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  • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

    Anyway, there is I believe a more down to earth explanation for the blood clots. The doctors were mystified by the presence of those clots, yet PC Lamb told the inquest he felt for a pulse, he held the hand, and touched her face. He was possible not aware he had transferred clotted blood to her hand.
    At the inquest he said the blood nearest to her body was slightly congealed.

    At night blood looks like oil, but you cannot tell by looking at it whether blood is wet or clotted, it is shiny but you have to touch it to know what state it is in. Although PC Lamb did not say he touched the blood, he could not have known it was congealed unless he pushed his fingers into it.
    He does say he touched both the face and her wrist, feeling for a pulse. He doesn't say in what order he did this, but the fact he knew the blood was congealed, and he admits to touching both her face & hand makes PC Lamb the most likely candidate for causing the small blood clots on the wrist & back of her hand.
    Yes Jon, I agree with the PC Lamb theory, itīs my first choice.

    Everything else I wrote is just speculation.

    Another explanation, similar to what Nathan Shine described, would be a knife stained with blood:

    "he saw a man holding a large narrow bladed knife standing over a woman who was lying motionless on the ground"

    A moment of shock for the killer, blood dripping onto the hand of Stride.

    (If one believes in the Nathan Shine- story)​

    Karsten.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

      The press accounts, as you know, have Diemshutz discover the body, but he doesn't know the woman is dead - so how could Gilyarovsky "immediately" run to the print office making that announcement? - he couldn't.
      The Arbeter Fraint missed a bit out, and that is, that:

      - Diemshutz runs into the club and says there's a woman outside that may be drunk, Kozebrodski his friend comes out with him, and others follow, possibly one of them was Gilyarovsky (aka Gilleman). Diemshutz brings a candle and they all see the blood.

      - Diemshutz & Kozebrodski run off to find a policeman, neither of them go back into the club.

      - Gilyarovsky goes back into the club and goes upstairs to announce the woman dead in the yard. Eagle, with others, follow Gilyarovsky out into the yard, where Eagle strikes a match and saw the blood.
      Whether Gilyarovsky ran to the print office before he went back into the club, or after is not known.
      All sources have Diemshutz & Kozebrodski leaving directly after they see the body.
      Kozebrodski, is out on the streets & Gilyarovsky goes back in the club - they are two different people.



      Other newspapers call him Gilleman (Times, 2nd Oct.) or Gildeman (Echo, 1st Oct.).
      Sounds good!

      Comment


      • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

        Hi Jon,

        After a lot of rethinking, I'd like to have a stab at a scenario starting after this point:

        A member of the club named Kozobrodski, but familiarly known as Isaacs, returned with Diemshitz into the court, and the former struck a match, while the latter lifted the body up.

        My hypothesis: From there, Diemshitz went into the street and started hollering for police, while Koze ducked into the printer's office,
        Ok, but you realize that does contradict what both witnesses say.

        Diemshutz: "A member named Isaacs went down to the yard with me, and we struck a match and saw the blood right from the gate up the yard. Then we both went for the police, but unfortunately it was several minutes before we could find a constable."

        Kozebrodski: "Shortly after I came in Diemschitz asked me to come out into the yard, as he saw there was something unusual had taken place there. So I came out with him, and he then pointed out to me a stream of blood, which was running down the gutter in the direction of the gate, and flowed from the gate to the back-door. The blood in the gutter extended to between six and seven yards. I immediately went for a policeman,"

        Neither witness say they did anything else, both immediately went for a policeman.

        ...where he was known as Gilyarovsky (Koze doesn't mention this when interviewed because he doesn't think it is relevant to the main chase). He returns to the body just as Eagle arrives from upstairs and the latter lights a match. At this stage Eagle hears Diemshitz hollering in the street, and Koze hears his name called from the street. They go to the gateway, Eagle see Diemshitz with Jacobs, and Koze is unsure whether he was called by Diemshitz or "some other member" (Jacobs). Diemshitz, Koze and Jacobs head off towards Grove St,...
        Jacobs could have followed Diemshutz, but they were not together as several minutes lay between Diemshutz leaving and Jacobs heading out after him.

