identify which woman was assaulted in Dutfields Yard, it is to identify the body that is the subject of his inquest.
The coroner already knows she was in Dutfields Yard, that is where she was found.
On that point, do you recall reading anywhere that Israel was asked to make a formal identification of the victim as being the one he claimed to see assaulted?
2. If he saw what he says he saw, the odds of her being "wilfully murdered" are much greater. The alleged attack coincides almost exactly with the earliest cut time estimate.
Schwartz saw an assault, a man push or pull a woman, nothing else, no weapon, no blood, nothing to suggest he saw a murder.
And, according to professional medical opinion, this assault happened roughly 12-15 minutes before her murder.
"The most formal document produced by a coroner following the legal examination of the cause of death was the inquest itself. This was a parchment document with a brief statement of the verdict of the inquest on one side. This might include verdicts such as chance medley or felo de se (accidental death in self defence or suicide), or it could include any number of more obviously descriptive causes of death such as manslaughter, drowning, fever, etc. The name of the victim will also normally appear here, and the parish in which they died."
It seems that Israels statement of the victim being assaulted almost at the time she is fatally cut would be relevant to the Inquest mandate, huh? Is it really your contention that his evidence would not have had a direct bearing on the verdict?
It seems that Israels statement of the victim being assaulted almost at the time she is fatally cut would be relevant to the Inquest mandate, huh? Is it really your contention that his evidence would not have had a direct bearing on the verdict?
The coroner already knows from existing evidence how she died, Schwartz statement adds nothing to clarify that fact.
3. No one witness is charged with making that determination, where she is found the evidence suggests is where she was cut.
I think its very naive to believe that a witnessed assault on a soon to be victim would be irrelevant to the Inquest mandate. But you are not alone in that naive belief, are you? Just so you dont go thinking that when people agree with you you are by definition correct, although some seem to think that the only real facts are the ones that the most people believe. Like its factual by consensus.
I think its very naive to believe that a witnessed assault on a soon to be victim would be irrelevant to the Inquest mandate. But you are not alone in that naive belief, are you? Just so you dont go thinking that when people agree with you you are by definition correct, although some seem to think that the only real facts are the ones that the most people believe. Like its factual by consensus.
A coroner will only summonz one witness to account for one event in the sequence, he does not require several witnesses to say the same thing. That was just a matter of procedure, so as I previously pointed out, Schwartz statement does not add or change anything not already part of the witness record provided by other witnesses.
In short his statement does not matter to a coroner.
To a murder investigation then yes, of course it does, but the coroner is not charged with investigating a murder. That is the mandate of Scotland Yard.
This is what you need to understand, your objections above show you clearly do not.
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