        ...while Eagle heads for Commercial Rd. As Koze starts along Fairclough he realises that they would have more success if they split up, so he turns into Batty St and heads up to Commercial Rd. Spooner hears shouting but sees only two men emerge from the darkness. Diemshitz uses the term "all the men who were with me" because he is leading the search and doesn't realise that Koze is no longer with them until they turn around at Grove. Lamb is just starting his beat back westward from Grove when he hears shouting from the west. Eagle and Koze each hear the other shouting and join up to continue east on Commercial to meet Lamb as he reaches a spot between Batty and Christian.
        The above is possible, we have no account of which direction Koz. takes from Fairclough to Commercial Rd.

        ...As an alternative to turning into Batty St, Koze may have decided to about face and turn back to the yard, where Eagle is standing in a state of shock, and the two proceed from there to Commercial Rd. I consider it less likely that Koze decided to back track to reach Commercial Rd when it was accessible via Batty St.
        You might be assuming Koz. had planned all along to go to Commercial Rd., but how can that be?
        The reason, I believe, that Koz. decided to go up to Comm. Rd. is because he saw there were still no policeman at the yard, which means he must have returned to the yard with Diem. & Spooner.
        Eagle left several minutes after Diemshutz, so was not ahead by much of Koz. when he came back up Comm. Rd.

        Of course there may have been other search parties comprised of men who were not interviewed and were not called to the inquest, so all we have in that regard is the Illustrated Police Gazette saying "and at the same time other members of the club, who had by this time found their way into the court, went off with the same object in different directions".
        I agree, we only know of a few who went for police.

        There it is. Please have a critical look to see if I've got all the ducks in a row, or contradicted any vital statements, and where improvements may be made .

        Cheers, George​
        Good job overall George, there's only a couple of points I wouldn't have proposed, for reasons given.

        Regards, Jon S.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

          - Gilyarovsky goes back into the club and goes upstairs to announce the woman dead in the yard. Eagle, with others, follow Gilyarovsky out into the yard, where Eagle strikes a match and saw the blood.
          Whether Gilyarovsky ran to the print office before he went back into the club, or after is not known.
          All sources have Diemshutz & Kozebrodski leaving directly after they see the body.
          Kozebrodski, is out on the streets & Gilyarovsky goes back in the club - they are two different people.


          Other newspapers call him Gilleman (Times, 2nd Oct.) or Gildeman (Echo, 1st Oct.).
          So quite a bit of time elapses from the time of discovery to when Eagle and others are observing the victim.
          At what time do you suppose PC Smith arrived at the yard?
          Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

          Comment


          • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

            So quite a bit of time elapses from the time of discovery to when Eagle and others are observing the victim.
            At what time do you suppose PC Smith arrived at the yard?
            I think that would be an entertaining question to try resolve.
            Given that Diemshutz says he arrived in the yard at 1:00 am, PC Lamb was between Christian and Batty, in Comm. Rd. at 1:00 am, and PC Smith was at the corner of Comm. Rd. & Berner St. also at 1:00 am.
            And yet quite some activity is understood to have taken place between Diemshutz & PC Lamb appearing on the scene, followed by PC Smith some time after.
            Regards, Jon S.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

              I think that would be an entertaining question to try resolve.
              Given that Diemshutz says he arrived in the yard at 1:00 am, PC Lamb was between Christian and Batty, in Comm. Rd. at 1:00 am, and PC Smith was at the corner of Comm. Rd. & Berner St. also at 1:00 am.
              And yet quite some activity is understood to have taken place between Diemshutz & PC Lamb appearing on the scene, followed by PC Smith some time after.
              Agreed. Something has to 'give'.

              So, what about the period between Diemschitz and Smith? How many minutes?
              Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

              Comment


              • Originally posted by S.Brett View Post

                No prob!

                Isaac Kozebrodsky "Isaacs" (maybe "Jacob" Gilyarovsky "Jacobs"?)
                Morris Eagle
                Philip Krantz (Jacob Rombro) & Yaffa
                (Simeon?) Fridenthal (Gildeman?)
                Was Eagle one of those locked into the yard, and thus on Reid's list of 28?

                ME: There were lots of people present in the yard at the time we returned. One of the constables said to his companion, "Go for a doctor," and turning to me he said, "Go to the police-station for the inspector."

                I've always assumed he then came back to the yard. Is that necessarily so? If cast in the role of the BS man, he might have gone somewhere else.

                That's only a half-serious suggestion, because it's conceivable that Eagle might have been involved in some push and shove with Stride, but not that he was JtR. Assuming he existed, I can't the BS man killing Stride, but the timing is pretty much perfect, and she was killed by someone with expertise. It doesn't 'add up'.
                Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

                  Ok, George, I got it.

                  This is from Morning Advertiser, 2 Oct.
                  Diemshutz - "....but went off at once for the police. We passed several streets without meeting a policeman, and we returned without one. All the men who were with me halloaed as loud as they could for the police, but no one came. When I returned a man that we met in Grove-street, and who came back with us, took hold of the head, and as he lifted it up I first saw the wound in the throat."

                  He's not talking about on the way back, is he?
                  It reads to me like the next sentence "When I returned..." is the start of the account of his return journey.
                  We've just jumped hoops & hurdles to try establish two men left the yard (Diem. & Koz.), and now it could be that more left the yard than we thought.
                  We have no contention how many past Spooner, he say two Jews hollering, so the others must have left they yard and gone down different streets?
                  So, there's room now for more than two leaving the yard before, after, or with Louis Deimshutz.

                  Hi Jon & George,

                  For what it’s worth, here’s my view on the search parties – after having read up on this thread.

                  I think Kozebrodski may have run out of the yard a little ahead of Diemshutz and that he also returned to the yard somewhat ahead of Diemshutz & Spooner (that Diemshutz more or less stopped to talk to Spooner, while Kozebrodski continued ahead of him). Kozebrodski & Diemshutz being the only two running past Spooner, just as he testified.

                  Jacobs was possibly a third man that ran south out of the yard. If so, he must have continued south on Berner Street or turned west towards Backchurch Lane, while the other two went in the direction of Grove Street. Or “Jacobs” was just a mishearing for “Diemshutz”. Diemshutz wasn’t a common name and perhaps Eagle didn’t say/pronounce it very clearly. Seeing that both names have two syllables, the reporter in question may have made “Jacobs” – a much more common name - of what was actually being said.

                  Then I think that Mortimer came outside again right after hearing Eagle pass her door shouting for the police. Mortimer, stating “A man touched her face, and said it was quite warm”, seems to have seen Spooner lift Stride’s chin, feeling it was quite warm. So, she came out right after Eagle passed and entered the yard when Diemshutz had already returned with Spooner. Depending, of course, how “immediately” Mortimer actually went out to see what was going on, it seems to me that Eagle left very shortly before Diemshutz returned with Spooner. Diemshutz could have arrived back in the yard within 1.5 to 2 minutes, maybe even less (from the yard to Grove Street & back would be around 300 meters/990 ft).

                  Kozebrodski, returning a bit ahead of Diemshutz & Spooner, may very well have “went into the Commercial-road along with Eagle”, just as he’s stated to have said. So, I think he saw Eagle running north and he caught up with him before reaching Commercial Road. Or he arrived back at the yard just before/when Eagle started running out.

                  I agree with Jon that Kozebrodski and Gilyarovsky at least don’t seem to be one and the same. Where Kozebrodski seems to have been called to accompany Diemshutz into the garden, Gilyarovski then went to the printing shop and then into the editor’s office to find Yaffa and Krantz. And that clearly isn’t running out “immediately” or “without delay” to find a policeman.

                  The best,
                  Frank
                  "You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
                  Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

                    So quite a bit of time elapses from the time of discovery to when Eagle and others are observing the victim.
                    At what time do you suppose PC Smith arrived at the yard?
                    Pinning a time on it would be quite difficult, Andrew, but he arrived between PC Collins arriving in the yard (in reaction to Lamb's whistle) and Edward Johns(t)on, Blackwell’s assistant. If we'd use Blackwell's timing as a basis, then Collins arrived around 1.06 am and Johnston at about 1.12 or 1.13. But it was probably some minutes earlier on the clock Smith based his timing on. Or his estimate was some minutes off on the early side.
                    "You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
                    Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

                      Agreed. Something has to 'give'.

                      So, what about the period between Diemschitz and Smith? How many minutes?
                      Hi Andrew,

                      Lamb was found at about 1 o'clock police time. He had just viewed his reference clock so this would be reasonably accurate. Smith was on police time, but estimating from when he last saw a reference clock, so I would guess around 1:04. Diemshitz claimed he looked at the Harris Tobacco clock which was not necessarily synched with police time. I would estimate he arrived about 10 minutes before Smith.

                      Cheers, George
                      The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

                      ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by FrankO View Post

                        Pinning a time on it would be quite difficult, Andrew, but he arrived between PC Collins arriving in the yard (in reaction to Lamb's whistle) and Edward Johns(t)on, Blackwell’s assistant. If we'd use Blackwell's timing as a basis, then Collins arrived around 1.06 am and Johnston at about 1.12 or 1.13. But it was probably some minutes earlier on the clock Smith based his timing on. Or his estimate was some minutes off on the early side.
                        ​If we say 1:09, and we give Smith a whole 2 minutes to walk from the top of Berner St to the yard, then Smith was off by 7 minutes. That seems a lot to me. On the other hand, if true, would we expect there to have a been a measured, heavy tramp past #36, shortly before a quarter to one?

                        Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

                        Hi Andrew,

                        Lamb was found at about 1 o'clock police time. He had just viewed his reference clock so this would be reasonably accurate. Smith was on police time, but estimating from when he last saw a reference clock, so I would guess around 1:04. Diemshitz claimed he looked at the Harris Tobacco clock which was not necessarily synched with police time. I would estimate he arrived about 10 minutes before Smith.

                        Cheers, George
                        I have wondered if Smith based his timings on a clock further along Commercial Rd. A ~12:54 arrival would be interesting, as various estimates would probably need to be pushed back. So, Eagle might be arriving at ~12:35, for example. Just before Smith. Also, you might have Fanny locking up at about 12:50, meaning that the path of Schwartz and Goldstein through Berner St was not only similar in direction, but similar in time too. However, how could she have seen one of these men and not the other?
                        Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by FrankO View Post
                          Hi Jon & George,

                          For what it’s worth, here’s my view on the search parties – after having read up on this thread.

                          I think Kozebrodski may have run out of the yard a little ahead of Diemshutz and that he also returned to the yard somewhat ahead of Diemshutz & Spooner (that Diemshutz more or less stopped to talk to Spooner, while Kozebrodski continued ahead of him). Kozebrodski & Diemshutz being the only two running past Spooner, just as he testified.

                          Jacobs was possibly a third man that ran south out of the yard. If so, he must have continued south on Berner Street or turned west towards Backchurch Lane, while the other two went in the direction of Grove Street. Or “Jacobs” was just a mishearing for “Diemshutz”. Diemshutz wasn’t a common name and perhaps Eagle didn’t say/pronounce it very clearly. Seeing that both names have two syllables, the reporter in question may have made “Jacobs” – a much more common name - of what was actually being said.
                          I like the first explanation, but not the second.

                          Then I think that Mortimer came outside again right after hearing Eagle pass her door shouting for the police. Mortimer, stating “A man touched her face, and said it was quite warm”, seems to have seen Spooner lift Stride’s chin, feeling it was quite warm. So, she came out right after Eagle passed and entered the yard when Diemshutz had already returned with Spooner. Depending, of course, how “immediately” Mortimer actually went out to see what was going on, it seems to me that Eagle left very shortly before Diemshutz returned with Spooner. Diemshutz could have arrived back in the yard within 1.5 to 2 minutes, maybe even less (from the yard to Grove Street & back would be around 300 meters/990 ft).

                          Kozebrodski, returning a bit ahead of Diemshutz & Spooner, may very well have “went into the Commercial-road along with Eagle”, just as he’s stated to have said. So, I think he saw Eagle running north and he caught up with him before reaching Commercial Road. Or he arrived back at the yard just before/when Eagle started running out.
                          Eagle did say that he left immediately after seeing the blood.

                          I agree with Jon that Kozebrodski and Gilyarovsky at least don’t seem to be one and the same. Where Kozebrodski seems to have been called to accompany Diemshutz into the garden, Gilyarovski then went to the printing shop and then into the editor’s office to find Yaffa and Krantz. And that clearly isn’t running out “immediately” or “without delay” to find a policeman.

                          The best,
                          Frank
                          Hi Frank,

                          Some interesting points. I have some observations on Eagle's testimony and interviews.

                          Diemschitz came in and said a woman had been murdered outside. I ran into the yard immediately and I saw in the yard a stream of blood. There was a general hue and cry for the police. I and others went off to find the officers, so I had no opportunity of seeing the body. Besides, I did not want to look at it, as those sights make me feel ill.

                          Gilleman came upstairs and said, "There is a dead woman lying in the yard." I went down in a second, and struck a match. I could then see a woman lying on the ground, near the gateway, and in a pool of blood. Her feet were about six or seven feet from the gate, and she was lying by the side of the club wall, her head being towards the yard. Another member, named Isaac, was with me at the time. As soon as I saw the blood I got very excited and ran away for the police. I did not touch her.
                          The CORONER. - Did you see if her clothes were disturbed?
                          Witness. - I could not say. When I got outside I saw Jacobs and another going for the police in the direction of Fairclough-street, and I then went to the Commercial-road, all the time shouting "Police!"

                          Comrades Morris Eygel, Fridenthal and Gilyarovsky were standing around the body. Eygel struck a match and shouted to the figure lying there: Get up! Why are you waking her? asked Yaffa, who noticed that the woman was lying in a liquid. Dont you see that the woman is dead?
                          [P. 3, col. 2]
                          In the meantime, there was quite a to-do going on inside the club, and everyone ran out into the yard. Dimshits, Eygel and Gilyarovsky ran to look for a policeman; ten minutes later they had found a pair of peace-keepers.


                          So Eagle claims in one interview that he did not see the body, but testifies at the inquest that he struck a match and did see the body. He also testifies that a member named "Isaac" was with him at the time. Was this Isaac Kozebrodski, or was Jacobs named Isaac, AKA Gilyarovsky? How can Gilyarovsky be named as one of the finders of the "peace-keepers".

                          Best regards, George​​
                          The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

                          ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
                            ​If we say 1:09, and we give Smith a whole 2 minutes to walk from the top of Berner St to the yard, then Smith was off by 7 minutes. That seems a lot to me. On the other hand, if true, would we expect there to have a been a measured, heavy tramp past #36, shortly before a quarter to one?



                            I have wondered if Smith based his timings on a clock further along Commercial Rd. A ~12:54 arrival would be interesting, as various estimates would probably need to be pushed back. So, Eagle might be arriving at ~12:35, for example. Just before Smith. Also, you might have Fanny locking up at about 12:50, meaning that the path of Schwartz and Goldstein through Berner St was not only similar in direction, but similar in time too. However, how could she have seen one of these men and not the other?
                            Hi Andrew,

                            AFAIK police times were established by a sergeant with a pocket watch regulated at a police station establishing a clock correction for a clock visible on the beat - Fixed point for instance. The time given by Eagle was a long time estimate. If the footfalls that Mortimer heard were made by Smith, then her clock would have been around ten minutes fast. IMO the clock in the club was about 10 minutes slow.

                            Cheers, George
                            The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

                            ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

                              Hi Frank,

                              Some interesting points. I have some observations on Eagle's testimony and interviews.

                              Diemschitz came in and said a woman had been murdered outside. I ran into the yard immediately and I saw in the yard a stream of blood. There was a general hue and cry for the police. I and others went off to find the officers, so I had no opportunity of seeing the body. Besides, I did not want to look at it, as those sights make me feel ill.

                              Gilleman came upstairs and said, "There is a dead woman lying in the yard." I went down in a second, and struck a match. I could then see a woman lying on the ground, near the gateway, and in a pool of blood. Her feet were about six or seven feet from the gate, and she was lying by the side of the club wall, her head being towards the yard. Another member, named Isaac, was with me at the time. As soon as I saw the blood I got very excited and ran away for the police. I did not touch her.
                              The CORONER. - Did you see if her clothes were disturbed?
                              Witness. - I could not say. When I got outside I saw Jacobs and another going for the police in the direction of Fairclough-street, and I then went to the Commercial-road, all the time shouting "Police!"

                              Comrades Morris Eygel, Fridenthal and Gilyarovsky were standing around the body. Eygel struck a match and shouted to the figure lying there: Get up! Why are you waking her? asked Yaffa, who noticed that the woman was lying in a liquid. Dont you see that the woman is dead?
                              [P. 3, col. 2]
                              In the meantime, there was quite a to-do going on inside the club, and everyone ran out into the yard. Dimshits, Eygel and Gilyarovsky ran to look for a policeman; ten minutes later they had found a pair of peace-keepers.


                              So Eagle claims in one interview that he did not see the body, but testifies at the inquest that he struck a match and did see the body. He also testifies that a member named "Isaac" was with him at the time. Was this Isaac Kozebrodski, or was Jacobs named Isaac, AKA Gilyarovsky? How can Gilyarovsky be named as one of the finders of the "peace-keepers".

                              Best regards, George​​
                              Hi George,

                              Thanks for your feedback.

                              Regarding Jacobs, I don’t think it matters much if there was a Jacobs or not. If so, he played an insignificant role and the most we can say is that he didn’t go with Diemshutz & Kozebrodski in the direction of Grove Street, but took some other direction.

                              I have a slight preference for it being a mishearing or misprint, though, as I’d find it quite odd that, if Eagle did mention both Diemschutz and Jacobs, there would be no newspaper that carried both names. Plus, if Jacobs would instead have been Jacobson or any other 3 syllable name, then I’d be more inclined to believe there was a third person running out with Diemschutz. But, again, I don’t think it matters much.

                              Then, as to when Eagle is supposed to have ran out, there are various things that might tell us something about that. There’s his own statement that said that he heard Diemschutz calling for the police and that would, quite probably, have been on Diemschutz’s way to Grove Street and much less likely on his way back. On the other hand, we have Kozebrodski saying that he “afterwards went into the Commercial-road along with Eagle, and found two officers.” and Lamb stating that two men came running to him shouting. I can’t help but wonder if both Lamb and Kozebrodski would have put it the way they did if Kozebrodski had turned into Batty Street to see if he could find a copper in Commercial Road and, so, would only have joined Eagle at the top of Batty Street, which would have been only some 30 yards from Lamb at that point. To me, that wouldn’t fit well with how Kozebrodski and Lamb stated what they’re supposed to have stated.

                              Therefore, I think it’s more likely that Kozebrodski joined Eagle while the latter had already left the yard but was still on Berner Street or, perhaps – but less likely – he joined Eagle on Commercial Road, with Eagle returning from the stretch of Commercial Road west of Berner Street.

                              Then we have Mortimer stating that “A man touched her face, and said it was quite warm”, which fits very well with Spooner testimony, suggesting very much that Diemschutz had already returned to the yard with Spooner when Mortimer arrived. I know you believe Mrs. Artisan to be another woman than Mortimer, but if you’re wrong, then it might well have been Eagle passing her door yelling for the police that made her come out and run to the yard. But, of course, if they weren’t one and the same, then Mortimer arrived in the yard just the same after Diemschutz had arrived back with Spooner or, at least, that’s the impression her account gives.

                              As to Gilyarovski, yes, according to the Arbeter Fraint he was one of the finders of the coppers, so according to that he must have been Kozebrodski. According to the rest of what the Arbeter Fraint wrote, he very much doesn’t seem to have been Kozebrodski. I, for one, don’t put a lot of stock in the AF. But that’s just me.

                              All the best,
                              Frank
                              "You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
                              Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

                                So Eagle claims in one interview that he did not see the body, but testifies at the inquest that he struck a match and did see the body. He also testifies that a member named "Isaac" was with him at the time. Was this Isaac Kozebrodski, or was Jacobs named Isaac, AKA Gilyarovsky? How can Gilyarovsky be named as one of the finders of the "peace-keepers".
                                Regardless of Eagle's return to club time being a rough estimate, I reckon he did arrive at about the time Smith was passing and did see Stride. The quotes hint at an element of denial. Understandable, especially if he'd had some sort of contact with her, verbal or physical or both.

                                I'm still thinking about the Kozebrodski/Gilyarovsky stuff.
                                Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                                Comment

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